[PATCH RFC 2/2] phy: phy-can-transceiver: Add support for setting mux
Aswath Govindraju
a-govindraju at ti.com
Thu Nov 18 03:12:00 PST 2021
Hi Peter,
On 18/11/21 2:54 am, Peter Rosin wrote:
> Hi!
>
> On 2021-11-15 07:31, Aswath Govindraju wrote:
>> Hi Peter,
>>
>> On 13/11/21 12:45 am, Peter Rosin wrote:
>>> Hi!
>>>
>>> On 2021-11-12 14:48, Aswath Govindraju wrote:
>>>> Hi Marc,
>>>>
>>>> On 12/11/21 2:10 pm, Marc Kleine-Budde wrote:
>>>>> On 11.11.2021 22:13:12, Aswath Govindraju wrote:
>>>>>> On some boards, for routing CAN signals from controller to transceiver,
>>>>>> muxes might need to be set. Therefore, add support for setting the mux by
>>>>>> reading the mux-controls property from the device tree node.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Aswath Govindraju <a-govindraju at ti.com>
>>>>>> ---
>>>>>> drivers/phy/phy-can-transceiver.c | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++
>>>>>> 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> diff --git a/drivers/phy/phy-can-transceiver.c b/drivers/phy/phy-can-transceiver.c
>>>>>> index 6f3fe37dee0e..3d8da5226e27 100644
>>>>>> --- a/drivers/phy/phy-can-transceiver.c
>>>>>> +++ b/drivers/phy/phy-can-transceiver.c
>>>>>> @@ -10,6 +10,7 @@
>>>>>> #include<linux/module.h>
>>>>>> #include<linux/gpio.h>
>>>>>> #include<linux/gpio/consumer.h>
>>>>>> +#include <linux/mux/consumer.h>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> struct can_transceiver_data {
>>>>>> u32 flags;
>>>>>> @@ -21,13 +22,22 @@ struct can_transceiver_phy {
>>>>>> struct phy *generic_phy;
>>>>>> struct gpio_desc *standby_gpio;
>>>>>> struct gpio_desc *enable_gpio;
>>>>>> + struct mux_control *mux_ctrl;
>>>>>> };
>>>>>>
>>>>>> /* Power on function */
>>>>>> static int can_transceiver_phy_power_on(struct phy *phy)
>>>>>> {
>>>>>> + int ret;
>>>>>> struct can_transceiver_phy *can_transceiver_phy = phy_get_drvdata(phy);
>>>>>>
>>>>>> + if (can_transceiver_phy->mux_ctrl) {
>>>>>> + ret = mux_control_select(can_transceiver_phy->mux_ctrl, 1);
>>>>>
>>>>> Hard coding the "1" looks wrong here. I have seen some boards where you
>>>>> can select between a CAN-2.0 and a single wire CAN transceiver with a
>>>>> mux. So I think we cannot hard code the "1" here.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Yes, as you mentioned it is not ideal to hard code "1". I feel that, it
>>>> would be much better to read the state of the mux to be set from the
>>>> mux-controls property. The issue that I see with this approach is that
>>>> the current implementation in the mux framework only allows for one
>>>> argument, which is for indicating the line to be toggled in the mux. If
>>>> more arguments are added then an error is returned from the
>>>> "mux_control_get". I am not sure why this limitation was added.
>>>
>>> The only current use of the first argument is for mux chips that contain
>>> more than one mux control. The limit in the mux core is there since no
>>> mux driver need more than this one argument. The number of mux-control
>>> property arguments is fixed by the #mux-control-cells property in the
>>> mux-control node. I don't see any way to and a new optional mux-control
>>> property argument that specifies a specific state. How would that not
>>> break all existing users?
>>>
>>
>> My idea was to use the second argument for reading the state of mux to
>> be set after increasing the #mux-control-cells value to 2. I don't think
>> this will break the existing mux controller users as the second argument
>> was not used till now, would be equivalent to adding an additional feature.
>
> Ok, I see what you mean now, sorry for being dense. If we allow this then
> there is a need to add a special value that means all/many states (such as
> -1 or something such) so that a mux-control can be used simultaneously by
> drivers "pointing at" a specific state like you want to do, and by the
> existing "application" style drivers that wraps the whole mux control.
>
> I.e. something like this
>
> mux: mux {
> compatible = "mux-gpio";
> ...
>
> #mux-control-cells = <1>; /* one more than previously */
> };
>
> phy {
> ...
>
> mux-control = <&mux 3>; /* point to specific state */
> };
>
> i2c-mux {
> compatible = "i2c-mux-gpmux";
> parent = <&i2c0>
> mux-control = <&mux (-1)>; /* many states needed */
>
> ...
>
> i2c at 1 {
> eeprom at 50 {
> ...
> };
> };
>
> i2c at 2 {
> ...
> };
> };
>
> Yes, I realize that accesses to the eeprom cannot happen if the mux is
> constantly selected and locked in state 3 by the phy, and that a mux with
> one channel being a phy and other channels being I2C might not be
> realistic, but the same gpio lines might control several muxes that are
> used for separate signals solving at least the latter "problem" with this
> completely made up example. Anyway, the above is in principle, and HW
> designs are sometimes too weird for words.
>
This is almost exactly what I was intending to implement except for one
more change. The state of the mux will always be represented using the
second argument(i.e. #mux-control-cells = <2>).
For example,
mux-controls = <&mux 0 1>, <&mux 1 0>;
With this I think we wouldn't need a special value for all or many states.
>> One more question that I had is, if the number of arguments match the
>> #mux-control-cells and if the number of arguments are greater than 1 why
>> is an error being returned?
>
> Changing that would require a bindings update anyway, so I simply
> disallowed it as an error. Not much thought went into the decision,
> as it couldn't be wrong to do what is being done with the bindings
> that exist. That said, I have no problem lifting this restriction,
> if there's a matching bindings update that makes it all fit.
>
Sure, I think making a change in
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mux/gpio-mux.yaml, should be good
enough I assume.
Thank you for the comments. I'll post a respin of this series, with the
above changes.
Thanks,
Aswath
>>> The current mux interface is designed around the idea that you wrap a
>>> mux control in a mux (lacking better name) application. There are
>>> several such mux applications in the tree, those for I2C, IIO and SPI
>>> pops into my head, and that you then tie the end user consumer to this
>>> muxing application. The mux state comes as a part of how you have tied
>>> the end user consumer to the mux application and is not really something
>>> that the mux-control is involved in.
>>>
>>> In other words, a mux-control is not really designed to be used directly
>>> by a driver that needs only one of the states.
>>>
>>> However, I'm not saying that doing so isn't also a useful model. It
>>> cetainly sound like it could be. However, the reason it's not done that
>>> way is that I did not want to add muxing code to *all* drivers. I.e. it
>>> would not be flexible to have to add boilerplate mux code to each and
>>> every IIO driver that happen to be connected in a way that a mux has to
>>> be in a certain state for the signal to reach the ADC (or whatever).
>>> Instead, new IIO channels are created for the appropriate mux states
>>> and the IIO mux is connected to the parent IIO channel. When one of the
>>> muxed channels is accessed the mux is selected as needed, and the ADC
>>> driver needs to know nothing about it. If two muxes need to be in a
>>> certain position, you again have no need to "pollute" drivers with
>>> double builerplate mux code. Instead, you simply add two levels of
>>> muxing to the muxed IIO channel.
>>>
>>> I think the same is probably true in this case too, and that it would
>>> perhaps be better to create a mux application for phys? But I don't know
>>> what the phy structure looks like, so I'm not in a position to say for
>>> sure if this model fits. But I imagine that phys have providers and
>>> consumers and that a mux can be jammed in there in some way and
>>> intercept some api such that the needed mux state can be selected when
>>> needed.
>>>
>>
>> Yes, I understand that reading the state of the mux in drivers would not
>> be efficient as it would adding the boiler plate code in each of the
>> drivers. However, for phys as each of them can be used for a different
>> interface, I am not sure if a common mux phy wrapper can be introduced.
>> This is reason why I felt that drivers should be allowed to read the
>> state of the mux directly, when no mux wrapper application is suitable
>> for it.
>
> It need not be one grand unifying phy mux, it could be one for each
> kind of phy interface. But again, I don't know much about how phys
> work nor their interfaces, not event roughly how many drivers there
> are etc etc. I have simply never needed to look.
>
> Hmm, wild idea, maybe there could be a mux "application" for pinctrl?
> I mean such that you could tie pinctrl states to mux states. It doesn't
> sound like too bad of a match to me?
>
> Cheers,
> Peter
>
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