[PATCH 4/5] input: touchscreen: support Allwinner SoCs' touchscreen
Dmitry Torokhov
dmitry.torokhov at gmail.com
Sat Sep 24 11:39:54 PDT 2016
Hi Quentin,
On Sat, Sep 24, 2016 at 08:26:08PM +0200, Quentin Schulz wrote:
> Hi Dimitry,
>
> Sorry for the (long) delay, I did not have time to work on it. I'll
> mainly work in my free time now.
>
> On 20/07/2016 19:25, Dmitry Torokhov wrote:
> > Hi Quentin,
> >
> > On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 10:29:10AM +0200, Quentin Schulz wrote:
> >> This adds support for Allwinner SoCs' (A10, A13 and A31) resistive
> >> touchscreen. This driver is probed by the MFD sunxi-gpadc-mfd.
> >>
> >> This driver uses ADC channels exposed through the IIO framework by
> >> sunxi-gpadc-iio to get its data. When opening this input device, it will
> >> start buffering in the ADC driver and enable a TP_UP_PENDING irq. The ADC
> >> driver will fill in a buffer with all data and call the callback the input
> >> device associated with this buffer. The input device will then read the
> >> buffer two by two and send X and Y coordinates to the input framework based
> >> on what it received from the ADC's buffer. When closing this input device,
> >> the buffering is stopped.
> >>
> >> Note that locations in the first received buffer after an TP_UP_PENDING irq
> >> occurred are unreliable, thus dropped.
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Quentin Schulz <quentin.schulz at free-electrons.com>
> >> ---
> [...]
> >> + info->buffer = iio_channel_get_all_cb(&pdev->dev,
> >> + &sunxi_gpadc_ts_callback,
> >> + (void *)info);
> >
> > Any chance we could introduce devm-variant here? If you do not want to
> > wait for IIO to add it you can temporarily add call
> > devm_add_action_or_reset() after getting channels and remove it when IIO
> > API catches up.
> >
>
> Something like:
>
> release_iio_channels(void* data)
> {
> struct sunxi_gpadc_ts *info = data;
> iio_channel_release_all_cb(info->buffer);
> }
>
> [...]
> info->buffer = iio_channel_get_all_cb(&pdev->dev,
> &sunxi_gpadc_ts_callback,
> (void *)info);
> ret = devm_add_action_or_reset(&pdev->dev,
> release_iio_channels,
> (void *)info);
> if (ret)
> return ret;
>
> ?
>
> May I know why you prefer that way instead of explicit removing in
> remove function of the platform device? I understand for devm-variant
> already in the framework but I am curious for this one.
So that you release all resources in the same order they were allocated.
When mixing devm and non-devm allocation/release order is often
incorrect.
>
> [...]
> >> +static int sunxi_gpadc_ts_remove(struct platform_device *pdev)
> >> +{
> >> + struct sunxi_gpadc_ts *info = platform_get_drvdata(pdev);
> >> +
> >> + iio_channel_stop_all_cb(info->buffer);
> >> + iio_channel_release_all_cb(info->buffer);
> >> +
> >> + disable_irq(info->tp_up_irq);
> >
> > You are mixing devm and non-devm so your unwind order is completely out
> > of wack. If input device is opened while you are unloading (or
> > unbinding) the dirver, then you'll release channels, then input device's
> > close() will be called, which will try to stop the IIO channels again
> > and disable IRQ yet again.
> >
>
> Do you mean that I should be using exclusively devm or non-devm functions?
Yes. Sometimes you can get away with mixing style (you have all devm
resources allocated first, then non-devm), but it is much clearer and
safer if you use one style or another exclusively.
> Do you mean input device's close will always be called when
> unloading/unbinding the driver?
If ->open() has been called() then input core will ensure that ->close()
is called as part of input_unregister_device(). If ->open() has not been
called, then ->close() will not be called either.
Thanks.
--
Dmitry
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