[PATCH v1 2/5] gpio: syscon: Add gpio-syscon for rockchip
Levin Du
djw at t-chip.com.cn
Thu May 10 19:16:48 PDT 2018
On 2018-05-10 10:56 PM, Robin Murphy wrote:
>
>> diff --git
>> a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/rockchip,gpio-syscon.txt
>> b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/rockchip,gpio-syscon.txt
>> new file mode 100644
>> index 0000000..e4c1650
>> --- /dev/null
>> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/rockchip,gpio-syscon.txt
>> @@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
>> +* Rockchip GPIO support for GRF_SOC_CON registers
>> +
>> +Required properties:
>> +- compatible: Should contain "rockchip,gpio-syscon".
>> +- gpio-controller: Marks the device node as a gpio controller.
>> +- #gpio-cells: Should be two. The first cell is the pin number and
>
> I would suggest s/pin number/bit number in the associated GRF
> register/ here. At least in this RK3328 case there's only one pin,
> which isn't numbered, and if you naively considered it pin 0 of this
> 'bank' you'd already have the wrong number. Since we're dealing with
> the "random SoC-specific controls" region of the GRF as opposed to the
> relatively-consistent and organised pinmux parts, I don't think we
> should rely on any assumptions about how things are laid out.
>
> I was initially going to suggest a more specific compatible string as
> well, but on reflection I think the generic "rockchip,gpio-syscon" for
> basic "flip this single GRF bit" functionality actually is the right
> way to go. In the specific RK3328 GPIO_MUTE case, there look to be 4
> bits in total related to this pin - the enable, value, and some pull
> controls (which I assume apply when the output is disabled) - if at
> some point in future we *did* want to start explicitly controlling the
> rest of them too, then would be a good time to define a separate
> "rockchip,rk3328-gpio-mute" binding (and probably a dedicated driver)
> for that specialised functionality, independently of this basic one.
>
Good point! I'll fix the doc.
>> +static void rockchip_gpio_set(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned int
>> offset,
>> + int val)
>> +{
>> + struct syscon_gpio_priv *priv = gpiochip_get_data(chip);
>> + unsigned int offs;
>> + u8 bit;
>> + u32 data;
>> + int ret;
>> +
>> + offs = priv->dreg_offset + priv->data->dat_bit_offset + offset;
>
> data->dat_bit_offset is always 0 here, but given that wrapping large
> offsets to successive GRF registers doesn't make sense (and wouldn't
> work anyway with this arithmetic) I don't think you even need this
> calculation of offs at all...
>
>> + bit = offs % SYSCON_REG_BITS;
>
> ... since it would suffice to use offset here...
>
>> + data = (val ? BIT(bit) : 0) | BIT(bit + 16);
>> + ret = regmap_write(priv->syscon,
>> + (offs / SYSCON_REG_BITS) * SYSCON_REG_SIZE,
>
> ... and priv->dreg_offset here.
>
rockchip_gpio_set() follows the conventional offset handling in the
gpio-syscon driver.
dreg_offset will get multiplied by 8 (dreg_offset <<= 3) in
syscon_gpio_probe().
I'm not sure if this needs to simplify, or stay the same as others.
Thanks
Levin
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