[PATCH 1/2] gpio: add pin biasing and drive mode to gpiolib
Ben Nizette
bn at niasdigital.com
Wed Apr 20 19:24:32 EDT 2011
On 20/04/2011, at 10:04 PM, Linus Walleij wrote:
> 2011/4/18 Ben Nizette <bn at niasdigital.com>:
>>
>> On 18/04/2011, at 7:37 AM, Linus Walleij wrote:
>>
>>> From: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij at linaro.org>
>>>
>>> This adds two functions for struct gpio_chip chips to provide pin
>>> bias and drive mode settings for individual pins. Implementers does
>>> this a bit differently and usually there are a few possible modes you
>>> can select, I'm providing a few common modes for biasing and driving
>>> pins.
>>>
>>> Since we have no previous hacked-up arch-specific drivers for this
>>> we can avoid any __override_functions and we just allow this to be
>>> properly implemented using gpiolib. Further the function is made
>>> non-mandatory, if it is not defined for the chip it will be silently
>>> ignored.
>>
>> I don't like this much. Why does the driver ever need to do this? When
>> should a driver even try this this given you can't guarantee any results
>> and as such it's only ever a hint?
>
> I don't get it. Who says the interface should be used by drivers?
> It could just as well (and much more likely) be the board code.
If the board code and the gpio code are both platform-specific then I didn't
see the point in this patch set when pure platform-only calls would do. I
assumed then that the only people that would benefit from this API would be
those who didn't have access to the platform-specific one, i.e. the gpio
consuming drivers.
Turns out this isn't always the case, eg when the GPIO is off-SoC. In that
case then it's certainly nicest to have an API like yours to deal with it.
In short, don't worry, I'm already more-or-less converted to the need for this
kind of API, it's just the form of it that I think should change a bit (as
discussed elsewhere in thread).
Thanks!
--Ben.
>
>> As far as I can see it would be
>> much much better if you just replaced
>
>>
>> platform_device_register(...)
>>
>> with
>>
>> set_up_pins(...)
>> platform_device_register(...)
>>
>> in board code (or add a device tree, erm, leaf or whatever).
>
> Yes that is one of the use cases for this patch set.
> We seem to be in 100% agreement :-)
>
>> So in short - what's the use case? Which driver requires this?
>
> You just gave the use case yourself.
>
> The intent of the patch set it to generalize the GPIO drivers
> so they can be pushed down into drivers/gpio/* where they
> belong.
>
> Since only the individual GPIO driver knows for example where
> to find the memory-mapped I/O region it has to reside with
> the GPIO driver(s).
>
> Even if these pin-specific calls are only called from board
> code the mechanism is still needed in order to move,
> consolidate and abstract the GPIO code into the gpio
> subsystem.
>
> Yours,
> Linus Walleij
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