Re: [PATCH] gpio: New driver for LSI ZEVIO SoCs

From: Linus Walleij
Date: Fri Aug 23 2013 - 10:09:23 EST


On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 6:34 PM, Fabian Vogt <fabian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 4:46 PM, Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@xxxxxxxxxx>
> wrote:

>> I want an ACK from one of the DT bindings maintainers for this
>> portion of the driver ideally. (It looks all right to me.)
>
> Any ideas which mail addresses I should add to CC:?

No. devicetree@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx is the place.

But if nothing happens you might want to ask Stephen Warren.

>>> +config GPIO_ZEVIO
>>> + bool "LSI ZEVIO SoC memory mapped GPIOs"
>>> + depends on ARCH_NSPIRE
>>
>>
>> Can't this appear in some other SoC?
>
> The problem is, no documents about this SoC are available at all.
> Everything we know about this chip has been found out by disassembling the
> nspire software (nucleus PLUS), so I have no idea, but probably not.
> Also, it can't be tested during bootup, as the only platform we can test it
> on
> boots from an internal read-only flash, which loads boot2,
> which itself is exploitable to start linux.
> The entire hardware has already been initialized before booting linux.

The thing is that if we don't put in the dependency, we can get
some nice compile coverage on a few different compilers and
platforms.

>>> + * 0x00-0x3F: Section 0
>>> + * +0x00: Masked interrupt status (read-only)
>>> + * +0x04: R: Interrupt status W: Reset interrupt status
>>> + * +0x08: R: Interrupt mask W: Mask interrupt
>>> + * +0x0C: W: Unmask interrupt (write-only)
>>> + * +0x10: Direction: I/O=1/0
>>> + * +0x14: Output
>>> + * +0x18: Input (read-only)
>>> + * +0x20: R: Sticky interrupts W: Set sticky interrupt
>>
>>
>> What is a sticky interrupt? Do you mean it is a level IRQ?
>> Then it's edge triggered if zero and level triggered if "sticky"
>> is set to 1, right?
>
> It's how the GPIO controller signals the VIC.
> On sticky it keeps the IRQ high until it has been handled (W to 0x4),

This is what is called a level interrupt.

So please update the terminology to match the common
one.

> if not sticky, it sets the IRQ line at the same state as the GPIO pin is.
> If GPIO high => IRQ high, if GPIO gets low again => IRQ low, which is not
> VERY useful..

Hm doesn't seem like an interrupt at all, rather some
test operation to test the IRQ line. Well whatever...

>> Use just u16 please. uint16_t is some portable C type.
>>
>> Please replace uint16_t with u16 everywhere.
>
> It's used VERY often and I couldn't find any coding style document which
> prefers u16..

There is no consensus around this.
It is up to the subsystem maintainer to decide this I think.


>>> +static int zevio_gpio_to_irq(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned pin)
>>> +{
>>> + /* Not implemented due to weird lockups */
>>> + return -ENXIO;
>>
>>
>> Hm. I guess this should be marked TODO: or something.
>>
>> So when you figure this out you also add an irqchip.
>>
>> The way this looks I was thinking it could use the
>> drivers/gpio/gpio-generic.c driver, but maybe not?
>
> Would be great, but it doesn't support multiple registers (4*8 GPIOs),
> so I would have to register 4 of them. Then, they had to share one
> interrupt,
> which would have to be implemented seperately (or not at all) and then it
> has
> to be working with device tree without any extra (struct platform_)data.
> I prefer two bitops (pin&7 and pin>>3), which are present anyways (for IRQs)
> over an array of four gpio_chips.

OK I buy this, but you know you can reuse only part of the
generic MMIO driver, and do not have to use all of it?

> I'll resubmit the improved version as V4 after you told me which devicetree
> mail addresses I should add.

OK thanks.

Yours,
Linus Walleij
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