[PATCH v5 0/4] Basic pinctrl support for StarFive JH7110 RISC-V SoC

Emil Renner Berthing emil.renner.berthing at canonical.com
Mon Feb 20 02:15:44 PST 2023


On Sat, 11 Feb 2023 at 09:25, Hal Feng <hal.feng at starfivetech.com> wrote:
> On Fri, 10 Feb 2023 23:45:05 +0100, Linus Walleij wrote:
> > On Thu, Feb 9, 2023 at 3:37 PM Hal Feng <hal.feng at starfivetech.com> wrote:
> >
> > > This patch series adds basic pinctrl support for StarFive JH7110 SoC.
> >
> > This v4 version applied, the driver is in good shape and all bindings ACKed,
> > nice work on this driver!
>
> v4? Is this a typo? This series is v5.
> Anyway, thank you so much!

Hi Hal and Linus

I'm curious if there is a plan to address Icenowy's concerns here:
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-gpio/52dcbe48dbf5f2561713a9642943353216fef15a.camel@icenowy.me/

The problem is that input from "GPIO" pins is configured a little
differently on the StarFive SoCs. Instead of having a register pr.
pin(grroup) there is a register pr. control line to the peripherals,
and into these you write the pin number + 2 of the pin you want the
peripheral to react to. Why +2? That's because 0 is a special "always
low" signal and similarly 1 is a special "always high" signal.

With the current bindings one hacky way to solve this is to treat
those two special values as kind of "virtual pins" that will always be
high or low. So that would be something like

pinmux = <GPIOMUX(GPIO_ALWAYS_LOW, GPOUT_IGNORED, GPOEN_DISABLE,
GPI_SYS_USB_OVERCURRENT)>;

..but this means we might need to mux these two virtual pins to
multiple peripherals. I'm not sure the pinmux framework is prepared
for that.

/Emil

> Best regards,
> Hal



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