On Tue, Aug 19, 2008 at 11:26:28AM +0200, Laurent Pinchart wrote: [...] > > I didn't say "SOC-specific". I said "SOC-model specific", which > > means that the driver would be not portable even across QE chips > > (i.e. MPC8323 vs. MPC8360, you can assume that the "CLK12" function > > is having same PAR/ODR/DAT/DIR bits). > > If I'm not mistaken, the PAR bit is used to select between GPIO and > dedicated mode by definition. It should be safe to assume that setting > a GPIO in dedicated mode requires the PAR bit to be set. But as I > stated above, we can ignore that for now until a hardware use case > comes up.
One more thing: you're assuming that there is one par bit, but there are two par bits for QE chips. Which one would you set in set_dedicated()? ;-) > > > > > If, for some > > > > > reason (driver not loaded, ...), no GPIO user shows up for that > > > > > pin, it will stay configured in dedicated mode. > > > > > > > > Yes. > > > > > > > > > It might be better to set the PAR bit unconditionally in > > > > > > > > Why it might be better? > > > > > > Because, as explained a few lines down, the board initialization code > > > will be able to configure a pin in a known state (PAR not set) at boot > > > time until a driver requests the pin to be switched to dedicated mode. > > > > You can do this as I described above. But prior to this, yes, you have > > to configure the pins and let Linux save these values. There is no other > > way to pass this information, unfortunately. > > Ok. > > I started implementing CPM2 dedicated mode support to be used in the > CPM UART driver for RTS/CTS flow control, and soon realized there was > a show stopper. The CPM UART driver is mostly CPM1/CPM2 agnostic. > I can't use a function such as cpm2_gpio32_set_dedicated, as that > wouldn't work on a CPM1 (at least not on all its ports). I could call > the right function depending on which port the GPIO is on, but that's > really hackish and would defeat the purpose of using GPIOs. You can easily refactor cpm gpio code so that you'll have common cpm structure with platform-specific "GPIO API extension" callbacks. Something like this: /* * generic structure, does not know anything about cpm1/2/qe, or * ports width. */ struct cpm_gpio_chip { struct of_mm_gpio_chip mm_gc; spinlock_t lock; void (*set_dedicated)(unsigned int gpio); }; struct cpm1_gpio16_chip { struct cpm_gpio_chip cpgc; /* shadowed data register to clear/set bits safely */ u16 cpdata; }; void cpm_gpio_set_dedicated(unsigned int gpio) { struct gpio_chip *gc = gpio_to_chip(gpio); struct of_gpio_chip *ofgc = to_of_gpio_chip(gc); struct cpm_gpio_chip *cpgc = to_cpm_gpio_chip(ofgc); if (cpgc->set_dedicated) cpgc->set_dedicated(gc->base - gpio); } > What we > really need there is a set_dedicated/set_option/set_whatever function > in the GPIO API :-/ Won't happen. ;-) -- Anton Vorontsov email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] irc://irc.freenode.net/bd2 _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org https://ozlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxppc-dev