Re: [PATCH 2/4] pinmux: Add TB10x pinmux driver

From: Christian Ruppert
Date: Fri Jul 26 2013 - 05:43:24 EST


On Thu, Jul 18, 2013 at 01:54:18PM -0600, Stephen Warren wrote:
> On 07/18/2013 10:07 AM, Christian Ruppert wrote:
> ...
> > Well, perhaps my definition of "inside"/"outside" pins was not quite
> > clear: The pin groups define the set of (kernel internal) pin numbers of
> > "outside" pins which are used by pin controller to map a given
> > interface. Inside pins are not numbered and the inside interfaces are
> > only used to determine which outside pins are part of the same group
> > (namely those for which the pin controller hardware provides a mux
> > connection to the same inside interface):
> >
> > 4
> > 4 /|--/-- SPI
> > PINS[0..3] --/--|| 4
> > \|--/-- GPIO[0..3]
> >
> > 4
> > PINS[4..7] -----/------ GPIO[4..7]
> >
> > 2
> > 2 /|--/-- I2C
> > PINS[8..9] --/--|| 2
> > \|--/-- GPIO[8..9]
> >
> > Pins 0..3 are in the SPI group because on the "inside" they can be muxed
> > to the SPI interface.
> > Pins 8..9 are in the I2C group because on the "inside" they can be muxed
> > to the I2C interface.
> > Pins 0..9 are in the GPIO group because on the "inside" they can be
> > muxed to the GPIO controller.
> >
> > All pin numbers are relative to the "outside", however, or conflict
> > management would not be possible. I hope this is more understandable
> > than my previous explanations.
> > Both muxes are controlled by the same register. In our overly simplistic
> > example this is not strictly necessary but in reality you might have pin
> > conflicts between the different interfaces.
>
> Same register, or same field/bits in that register?
>
> If it's the same field/bits, I would expect to see the following pin groups:
>
> 1) PINS[0..3], PINS[8..9]
> 2) PINS[4..7]
>
> ... since those are the things that are independently muxable.
> Otherwise, I'd expect to see the following groups:
>
> 1) PINS[0..3]
> 2) PINS[4..7]
> 3) PINS[8..9]
>
> > After the discussion we had so far I'm not so sure if extending the
> > pinctrl system with this kind of features is a very good idea.
>
> That makes things simple:-)
>
> One thing I still don't understand; in a previous mail, you'd mentioned
> 3 DT properties for configuring the pinmux; one represented the pin
> group, one represented the mux function that was selected for that pin
> group, and there was a third ("config"?) property. I still don't
> understand that third property. I only see pins/pingroups and mux
> functions in the diagram I quoted above.

In my proposal, pin groups represent interfaces instead of ports: All
three pin groups are configured through the same bit field in the same
register but they represent _logically_ independent functionalities.
The three DT properties are:

1. interface (which pins are we actually interested in when requesting
this)
2. port (which bit field/register is used to configure this)
3. configuration of that port (which mux function(s) in that bit
field/register are possible to make the interface available)

--
Christian Ruppert , <christian.ruppert@xxxxxxxxxx>
/|
Tel: +41/(0)22 816 19-42 //| 3, Chemin du Pré-Fleuri
_// | bilis Systems CH-1228 Plan-les-Ouates
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