[PATCH 1/1] of/irq: store IRQ trigger/level in struct resource flags
Rob Herring
robherring2 at gmail.com
Mon Apr 8 18:05:26 EDT 2013
On 04/05/2013 02:48 AM, Javier Martinez Canillas wrote:
> According to Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/interrupts.txt
> the "#interrupt-cells" property of an "interrupt-controller" is used
> to define the number of cells needed to specify a single interrupt.
>
> A commonly used variant is two cell on which #interrupt-cells = <2>
> and the first cell defines the index of the interrupt in the controller
> and the second cell is used to specify any of the following flags:
>
> - bits[3:0] trigger type and level flags
> 1 = low-to-high edge triggered
> 2 = high-to-low edge triggered
> 4 = active high level-sensitive
> 8 = active low level-sensitive
>
> An example of an interrupt controller which use the two cell format is
> the OMAP GPIO controller that allows GPIO lines to be used as IRQ
> (Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio-omap.txt)
>
> But setting #interrupt-cells = <2> on the OMAP GPIO device node and
> specifying the GPIO-IRQ type and level flags on the second cell does not
> store this value on the populated IORESOURCE_IRQ struct resource.
>
> This is because when using an IRQ from an interrupt controller and
> setting both cells (e.g:)
>
> interrupt-parent = <&gpio6>;
> interrupts = <16 8>;
>
> A call to of_irq_to_resource() is made and this function calls to
> irq_of_parse_and_map_type() to get the virtual IRQ mapped to the real
> index for this interrupt controller. This IRQ number is populated on
> the struct resource:
>
> int of_irq_to_resource(struct device_node *dev, int index, struct resource *r)
> {
> int irq = irq_of_parse_and_map(dev, index);
> ..
> r->start = r->end = irq;
> }
>
> irq_of_parse_and_map() calls to irq_create_of_mapping() which calls to
> the correct xlate function handler according to "#interrupt-cells"
> (irq_domain_xlate_onecell or irq_domain_xlate_twocell) and to
> irq_set_irq_type() to set the IRQ type.
>
> But the type is never returned so it can't be saved on the IRQ struct
> resource flags member.
>
> This means that drivers that need the IRQ type/level flags defined in
> the DT won't be able to get it.
But the interrupt controllers that need the information should be able
to get to it via irqd_get_trigger_type. What problem exactly are you
trying to fix? What driver would use this?
My understanding of the IORESOURCE_IRQ_xxx (and DMA) bits are they are
ISA specific and therefore should not be used on non-ISA buses.
Rob
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