[PATCH 3/5] gpio/omap: Add DT support to GPIO driver

Stephen Warren swarren at wwwdotorg.org
Tue Feb 26 19:13:56 EST 2013


On 02/26/2013 04:45 PM, Jon Hunter wrote:
> 
> On 02/26/2013 05:06 PM, Stephen Warren wrote:
>> On 02/26/2013 04:01 PM, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>>
>>> On 02/26/2013 04:44 PM, Stephen Warren wrote:
>>>> On 02/26/2013 03:40 PM, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> On 02/26/2013 04:01 AM, Javier Martinez Canillas wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> [snip]
>>>>>
>>>>>> I was wondering if the level/edge settings for gpios is working on OMAP.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm adding DT support for an SMSC911x ethernet chip connected to the
>>>>>> GPMC for an OMAP3 SoC based board.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In the smsc911x driver probe function (smsc911x_drv_probe() in
>>>>>> drivers/net/ethernet/smsc/smsc911x.c), a call to request_irq() with
>>>>>> the flag IRQF_TRIGGER_LOW is needed because of the wiring on my board.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Reading the gpio-omap.txt documentation it says that #interrupt-cells
>>>>>> should be <2> and that a value of 8 is "active low level-sensitive".
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So I tried this:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> &gpmc {
>>>>>> 	ethernet at 5,0 {
>>>>>> 		pinctrl-names = "default";
>>>>>> 		pinctrl-0 = <&smsc911x_pins>;
>>>>>> 		compatible = "smsc,lan9221", "smsc,lan9115";
>>>>>> 		reg = <5 0 0xff>; /* CS5 */
>>>>>> 		interrupt-parent = <&gpio6>;
>>>>>> 		interrupts = <16 8>; /* gpio line 176 */
>>>>>> 		interrupt-names = "smsc911x irq";
>>>>>> 		vmmc-supply = <&vddvario>;
>>>>>> 		vmmc_aux-supply = <&vdd33a>;
>>>>>> 		reg-io-width = <4>;
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 		smsc,save-mac-address;
>>>>>>       };
>>>>>> };
>>>>>
>>>>> Are you requesting the gpio anywhere? If not then this is not going to
>>>>> work as-is. This was discussed fairly recently [1] and the conclusion
>>>>> was that the gpio needs to be requested before we can use as an interrupt.
>>>>
>>>> That seems wrong; the GPIO/IRQ driver should handle this internally. The
>>>> Ethernet driver shouldn't know/care whether the interrupt it's given is
>>>> some form of dedicated interrupt or a GPIO-based interrupt, and even if
>>>> it somehow did, there's no irq_to_gpio() any more, so the driver can't
>>>> tell which GPIO ID it should request, unless it's given yet another
>>>> property to represent this.
>>>
>>> I agree that ideally this should be handled internally. Did you read the
>>> discussion on the thread that I referenced [1]? If you have any thoughts
>>> we are open to ideas :-)
>>>
>>> Cheers
>>> Jon
>>>
>>> [1] http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.ports.arm.omap/92192
>>
>> Oh, when I clicked that link the first time, all I saw was the patch,
>> not any discussion. I guess it must have timed out finding the other
>> emails or something.
> 
> Actually, I sent a slightly different link the 2nd time to ensure you
> saw the thread. So my fault ;-)
> 
>> I disagree that the GPIO needs to be requested, and that a custom DT
>> property and associated code are needed for that; simply requesting the
>> IRQ should be enough to make everything work.
>>
>> In the Tegra GPIO IRQ driver for example, the irq_set_type irq_chip op
>> goes and configures the base GPIO HW to enable the pin as a GPIO, just
>> like gpio_request() would. I imagine the OMAP driver can do whatever
>> similar action it needs.
> 
> Yes that is similar to what the patch in the thread was attempting to
> do, but this got shot down.
> 
> One issue I see is that by not calling gpio_request, then potentially
> you could have someone request a gpio via gpio_request() and someone
> trying to use it as an interrupt source via request_irq(). Now obviously
> that represents a bug because there is only one physical gpio, but I
> gather it is something we need to protect against.

I'm not sure it's really that much of an issue, but presumably the
solution is for a combined GPIO+IRQ driver to simply call gpio_request
internally from within some irq_chip function. It looks like struct
irq_chip doesn't have a request/free, but perhaps they could be added to
solve this?



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