[PATCH v3 04/14] GPIO: Add gpio-ingenic driver

Linus Walleij linus.walleij at linaro.org
Tue Jan 31 06:13:50 PST 2017


On Wed, Jan 25, 2017 at 7:51 PM, Paul Cercueil <paul at crapouillou.net> wrote:

> This driver handles the GPIOs of all the Ingenic JZ47xx SoCs
> currently supported by the upsteam Linux kernel.
>
> Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil <paul at crapouillou.net>

Looking nice.

> +#define JZ4740_GPIO_DATA       0x10
> +#define JZ4740_GPIO_SELECT     0x50
> +#define JZ4740_GPIO_DIR                0x60
> +#define JZ4740_GPIO_TRIG       0x70
> +#define JZ4740_GPIO_FLAG       0x80
> +
> +#define JZ4780_GPIO_INT                0x10
> +#define JZ4780_GPIO_PAT1       0x30
> +#define JZ4780_GPIO_PAT0       0x40
> +#define JZ4780_GPIO_FLAG       0x50
> +
> +#define REG_SET(x) ((x) + 0x4)
> +#define REG_CLEAR(x) ((x) + 0x8)
(...)
> +enum jz_version {
> +       ID_JZ4740,
> +       ID_JZ4780,
> +};
(...)
> +static inline bool gpio_get_value(struct ingenic_gpio_chip *jzgc, u8 offset)
> +{
> +       if (jzgc->version >= ID_JZ4780)
> +               return readl(jzgc->base + GPIO_PIN) & BIT(offset);
> +       else
> +               return readl(jzgc->base + JZ4740_GPIO_DATA) & BIT(offset);
> +}

This works for me, for sure.

What some people do, is to put the right virtual address in to the state
container.

So it would be just:

return !!readl(jzgc->datareg) & BIT(offset));

Notice also the double-bang that clamps the value to a bool. I know
the core does it too but I like to see it in drivers just to be sure.

> +static void gpio_set_value(struct ingenic_gpio_chip *jzgc, u8 offset, int value)
> +{
> +       u8 reg;
> +
> +       if (jzgc->version >= ID_JZ4780)
> +               reg = JZ4780_GPIO_PAT0;
> +       else
> +               reg = JZ4740_GPIO_DATA;
> +
> +       if (value)
> +               writel(BIT(offset), jzgc->base + REG_SET(reg));
> +       else
> +               writel(BIT(offset), jzgc->base + REG_CLEAR(reg));
> +}

Same comment.

What some drivers do when they just get/set a bit in a register
to get/set or set the direction of a GPIO, is to select GPIO_GENERIC
and just bgpio_init() with the right iomem pointers, then the core
will register handlers for get, set, set_direcition callback and
get_direction and your driver can just focus on the remainders.

> +static void ingenic_gpio_set(struct gpio_chip *gc,
> +               unsigned int offset, int value)
> +{
> +       struct ingenic_gpio_chip *jzgc = gpiochip_get_data(gc);
> +
> +       gpio_set_value(jzgc, offset, value);
> +}
> +
> +static int ingenic_gpio_get(struct gpio_chip *gc, unsigned int offset)
> +{
> +       struct ingenic_gpio_chip *jzgc = gpiochip_get_data(gc);
> +
> +       return (int) gpio_get_value(jzgc, offset);
> +}
> +
> +static int ingenic_gpio_direction_input(struct gpio_chip *gc,
> +               unsigned int offset)
> +{
> +       return pinctrl_gpio_direction_input(gc->base + offset);
> +}
> +
> +static int ingenic_gpio_direction_output(struct gpio_chip *gc,
> +               unsigned int offset, int value)
> +{
> +       ingenic_gpio_set(gc, offset, value);
> +       return pinctrl_gpio_direction_output(gc->base + offset);
> +}

If you're not just replacing these with GPIO_GENERIC, please also
include a .get_direction() callback.

It's especially nice as it reads out the state at probe and "lsgpio"
lists if pins are inputs or outputs.

Yours,
Linus Walleij



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