[PATCH 1/2] gpio: add pin biasing and drive mode to gpiolib

Ben Nizette bn at niasdigital.com
Sat Apr 23 04:25:27 EDT 2011


On 21/04/2011, at 4:48 PM, Linus Walleij wrote:

> 2011/4/21 Ben Nizette <bn at niasdigital.com>:
> 
>>> This patch is about biasing and drive modes. We need to alter
>>> these at runtime (from board code, indeed) due to the fact that
>>> when you go to sleep e.g. floating a pin yeilds better power
>>> characteristics.
>> 
>> This is actually an interesting case because floating pins yeild
>> /worse/ power characteristics (each transistor of the push-pull
>> is on a little bit and you get a path straight through) [1].  To
>> get good power performance you want to pull an input pin high or
>> low but which of those two directions depends on external
>> constraints, i.e. the board.
> 
> Yeah, mea culpa, I twisted it around in my head. I mean the
> reverse. So this is why there are GPIO_CONFIG_BIAS_HIGH
> and GPIO_CONFIG_BIAS_GROUND in the predefined pin
> bias states.
> 
> (I do get it, don't worry, I was in electroscience before I
> turned computer science actually...)

np, did a bit of a double-take myself :)

> 
>>  This is a case where the driver
>> should /not/ go playing with things it can't fully understand.
>> 
>> Perhaps one of the properties that a board can set in a gpio chip
>> driver is the suspend state and have suspend/resume hooks in the
>> gpio chip take care of setting things up on each side.
> 
> Yes, the API is not only for drivers, it's for boards alright.
> 
> Pushing it to drivers/gpio give us two advantages:
> 
> 1. Depopulate the overpopulated arch/arm/* etc trees
> 2. Give an overview so the GPIO maintainer and others can
>  think about consolidations
> 3. Clear cut drivers that can have runtime PM hooks etc...
> 

Yep I think I like this now, looking forward to seeing a few driver
implementations and seeing what kind of cool custom features i/o IP
blocks have that can now be easily and usefully exposed.

Thanks!
	--Ben.

> Linus Walleij
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