[PATCH net-next 09/12] gpio: tc956x: add TC956x/QPS615 support

Alex Elder elder at riscstar.com
Wed May 6 15:41:41 PDT 2026


On 5/6/26 4:43 PM, Andrew Lunn wrote:
>> To be clear, the reason you're asking is that you're suggesting
>> we might want to model the GPIO controller differently, correct?
> 
> Correct.
> 
>> I.e., model it as *not* associated with the embedded PCIe
>> functions.  Then we need to think about what its parent device
>> would be (the power control device, which I think somehow
>> duplicates the switch device?).
> 
> Logically, the GPIO controller cannot be part of a downstream
> function, if you need to use the GPIO controller to turn the
> downstream function on.

Yes you're right, though the PCIe power controller functions
before the PCIe switch is enabled, and uses I2C to communicate
with the host.

> Logically, the GPIO controller needs to be above the switch downstream
> end points. Where above, i don't know. Which is why i was asking about
> where it appears in the address spaces.

You are touching on an issue we have faced since we started on
this earlier in the year.  Our objective was to enable the eMACs,
but there was no device representing the "chip" (which holds the
switch and the GPIO controller, etc.).  The TC956x is more than
just a PCIe switch, and more than just two Ethernet MACs.  The
vendor code handles some of this between PCIe functions with
some reference counting and perhaps other things.

Eventually we settled on the model we have presented, which
creates a device for each function and lets one of them take
care of common "chip" things (including creating the GPIO
auxiliary device).  The function device driver creates a
new auxiliary device to represent the MAC for each function.

I also considered modeling the TC956x as a remoteproc, but have
been reluctant to really pursue that.

> But i also don't know too much about PCI, i'm used to SoCs with simple
> linear MMIO.

I'm no PCI expert either, but I'm learning.

>  From the little i know, it is more than what address space does the
> GPIO appear in. Its also, what enumerable entity does it appear in
> within the PCI bus. Because its the enumeration which is going to
> trigger a driver load, which can then drive the GPIO controller.
> 
> Or, something more radical, you make the PCIe power controller an MFD,
> instantiating both the power controller and a GPIO controller over the
> I2C bus. GPIO access will not be as fast, but is there anything here
> which needs to be fast?

I considered that, but opted not to mess with the PCIe power controller
driver.

It's only asserting resets in the RB3gen2, so I don't the speed is a
major factor.

					-Alex


> 
>        Andrew




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