> > No, the 2 things above are GPIOs (general purpose IO pins), that > > apparently are used as interrupts. > > Can you point me to any documentation on these GPIOs? I must admit that > I've never heard of the term.
There isn't really any documentation. GPIO is a generic term for general purpose IO pins that can be used for all sort of things, like controlling a reset line, getting an interrupt from some device, etc... All the stuffs under the "mac-io/gpio" node in the device-tree is GPIO lines going out of Apple ASIC. There is code using them in things like the cpufreq driver or the sound driver. The via-pmu driver also gets the incoming message interrupt from a GPIO (which isn't always in the device-tree btw, I had to hard code some of them...) Also note that Apple doesn't always put very consistent infos about the various GPIOs in the device-tree. For example, depending on the model the GPIO "reg" property (unit address) contains either an offset from the KeyLargo ASIC MMIO base address, or from the GPIO block of it which is at 0x50... so you sometimes have to add 0x50 to the value you get from there... (see today's patch I posted about cpufreq and sleep problem). In our case, though, those GPIOs seem to be interrupts, so you probably just have to get their irq line and request it, though if those are level interrupts (I haven't checked), then you probably need a mecanism for "ack'ing" them or you'll deadlock the first time you get one (but I suspect they are edge). > > I suspect the accelerometer can be > > configure to send an interrupt when a certain threshold is attained, and > > those interrupts are sent via those 2 GPIO pins. > > That would make sense since it is supposed to be used to save the hd. > > johannes -- Benjamin Herrenschmidt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]