On Fri, Feb 16, 2024 at 06:01:52PM +0200, Kalle Valo wrote: > (Adding devicetree list for comments) > > <Ajay.Kathat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > On 2/13/24 09:58, Alexis Lothoré wrote: > >> > >> On 2/13/24 17:42, David Mosberger-Tang wrote: > >>> On Tue, 2024-02-13 at 16:22 +0100, Alexis Lothoré wrote: > >>>> When using a wilc1000 chip over a spi bus, users can optionally define a > >>>> reset gpio and a chip enable gpio. The reset line of wilc1000 is active > >>>> low, so to hold the chip in reset, a low (physical) value must be applied. > >>>> > >>>> The corresponding device tree binding documentation was introduced by > >>>> commit f31ee3c0a555 ("wilc1000: Document enable-gpios and reset-gpios > >>>> properties") and correctly indicates that the reset line is an active-low > >>>> signal. However, the corresponding driver part, brought by commit > >>>> ec031ac4792c ("wilc1000: Add reset/enable GPIO support to SPI driver"), is > >>>> misusing the gpiod APIs and apply an inverted logic when powering up/down > >>>> the chip (for example, setting the reset line to a logic "1" during power > >>>> up, which in fact asserts the reset line when device tree describes the > >>>> reset line as GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW). > >>> > >>> Note that commit ec031ac4792c is doing the right thing in regards to an > >>> ACTIVE_LOW RESET pin and the binding documentation is consistent with that code. > >>> > >>> It was later on that commit fcf690b0 flipped the RESET line polarity to treat it > >>> as GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH. I never understood why that was done and, as you noted, it > >>> introduced in inconsistency with the binding documentation. > >> > >> Ah, you are right, and I was wrong citing your GPIOs patch as faulty > >> (git-blaming too fast !), thanks for the clarification. I missed this patch from > >> Ajay (fcf690b0) flipping the reset logic. Maybe he had issues while missing > >> proper device tree configuration and then submitted this flip ? > > > > Indeed, it was done to align the code as per the DT entry suggested in > > WILC1000/3000 porting guide[1 -page 18], which is already used by most > > of the existing users. This change has impact on the users who are using > > DT entry from porting guide. One approach is to retain the current code > > and document this if needed. > > So if I'm understanding the situation correctly Microchip's porting > guide[1] doesn't match with kernel.org documentation[2]? I'm not the > expert here but from my point of view the issue is clear: the code needs > to follow kernel.org documentation[2], not external documentation. My point of view would definitely be that drivers in the mainline kernel absolutely should respect the ABI defined in the dt-binding. What a vendor decides to do in their own tree I suppose is their problem, but I would advocate that vendor kernels would also respect the ABI from mainline. Looking a bit more closely at the porting guide, it contains other properties that are not present in the dt-binding - undocumented compatibles and a different enable gpio property for example. I guess it (and the vendor version of the driver) never got updated when wilc1000 supported landed in mainline? > I'll add devicetree list so hopefully people there can comment also, > full patch available in [3]. > > Alexis, if there are no more comments I'm in favor submitting the revert > you mentioned. From a dt-bindings point of view, the aforementioned revert seems correct and would be Acked-by: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Getting off my dt-binding maintainer high-horse, linux4microchip is going be updating to a 6.6 based kernel in the coming weeks - maybe that's a good time to update the vendor kernel wilc drivers (and therefore the porting guide?) to match the properties used by mainline Ajay? Cheers, Conor.
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