[PATCH v6 03/15] pinctrl: bcm: add bcm63xx base code
Rob Herring
robh+dt at kernel.org
Thu Mar 11 18:24:28 GMT 2021
On Thu, Mar 11, 2021 at 10:00 AM Álvaro Fernández Rojas
<noltari at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Rob and Linus,
>
> El 11/03/2021 a las 17:13, Linus Walleij escribió:
> > On Thu, Mar 11, 2021 at 3:58 PM Rob Herring <robh+dt at kernel.org> wrote:
> >> On Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at 6:09 PM Linus Walleij <linus.walleij at linaro.org> wrote:
> >>> On Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at 6:51 PM Rob Herring <robh+dt at kernel.org> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>>> +static const struct of_device_id bcm63xx_gpio_of_match[] = {
> >>>>> + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6318-gpio", },
> >>>>> + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6328-gpio", },
> >>>>> + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6358-gpio", },
> >>>>> + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6362-gpio", },
> >>>>> + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm6368-gpio", },
> >>>>> + { .compatible = "brcm,bcm63268-gpio", },
> >>>>
> >>>> All these would be moved to gpio-mmio.c (or maybe that can have a
> >>>> fallback compatible?).
> >>>
> >>> This is gpio-regmap.c and it can only be used as a library
> >>> by a certain driver. gpio-mmio.c can be used stand-alone
> >>> for certain really simple hardware (though most use that
> >>> as a library as well).
> >>
> >> I don't really care which one is used, but the problem is that this
> >> choice is leaking into the binding design.
> >
> > Aha I guess I misunderstood your comment.
> >
> >> The primary problem here is
> >> once someone uses regmap, then they think they must have a syscon and
> >> can abandon using 'reg' and normal address properties as Linux happens
> >> to not use them (currently). I think we really need some better regmap
> >> vs. mmio handling to eliminate this duplication of foo-mmio and
> >> foo-regmap drivers and difference in binding design. Not sure exactly
> >> what that looks like, but basically some sort of 'reg' property to
> >> regmap creation.
> >
> > I see the problem. Yeah we should try to be more strict around
> > these things. To me there are syscons and "other regmaps",
> > where syscon is a real hurdle of registers while "other regmaps"
> > are just regmaps by convenience.
> >
> > Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mfd/syscon.yaml
> > describes what a syscon really is so if everyone could
> > just read the documentation that would be great ...
> >
> >> Given we already have a Broadcom GPIO binding for what looks to be
> >> similar to this one, I'm left wondering what's the real difference
> >> here?
> >
> > Which one is similar? I can take a look.
>
> @Linus I think @Rob is referring to brcm,bcm6345-gpio:
> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/a74e6a014c9d4d4161061f770c9b4f98372ac778/drivers/gpio/gpio-mmio.c#L686
Well, since it's the bindings we're talking about:
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/brcm,bcm6345-gpio.txt
Which says this:
"These bindings can be used on any BCM63xx SoC. However, BCM6338 and
BCM6345 are the only ones which don't need a pinctrl driver."
Not that the 1 in tree user of this is perfect. Seems like it too
should be a child of a system controller if there's other registers.
>
> However, the real difference between BCM6345 (and BCM6338) is that these
> SoCs have no pin controller at all, only a GPIO controller:
>
> BCM6345:
> typedef struct GpioControl {
> uint16 unused0;
> byte unused1;
> byte TBusSel;
> uint16 unused2;
> uint16 GPIODir;
> byte unused3;
> byte Leds;
> uint16 GPIOio;
> uint32 UartCtl;
> } GpioControl;
>
> BCM6338:
> typedef struct GpioControl {
> uint32 unused0;
> uint32 GPIODir; /* bits 7:0 */
> uint32 unused1;
> uint32 GPIOio; /* bits 7:0 */
> uint32 LEDCtrl;
> uint32 SpiSlaveCfg;
> uint32 vRegConfig;
> } GpioControl;
>
> BCM6348 and newer also have pinctrl.
> That's the main difference between that driver @Rob's referring to and
> the ones in this patch series.
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