linux_dsm_epyc7002/drivers/pinctrl/Makefile

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drivers: create a pin control subsystem This creates a subsystem for handling of pin control devices. These are devices that control different aspects of package pins. Currently it handles pinmuxing, i.e. assigning electronic functions to groups of pins on primarily PGA and BGA type of chip packages which are common in embedded systems. The plan is to also handle other I/O pin control aspects such as biasing, driving, input properties such as schmitt-triggering, load capacitance etc within this subsystem, to remove a lot of ARM arch code as well as feature-creepy GPIO drivers which are implementing the same thing over and over again. This is being done to depopulate the arch/arm/* directory of such custom drivers and try to abstract the infrastructure they all need. See the Documentation/pinctrl.txt file that is part of this patch for more details. ChangeLog v1->v2: - Various minor fixes from Joe's and Stephens review comments - Added a pinmux_config() that can invoke custom configuration with arbitrary data passed in or out to/from the pinmux driver ChangeLog v2->v3: - Renamed subsystem folder to "pinctrl" since we will likely want to keep other pin control such as biasing in this subsystem too, so let us keep to something generic even though we're mainly doing pinmux now. - As a consequence, register pins as an abstract entity separate from the pinmux. The muxing functions will claim pins out of the pin pool and make sure they do not collide. Pins can now be named by the pinctrl core. - Converted the pin lookup from a static array into a radix tree, I agreed with Grant Likely to try to avoid any static allocation (which is crap for device tree stuff) so I just rewrote this to be dynamic, just like irq number descriptors. The platform-wide definition of number of pins goes away - this is now just the sum total of the pins registered to the subsystem. - Make sure mappings with only a function name and no device works properly. ChangeLog v3->v4: - Define a number space per controller instead of globally, Stephen and Grant requested the same thing so now maps need to define target controller, and the radix tree of pin descriptors is a property on each pin controller device. - Add a compulsory pinctrl device entry to the pinctrl mapping table. This must match the pinctrl device, like "pinctrl.0" - Split the file core.c in two: core.c and pinmux.c where the latter carry all pinmux stuff, the core is for generic pin control, and use local headers to access functionality between files. It is now possible to implement a "blank" pin controller without pinmux capabilities. This split will make new additions like pindrive.c, pinbias.c etc possible for combined drivers and chunks of functionality which is a GoodThing(TM). - Rewrite the interaction with the GPIO subsystem - the pin controller descriptor now handles this by defining an offset into the GPIO numberspace for its handled pin range. This is used to look up the apropriate pin controller for a GPIO pin. Then that specific GPIO range is matched 1-1 for the target controller instance. - Fixed a number of review comments from Joe Perches. - Broke out a header file pinctrl.h for the core pin handling stuff that will be reused by other stuff than pinmux. - Fixed some erroneous EXPORT() stuff. - Remove mispatched U300 Kconfig and Makefile entries - Fixed a number of review comments from Stephen Warren, not all of them - still WIP. But I think the new mapping that will specify which function goes to which pin mux controller address 50% of your concerns (else beat me up). ChangeLog v4->v5: - Defined a "position" for each function, so the pin controller now tracks a function in a certain position, and the pinmux maps define what position you want the function in. (Feedback from Stephen Warren and Sascha Hauer). - Since we now need to request a combined function+position from the machine mapping table that connect mux settings to drivers, it was extended with a position field and a name field. The name field is now used if you e.g. need to switch between two mux map settings at runtime. - Switched from a class device to using struct bus_type for this subsystem. Verified sysfs functionality: seems to work fine. (Feedback from Arnd Bergmann and Greg Kroah-Hartman) - Define a per pincontroller list of GPIO ranges from the GPIO pin space that can be handled by the pin controller. These can be added one by one at runtime. (Feedback from Barry Song) - Expanded documentation of regulator_[get|enable|disable|put] semantics. - Fixed a number of review comments from Barry Song. (Thanks!) ChangeLog v5->v6: - Create an abstract pin group concept that can sort pins into named and enumerated groups no matter what the use of these groups may be, one possible usecase is a group of pins being muxed in or so. The intention is however to also use these groups for other pin control activities. - Make it compulsory for pinmux functions to associate with at least one group, so the abstract pin group concept is used to define the groups of pins affected by a pinmux function. The pinmux driver interface has been altered so as to enforce a function to list applicable groups per function. - Provide an optional .group entry in the pinmux machine map so the map can select beteween different available groups to be used with a certain function. - Consequent changes all over the place so that e.g. debugfs present reasonable information about the world. - Drop the per-pin mux (*config) function in the pinmux_ops struct - I was afraid that this would start to be used for things totally unrelated to muxing, we can introduce that to the generic struct pinctrl_ops if needed. I want to keep muxing orthogonal to other pin control subjects and not mix these things up. ChangeLog v6->v7: - Make it possible to have several map entries matching the same device, pin controller and function, but using a different group, and alter the semantics so that pinmux_get() will pick all matching map entries, and store the associated groups in a list. The list will then be iterated over at pinmux_enable()/pinmux_disable() and corresponding driver functions called for each defined group. Notice that you're only allowed to map multiple *groups* to the same { device, pin controller, function } triplet, attempts to map the same device to multiple pin controllers will for example fail. This is hopefully the crucial feature requested by Stephen Warren. - Add a pinmux hogging field to the pinmux mapping entries, and enable the pinmux core to hog pinmux map entries. This currently only works for pinmuxes without assigned devices as it looks now, but with device trees we can look up the corresponding struct device * entries when we register the pinmux driver, and have it hog each pinmux map in turn, for a simple approach to non-dynamic pin muxing. This addresses an issue from Grant Likely that the machine should take care of as much of the pinmux setup as possible, not the devices. By supplying a list of hogs, it can now instruct the core to take care of any static mappings. - Switch pinmux group retrieveal function to grab an array of strings representing the groups rather than an array of unsigned and rewrite accordingly. - Alter debugfs to show the grouplist handled by each pinmux. Also add a list of hogs. - Dynamically allocate a struct pinmux at pinmux_get() and free it at pinmux_put(), then add these to the global list of pinmuxes active as we go along. - Go over the list of pinmux maps at pinmux_get() time and repeatedly apply matches. - Retrieve applicable groups per function from the driver as a string array rather than a unsigned array, then lookup the enumerators. - Make the device to pinmux map a singleton - only allow the mapping table to be registered once and even tag the registration function with __init so it surely won't be abused. - Create a separate debugfs file to view the pinmux map at runtime. - Introduce a spin lock to the pin descriptor struct, lock it when modifying pin status entries. Reported by Stijn Devriendt. - Fix up the documentation after review from Stephen Warren. - Let the GPIO ranges give names as const char * instead of some fixed-length string. - add a function to unregister GPIO ranges to mirror the registration function. - Privatized the struct pinctrl_device and removed it from the <linux/pinctrl/pinctrl.h> API, the drivers do not need to know the members of this struct. It is now in the local header "core.h". - Rename the concept of "anonymous" mux maps to "system" muxes and add convenience macros and documentation. ChangeLog v7->v8: - Delete the leftover pinmux_config() function from the <linux/pinctrl/pinmux.h> header. - Fix a race condition found by Stijn Devriendt in pin_request() ChangeLog v8->v9: - Drop the bus_type and the sysfs attributes and all, we're not on the clear about how this should be used for e.g. userspace interfaces so let us save this for the future. - Use the right name in MAINTAINERS, PIN CONTROL rather than PINMUX - Don't kfree() the device state holder, let the .remove() callback handle this. - Fix up numerous kerneldoc headers to have one line for the function description and more verbose documentation below the parameters ChangeLog v9->v10: - pinctrl: EXPORT_SYMBOL needs export.h, folded in a patch from Steven Rothwell - fix pinctrl_register error handling, folded in a patch from Axel Lin - Various fixes to documentation text so that it's consistent. - Removed pointless comment from drivers/Kconfig - Removed dependency on SYSFS since we removed the bus in v9. - Renamed hopelessly abbreviated pctldev_* functions to the more verbose pinctrl_dev_* - Drop mutex properly when looking up GPIO ranges - Return NULL instead of ERR_PTR() errors on registration of pin controllers, using cast pointers is fragile. We can live without the detailed error codes for sure. Cc: Stijn Devriendt <highguy@gmail.com> Cc: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> Cc: Russell King <linux@arm.linux.org.uk> Acked-by: Grant Likely <grant.likely@secretlab.ca> Acked-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@nvidia.com> Tested-by: Barry Song <21cnbao@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
2011-05-03 01:50:54 +07:00
# generic pinmux support
ccflags-$(CONFIG_DEBUG_PINCTRL) += -DDEBUG
drivers: create a pin control subsystem This creates a subsystem for handling of pin control devices. These are devices that control different aspects of package pins. Currently it handles pinmuxing, i.e. assigning electronic functions to groups of pins on primarily PGA and BGA type of chip packages which are common in embedded systems. The plan is to also handle other I/O pin control aspects such as biasing, driving, input properties such as schmitt-triggering, load capacitance etc within this subsystem, to remove a lot of ARM arch code as well as feature-creepy GPIO drivers which are implementing the same thing over and over again. This is being done to depopulate the arch/arm/* directory of such custom drivers and try to abstract the infrastructure they all need. See the Documentation/pinctrl.txt file that is part of this patch for more details. ChangeLog v1->v2: - Various minor fixes from Joe's and Stephens review comments - Added a pinmux_config() that can invoke custom configuration with arbitrary data passed in or out to/from the pinmux driver ChangeLog v2->v3: - Renamed subsystem folder to "pinctrl" since we will likely want to keep other pin control such as biasing in this subsystem too, so let us keep to something generic even though we're mainly doing pinmux now. - As a consequence, register pins as an abstract entity separate from the pinmux. The muxing functions will claim pins out of the pin pool and make sure they do not collide. Pins can now be named by the pinctrl core. - Converted the pin lookup from a static array into a radix tree, I agreed with Grant Likely to try to avoid any static allocation (which is crap for device tree stuff) so I just rewrote this to be dynamic, just like irq number descriptors. The platform-wide definition of number of pins goes away - this is now just the sum total of the pins registered to the subsystem. - Make sure mappings with only a function name and no device works properly. ChangeLog v3->v4: - Define a number space per controller instead of globally, Stephen and Grant requested the same thing so now maps need to define target controller, and the radix tree of pin descriptors is a property on each pin controller device. - Add a compulsory pinctrl device entry to the pinctrl mapping table. This must match the pinctrl device, like "pinctrl.0" - Split the file core.c in two: core.c and pinmux.c where the latter carry all pinmux stuff, the core is for generic pin control, and use local headers to access functionality between files. It is now possible to implement a "blank" pin controller without pinmux capabilities. This split will make new additions like pindrive.c, pinbias.c etc possible for combined drivers and chunks of functionality which is a GoodThing(TM). - Rewrite the interaction with the GPIO subsystem - the pin controller descriptor now handles this by defining an offset into the GPIO numberspace for its handled pin range. This is used to look up the apropriate pin controller for a GPIO pin. Then that specific GPIO range is matched 1-1 for the target controller instance. - Fixed a number of review comments from Joe Perches. - Broke out a header file pinctrl.h for the core pin handling stuff that will be reused by other stuff than pinmux. - Fixed some erroneous EXPORT() stuff. - Remove mispatched U300 Kconfig and Makefile entries - Fixed a number of review comments from Stephen Warren, not all of them - still WIP. But I think the new mapping that will specify which function goes to which pin mux controller address 50% of your concerns (else beat me up). ChangeLog v4->v5: - Defined a "position" for each function, so the pin controller now tracks a function in a certain position, and the pinmux maps define what position you want the function in. (Feedback from Stephen Warren and Sascha Hauer). - Since we now need to request a combined function+position from the machine mapping table that connect mux settings to drivers, it was extended with a position field and a name field. The name field is now used if you e.g. need to switch between two mux map settings at runtime. - Switched from a class device to using struct bus_type for this subsystem. Verified sysfs functionality: seems to work fine. (Feedback from Arnd Bergmann and Greg Kroah-Hartman) - Define a per pincontroller list of GPIO ranges from the GPIO pin space that can be handled by the pin controller. These can be added one by one at runtime. (Feedback from Barry Song) - Expanded documentation of regulator_[get|enable|disable|put] semantics. - Fixed a number of review comments from Barry Song. (Thanks!) ChangeLog v5->v6: - Create an abstract pin group concept that can sort pins into named and enumerated groups no matter what the use of these groups may be, one possible usecase is a group of pins being muxed in or so. The intention is however to also use these groups for other pin control activities. - Make it compulsory for pinmux functions to associate with at least one group, so the abstract pin group concept is used to define the groups of pins affected by a pinmux function. The pinmux driver interface has been altered so as to enforce a function to list applicable groups per function. - Provide an optional .group entry in the pinmux machine map so the map can select beteween different available groups to be used with a certain function. - Consequent changes all over the place so that e.g. debugfs present reasonable information about the world. - Drop the per-pin mux (*config) function in the pinmux_ops struct - I was afraid that this would start to be used for things totally unrelated to muxing, we can introduce that to the generic struct pinctrl_ops if needed. I want to keep muxing orthogonal to other pin control subjects and not mix these things up. ChangeLog v6->v7: - Make it possible to have several map entries matching the same device, pin controller and function, but using a different group, and alter the semantics so that pinmux_get() will pick all matching map entries, and store the associated groups in a list. The list will then be iterated over at pinmux_enable()/pinmux_disable() and corresponding driver functions called for each defined group. Notice that you're only allowed to map multiple *groups* to the same { device, pin controller, function } triplet, attempts to map the same device to multiple pin controllers will for example fail. This is hopefully the crucial feature requested by Stephen Warren. - Add a pinmux hogging field to the pinmux mapping entries, and enable the pinmux core to hog pinmux map entries. This currently only works for pinmuxes without assigned devices as it looks now, but with device trees we can look up the corresponding struct device * entries when we register the pinmux driver, and have it hog each pinmux map in turn, for a simple approach to non-dynamic pin muxing. This addresses an issue from Grant Likely that the machine should take care of as much of the pinmux setup as possible, not the devices. By supplying a list of hogs, it can now instruct the core to take care of any static mappings. - Switch pinmux group retrieveal function to grab an array of strings representing the groups rather than an array of unsigned and rewrite accordingly. - Alter debugfs to show the grouplist handled by each pinmux. Also add a list of hogs. - Dynamically allocate a struct pinmux at pinmux_get() and free it at pinmux_put(), then add these to the global list of pinmuxes active as we go along. - Go over the list of pinmux maps at pinmux_get() time and repeatedly apply matches. - Retrieve applicable groups per function from the driver as a string array rather than a unsigned array, then lookup the enumerators. - Make the device to pinmux map a singleton - only allow the mapping table to be registered once and even tag the registration function with __init so it surely won't be abused. - Create a separate debugfs file to view the pinmux map at runtime. - Introduce a spin lock to the pin descriptor struct, lock it when modifying pin status entries. Reported by Stijn Devriendt. - Fix up the documentation after review from Stephen Warren. - Let the GPIO ranges give names as const char * instead of some fixed-length string. - add a function to unregister GPIO ranges to mirror the registration function. - Privatized the struct pinctrl_device and removed it from the <linux/pinctrl/pinctrl.h> API, the drivers do not need to know the members of this struct. It is now in the local header "core.h". - Rename the concept of "anonymous" mux maps to "system" muxes and add convenience macros and documentation. ChangeLog v7->v8: - Delete the leftover pinmux_config() function from the <linux/pinctrl/pinmux.h> header. - Fix a race condition found by Stijn Devriendt in pin_request() ChangeLog v8->v9: - Drop the bus_type and the sysfs attributes and all, we're not on the clear about how this should be used for e.g. userspace interfaces so let us save this for the future. - Use the right name in MAINTAINERS, PIN CONTROL rather than PINMUX - Don't kfree() the device state holder, let the .remove() callback handle this. - Fix up numerous kerneldoc headers to have one line for the function description and more verbose documentation below the parameters ChangeLog v9->v10: - pinctrl: EXPORT_SYMBOL needs export.h, folded in a patch from Steven Rothwell - fix pinctrl_register error handling, folded in a patch from Axel Lin - Various fixes to documentation text so that it's consistent. - Removed pointless comment from drivers/Kconfig - Removed dependency on SYSFS since we removed the bus in v9. - Renamed hopelessly abbreviated pctldev_* functions to the more verbose pinctrl_dev_* - Drop mutex properly when looking up GPIO ranges - Return NULL instead of ERR_PTR() errors on registration of pin controllers, using cast pointers is fragile. We can live without the detailed error codes for sure. Cc: Stijn Devriendt <highguy@gmail.com> Cc: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> Cc: Russell King <linux@arm.linux.org.uk> Acked-by: Grant Likely <grant.likely@secretlab.ca> Acked-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@nvidia.com> Tested-by: Barry Song <21cnbao@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
2011-05-03 01:50:54 +07:00
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL) += core.o pinctrl-utils.o
drivers: create a pin control subsystem This creates a subsystem for handling of pin control devices. These are devices that control different aspects of package pins. Currently it handles pinmuxing, i.e. assigning electronic functions to groups of pins on primarily PGA and BGA type of chip packages which are common in embedded systems. The plan is to also handle other I/O pin control aspects such as biasing, driving, input properties such as schmitt-triggering, load capacitance etc within this subsystem, to remove a lot of ARM arch code as well as feature-creepy GPIO drivers which are implementing the same thing over and over again. This is being done to depopulate the arch/arm/* directory of such custom drivers and try to abstract the infrastructure they all need. See the Documentation/pinctrl.txt file that is part of this patch for more details. ChangeLog v1->v2: - Various minor fixes from Joe's and Stephens review comments - Added a pinmux_config() that can invoke custom configuration with arbitrary data passed in or out to/from the pinmux driver ChangeLog v2->v3: - Renamed subsystem folder to "pinctrl" since we will likely want to keep other pin control such as biasing in this subsystem too, so let us keep to something generic even though we're mainly doing pinmux now. - As a consequence, register pins as an abstract entity separate from the pinmux. The muxing functions will claim pins out of the pin pool and make sure they do not collide. Pins can now be named by the pinctrl core. - Converted the pin lookup from a static array into a radix tree, I agreed with Grant Likely to try to avoid any static allocation (which is crap for device tree stuff) so I just rewrote this to be dynamic, just like irq number descriptors. The platform-wide definition of number of pins goes away - this is now just the sum total of the pins registered to the subsystem. - Make sure mappings with only a function name and no device works properly. ChangeLog v3->v4: - Define a number space per controller instead of globally, Stephen and Grant requested the same thing so now maps need to define target controller, and the radix tree of pin descriptors is a property on each pin controller device. - Add a compulsory pinctrl device entry to the pinctrl mapping table. This must match the pinctrl device, like "pinctrl.0" - Split the file core.c in two: core.c and pinmux.c where the latter carry all pinmux stuff, the core is for generic pin control, and use local headers to access functionality between files. It is now possible to implement a "blank" pin controller without pinmux capabilities. This split will make new additions like pindrive.c, pinbias.c etc possible for combined drivers and chunks of functionality which is a GoodThing(TM). - Rewrite the interaction with the GPIO subsystem - the pin controller descriptor now handles this by defining an offset into the GPIO numberspace for its handled pin range. This is used to look up the apropriate pin controller for a GPIO pin. Then that specific GPIO range is matched 1-1 for the target controller instance. - Fixed a number of review comments from Joe Perches. - Broke out a header file pinctrl.h for the core pin handling stuff that will be reused by other stuff than pinmux. - Fixed some erroneous EXPORT() stuff. - Remove mispatched U300 Kconfig and Makefile entries - Fixed a number of review comments from Stephen Warren, not all of them - still WIP. But I think the new mapping that will specify which function goes to which pin mux controller address 50% of your concerns (else beat me up). ChangeLog v4->v5: - Defined a "position" for each function, so the pin controller now tracks a function in a certain position, and the pinmux maps define what position you want the function in. (Feedback from Stephen Warren and Sascha Hauer). - Since we now need to request a combined function+position from the machine mapping table that connect mux settings to drivers, it was extended with a position field and a name field. The name field is now used if you e.g. need to switch between two mux map settings at runtime. - Switched from a class device to using struct bus_type for this subsystem. Verified sysfs functionality: seems to work fine. (Feedback from Arnd Bergmann and Greg Kroah-Hartman) - Define a per pincontroller list of GPIO ranges from the GPIO pin space that can be handled by the pin controller. These can be added one by one at runtime. (Feedback from Barry Song) - Expanded documentation of regulator_[get|enable|disable|put] semantics. - Fixed a number of review comments from Barry Song. (Thanks!) ChangeLog v5->v6: - Create an abstract pin group concept that can sort pins into named and enumerated groups no matter what the use of these groups may be, one possible usecase is a group of pins being muxed in or so. The intention is however to also use these groups for other pin control activities. - Make it compulsory for pinmux functions to associate with at least one group, so the abstract pin group concept is used to define the groups of pins affected by a pinmux function. The pinmux driver interface has been altered so as to enforce a function to list applicable groups per function. - Provide an optional .group entry in the pinmux machine map so the map can select beteween different available groups to be used with a certain function. - Consequent changes all over the place so that e.g. debugfs present reasonable information about the world. - Drop the per-pin mux (*config) function in the pinmux_ops struct - I was afraid that this would start to be used for things totally unrelated to muxing, we can introduce that to the generic struct pinctrl_ops if needed. I want to keep muxing orthogonal to other pin control subjects and not mix these things up. ChangeLog v6->v7: - Make it possible to have several map entries matching the same device, pin controller and function, but using a different group, and alter the semantics so that pinmux_get() will pick all matching map entries, and store the associated groups in a list. The list will then be iterated over at pinmux_enable()/pinmux_disable() and corresponding driver functions called for each defined group. Notice that you're only allowed to map multiple *groups* to the same { device, pin controller, function } triplet, attempts to map the same device to multiple pin controllers will for example fail. This is hopefully the crucial feature requested by Stephen Warren. - Add a pinmux hogging field to the pinmux mapping entries, and enable the pinmux core to hog pinmux map entries. This currently only works for pinmuxes without assigned devices as it looks now, but with device trees we can look up the corresponding struct device * entries when we register the pinmux driver, and have it hog each pinmux map in turn, for a simple approach to non-dynamic pin muxing. This addresses an issue from Grant Likely that the machine should take care of as much of the pinmux setup as possible, not the devices. By supplying a list of hogs, it can now instruct the core to take care of any static mappings. - Switch pinmux group retrieveal function to grab an array of strings representing the groups rather than an array of unsigned and rewrite accordingly. - Alter debugfs to show the grouplist handled by each pinmux. Also add a list of hogs. - Dynamically allocate a struct pinmux at pinmux_get() and free it at pinmux_put(), then add these to the global list of pinmuxes active as we go along. - Go over the list of pinmux maps at pinmux_get() time and repeatedly apply matches. - Retrieve applicable groups per function from the driver as a string array rather than a unsigned array, then lookup the enumerators. - Make the device to pinmux map a singleton - only allow the mapping table to be registered once and even tag the registration function with __init so it surely won't be abused. - Create a separate debugfs file to view the pinmux map at runtime. - Introduce a spin lock to the pin descriptor struct, lock it when modifying pin status entries. Reported by Stijn Devriendt. - Fix up the documentation after review from Stephen Warren. - Let the GPIO ranges give names as const char * instead of some fixed-length string. - add a function to unregister GPIO ranges to mirror the registration function. - Privatized the struct pinctrl_device and removed it from the <linux/pinctrl/pinctrl.h> API, the drivers do not need to know the members of this struct. It is now in the local header "core.h". - Rename the concept of "anonymous" mux maps to "system" muxes and add convenience macros and documentation. ChangeLog v7->v8: - Delete the leftover pinmux_config() function from the <linux/pinctrl/pinmux.h> header. - Fix a race condition found by Stijn Devriendt in pin_request() ChangeLog v8->v9: - Drop the bus_type and the sysfs attributes and all, we're not on the clear about how this should be used for e.g. userspace interfaces so let us save this for the future. - Use the right name in MAINTAINERS, PIN CONTROL rather than PINMUX - Don't kfree() the device state holder, let the .remove() callback handle this. - Fix up numerous kerneldoc headers to have one line for the function description and more verbose documentation below the parameters ChangeLog v9->v10: - pinctrl: EXPORT_SYMBOL needs export.h, folded in a patch from Steven Rothwell - fix pinctrl_register error handling, folded in a patch from Axel Lin - Various fixes to documentation text so that it's consistent. - Removed pointless comment from drivers/Kconfig - Removed dependency on SYSFS since we removed the bus in v9. - Renamed hopelessly abbreviated pctldev_* functions to the more verbose pinctrl_dev_* - Drop mutex properly when looking up GPIO ranges - Return NULL instead of ERR_PTR() errors on registration of pin controllers, using cast pointers is fragile. We can live without the detailed error codes for sure. Cc: Stijn Devriendt <highguy@gmail.com> Cc: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com> Cc: Russell King <linux@arm.linux.org.uk> Acked-by: Grant Likely <grant.likely@secretlab.ca> Acked-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@nvidia.com> Tested-by: Barry Song <21cnbao@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
2011-05-03 01:50:54 +07:00
obj-$(CONFIG_PINMUX) += pinmux.o
pinctrl: add a pin config interface This add per-pin and per-group pin config interfaces for biasing, driving and other such electronic properties. The details of passed configurations are passed in an opaque unsigned long which may be dereferences to integer types, structs or lists on either side of the configuration interface. ChangeLog v1->v2: - Clear split of terminology: we now have pin controllers, and those may support two interfaces using vtables: pin multiplexing and pin configuration. - Break out pin configuration to its own C file, controllers may implement only config without mux, and vice versa, so keep each sub-functionality of pin controllers separate. Introduce CONFIG_PINCONF in Kconfig. - Implement some core logic around pin configuration in the pinconf.c file. - Remove UNKNOWN config states, these were just surplus baggage. - Remove FLOAT config state - HIGH_IMPEDANCE should be enough for everyone. - PIN_CONFIG_POWER_SOURCE added to handle switching the power supply for the pin logic between different sources - Explicit DISABLE config enums to turn schmitt-trigger, wakeup etc OFF. - Update documentation to reflect all the recent reasoning. ChangeLog v2->v3: - Twist API around to pass around arrays of config tuples instead of (param, value) pairs everywhere. - Explicit drive strength semantics for push/pull and similar drive modes, this shall be the number of drive stages vs nominal load impedance, which should match the actual electronics used in push/pull CMOS or TTY totempoles. - Drop load capacitance configuration - I probably don't know what I'm doing here so leave it out. - Drop PIN_CONFIG_INPUT_SCHMITT_OFF, instead the argument zero to PIN_CONFIG_INPUT_SCHMITT turns schmitt trigger off. - Drop PIN_CONFIG_NORMAL_POWER_MODE and have a well defined argument to PIN_CONFIG_LOW_POWER_MODE to get out of it instead. - Drop PIN_CONFIG_WAKEUP_ENABLE/DISABLE and just use PIN_CONFIG_WAKEUP with defined value zero to turn wakeup off. - Add PIN_CONFIG_INPUT_DEBOUNCE for configuring debounce time on input lines. - Fix a bug when we tried to configure pins for pin controllers without pinconf support. - Initialized debugfs properly so it works. - Initialize the mutex properly and lock around config tampering sections. - Check the return value from get_initial_config() properly. ChangeLog v3->v4: - Export the pin_config_get(), pin_config_set() and pin_config_group() functions. - Drop the entire concept of just getting initial config and keeping track of pin states internally, instead ask the pins what state they are in. Previous idea was plain wrong, if the device cannot keep track of its state, the driver should do it. - Drop the generic configuration layout, it seems this impose too much restriction on some pin controllers, so let them do things the way they want and split off support for generic config as an optional add-on. ChangeLog v4->v5: - Introduce two symmetric driver calls for group configuration, .pin_config_group_[get|set] and corresponding external calls. - Remove generic semantic meanings of return values from config calls, these belong in the generic config patch. Just pass the return value through instead. - Add a debugfs entry "pinconf-groups" to read status from group configuration only, also slam in a per-group debug callback in the pinconf_ops so custom drivers can display something meaningful for their pins. - Fix some dangling newline. - Drop dangling #else clause. - Update documentation to match the above. ChangeLog v5->v6: - Change to using a pin name as parameter for the [get|set]_config() functions, as suggested by Stephen Warren. This is more natural as names will be what a developer has access to in written documentation etc. ChangeLog v6->v7: - Refactor out by-pin and by-name get/set functions, only expose the by-name functions externally, expose the by-pin functions internally. - Show supported pin control functionality in the debugfs pinctrl-devices file. Acked-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
2011-10-19 23:14:33 +07:00
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCONF) += pinconf.o
ifeq ($(CONFIG_OF),y)
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL) += devicetree.o
endif
obj-$(CONFIG_GENERIC_PINCONF) += pinconf-generic.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_ABX500) += pinctrl-abx500.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_AB8500) += pinctrl-ab8500.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_AB8540) += pinctrl-ab8540.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_AB9540) += pinctrl-ab9540.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_AB8505) += pinctrl-ab8505.o
pinctrl: ADI PIN control driver for the GPIO controller on bf54x and bf60x. The new ADI GPIO2 controller was introduced since the BF548 and BF60x processors. It differs a lot from the old one on BF5xx processors. So, create a pinctrl driver under the pinctrl framework. - Define gpio ports and pin interrupt controllers as individual platform devices. - Register a pinctrl driver for the whole GPIO ports and pin interrupt devices. - Probe pint devices before port devices. Put device instances into the global gpio and pint lists. - Define peripheral, irq and gpio reservation bit masks for each gpio port as runtime resources. - Save and restore gpio port and pint status MMRs in syscore PM functions. - Create the plug-in subdrivers to hold the pinctrl soc data for bf54x and bf60x. Add soc data into struct adi_pinctrl. Initialize the soc data in pin controller probe function. Get the pin groups and functions via the soc data reference. - Call gpiochip_add_pin_range() in gpio device probe function to register range cross reference between gpio device and pin control device. - Get range by pinctrl_find_gpio_range_from_pin(), find gpio_port object by container_of() and find adi_pinctrl by pin control device name. - Handle peripheral and gpio requests in pinctrl operation functions. - Demux gpio IRQs via the irq_domain created by each GPIO port. v2-changes: - Remove unlinke() directive. v3-changes: - Rename struct adi_pmx to adi_pinctrl. - Fix the comments of struct gpio_pint. - Remove unused pin_base in struct gpio_port. - Change pint_assign into bool type. - Add comments about the relationship between pint device and port device to the driver header. - Use BIT macro to shift bit. - Remove all bitmap reservation help functions. Inline reservation functions into the actual code. - Remove gpio and offset mutual reference help functions. - Remove all help functions to find gpio_port and adi_pinctrl structs. Get range by pinctrl_find_gpio_range_from_pin(), find gpio_port object by container_of() and find adi_pinctrl by pin control device name. - Pass bool type usage variable to port_setup help function. - Separate long bit operations into several lines and add comments. - Use debugfs to output all GPIO request information. - Avoid to set drvdata to NULL - Add explanation to function adi_gpio_init_int() - Call gpiochip_add_pin_range() in gpio device probe function to register range cross reference between gpio device and pin control device. - Remove the reference to pin control device from the gpio_port struct. Remove the reference list to gpio device from the adi_pinctrl struct. Replace the global adi_pinctrl list with adi_gpio_port_list. Walk through the gpio list to do power suspend and resume operations. - Remove the global GPIO base from struct adi_pinctrl, define pin base in the platform data for each GPIO port device. - Initialize adi_pinctrl_setup in arch_initcall(). - print the status of triggers, whether it is in GPIO mode, if it is flagged to be used as IRQ, etc in adi_pin_dbg_show(). - Create the plug-in subdrivers to hold the pinctrl soc data for bf54x and bf60x. Add soc data into struct adi_pinctrl. Initialize the soc data in pin controller probe function. Get the pin groups and functions via the soc data reference. v4-changes: - remove useless system_state checking. - replace dev_err with dev_warn in both irq and gpio pin cases. - comment on relationship between irq type and invert operation. - It is not necessary to check the reservation mode of the requested pin in IRQ chip operation. Remove the reservation map. - Use existing gpio/pinctrl subsystem debugfs files. Remove pinctrl-adi2 driver specific debugfs output. - Add linkport group and function information for bf60x. - Separate uart and ctsrts pins into 2 groups. - Separate APAPI and alternative ATAPI pins into 2 groups. Signed-off-by: Sonic Zhang <sonic.zhang@analog.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
2013-09-03 15:28:59 +07:00
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_ADI2) += pinctrl-adi2.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_AS3722) += pinctrl-as3722.o
pinctrl: ADI PIN control driver for the GPIO controller on bf54x and bf60x. The new ADI GPIO2 controller was introduced since the BF548 and BF60x processors. It differs a lot from the old one on BF5xx processors. So, create a pinctrl driver under the pinctrl framework. - Define gpio ports and pin interrupt controllers as individual platform devices. - Register a pinctrl driver for the whole GPIO ports and pin interrupt devices. - Probe pint devices before port devices. Put device instances into the global gpio and pint lists. - Define peripheral, irq and gpio reservation bit masks for each gpio port as runtime resources. - Save and restore gpio port and pint status MMRs in syscore PM functions. - Create the plug-in subdrivers to hold the pinctrl soc data for bf54x and bf60x. Add soc data into struct adi_pinctrl. Initialize the soc data in pin controller probe function. Get the pin groups and functions via the soc data reference. - Call gpiochip_add_pin_range() in gpio device probe function to register range cross reference between gpio device and pin control device. - Get range by pinctrl_find_gpio_range_from_pin(), find gpio_port object by container_of() and find adi_pinctrl by pin control device name. - Handle peripheral and gpio requests in pinctrl operation functions. - Demux gpio IRQs via the irq_domain created by each GPIO port. v2-changes: - Remove unlinke() directive. v3-changes: - Rename struct adi_pmx to adi_pinctrl. - Fix the comments of struct gpio_pint. - Remove unused pin_base in struct gpio_port. - Change pint_assign into bool type. - Add comments about the relationship between pint device and port device to the driver header. - Use BIT macro to shift bit. - Remove all bitmap reservation help functions. Inline reservation functions into the actual code. - Remove gpio and offset mutual reference help functions. - Remove all help functions to find gpio_port and adi_pinctrl structs. Get range by pinctrl_find_gpio_range_from_pin(), find gpio_port object by container_of() and find adi_pinctrl by pin control device name. - Pass bool type usage variable to port_setup help function. - Separate long bit operations into several lines and add comments. - Use debugfs to output all GPIO request information. - Avoid to set drvdata to NULL - Add explanation to function adi_gpio_init_int() - Call gpiochip_add_pin_range() in gpio device probe function to register range cross reference between gpio device and pin control device. - Remove the reference to pin control device from the gpio_port struct. Remove the reference list to gpio device from the adi_pinctrl struct. Replace the global adi_pinctrl list with adi_gpio_port_list. Walk through the gpio list to do power suspend and resume operations. - Remove the global GPIO base from struct adi_pinctrl, define pin base in the platform data for each GPIO port device. - Initialize adi_pinctrl_setup in arch_initcall(). - print the status of triggers, whether it is in GPIO mode, if it is flagged to be used as IRQ, etc in adi_pin_dbg_show(). - Create the plug-in subdrivers to hold the pinctrl soc data for bf54x and bf60x. Add soc data into struct adi_pinctrl. Initialize the soc data in pin controller probe function. Get the pin groups and functions via the soc data reference. v4-changes: - remove useless system_state checking. - replace dev_err with dev_warn in both irq and gpio pin cases. - comment on relationship between irq type and invert operation. - It is not necessary to check the reservation mode of the requested pin in IRQ chip operation. Remove the reservation map. - Use existing gpio/pinctrl subsystem debugfs files. Remove pinctrl-adi2 driver specific debugfs output. - Add linkport group and function information for bf60x. - Separate uart and ctsrts pins into 2 groups. - Separate APAPI and alternative ATAPI pins into 2 groups. Signed-off-by: Sonic Zhang <sonic.zhang@analog.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
2013-09-03 15:28:59 +07:00
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_BF54x) += pinctrl-adi2-bf54x.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_BF60x) += pinctrl-adi2-bf60x.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_AT91) += pinctrl-at91.o
pinctrl: add bcm2835 driver The BCM2835 GPIO module is a combined GPIO controller, (GPIO) interrupt controller, and pinmux/control device. Original driver by Simon Arlott. Rewrite including GPIO chip device by Chris Boot. Upstreaming changes by Stephen Warren: * Wrote DT binding documentation. * Changed brcm,function to an integer to more directly match the datasheet, and to match brcm,pins being an integer. * Implemented pull-up/down pin config. * Removed read-only DT property and related code. The restriction this implemented are driven by the board, not the GPIO HW block, so don't really make sense of a HW block binding, were in general incomplete (since they could only know about the few pins hard-coded into the Raspberry Pi B board design and not the uncommitted GPIOS), and are better represented simply by not writing incorrect data into pin configuration nodes. * Don't set GPIO_IN function select in gpio_request_enable() to avoid glitches; defer this to gpio_set_direction(). Consequently, removed empty bcm2835_pmx_gpio_request_enable(). * Simplified enabled_irq_map[]; make it explicitly 1 entry per bank. * Lifted use of enabled_irq_map[] outside the per-interrupt loop in IRQ handler, thus fixing an issue where the code was indexing into enabled_irq_map[] by intra-bank GPIO ID, not global GPIO ID. * Removed locking in IRQ handler, since all other code uses spin_lock_irqsave() and so guarantees it doesn't run concurrently with the handler. * Moved duplicated BUILD_BUG_ON()s into probe(). Also check size of bcm2835_gpio_pins[]. * Remove range-checking from bcm2835_pctl_get_groups_count() since we've decided to trust the pinctrl core. * Made bcm2835_pmx_gpio_disable_free() call bcm2835_pinctrl_fsel_set() directly for simplicity. * Fixed body of dt_free_map() to match latest dt_node_to_map(). * Removed GPIO ownership check from bcm2835_pmx_enable() since the pinctrl core owns doing this. * Made irq_chip and pinctrl_gpio_range .name == MODULE_NAME so it's more descriptive. * Simplified remove(); removed call to non-existent pinctrl_remove_gpio_range(), remove early return on error. * Don't force gpiochip's base to 0. Set gpio_range.base to gpiochip's base GPIO number. * Error-handling cleanups in probe(). * Switched to module_platform_driver() rather than open-coding. * Made pin, group, and function names lower-case. * s/broadcom/brcm/ in DT property names. * s/2708/2835/. * Fixed a couple minor checkpatch warnings, and other minor cleanup. Signed-off-by: Simon Arlott <simon@fire.lp0.eu> Signed-off-by: Chris Boot <bootc@bootc.net> Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
2012-09-28 11:10:11 +07:00
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_BCM2835) += pinctrl-bcm2835.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_BAYTRAIL) += pinctrl-baytrail.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_BCM281XX) += pinctrl-bcm281xx.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX) += pinctrl-imx.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX1_CORE) += pinctrl-imx1-core.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX27) += pinctrl-imx27.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX35) += pinctrl-imx35.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX50) += pinctrl-imx50.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX51) += pinctrl-imx51.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX53) += pinctrl-imx53.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX6Q) += pinctrl-imx6q.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX6Q) += pinctrl-imx6dl.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX6SL) += pinctrl-imx6sl.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX6SX) += pinctrl-imx6sx.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_FALCON) += pinctrl-falcon.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_MXS) += pinctrl-mxs.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX23) += pinctrl-imx23.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX25) += pinctrl-imx25.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IMX28) += pinctrl-imx28.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_MSM) += pinctrl-msm.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_APQ8064) += pinctrl-apq8064.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_IPQ8064) += pinctrl-ipq8064.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_MSM8X74) += pinctrl-msm8x74.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_NOMADIK) += pinctrl-nomadik.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_STN8815) += pinctrl-nomadik-stn8815.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_DB8500) += pinctrl-nomadik-db8500.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_DB8540) += pinctrl-nomadik-db8540.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_PALMAS) += pinctrl-palmas.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_ROCKCHIP) += pinctrl-rockchip.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_SINGLE) += pinctrl-single.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_SIRF) += sirf/
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_TEGRA) += pinctrl-tegra.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_TEGRA20) += pinctrl-tegra20.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_TEGRA30) += pinctrl-tegra30.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_TEGRA114) += pinctrl-tegra114.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_TEGRA124) += pinctrl-tegra124.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_TZ1090) += pinctrl-tz1090.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_TZ1090_PDC) += pinctrl-tz1090-pdc.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_U300) += pinctrl-u300.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_COH901) += pinctrl-coh901.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_SAMSUNG) += pinctrl-samsung.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_EXYNOS) += pinctrl-exynos.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_EXYNOS5440) += pinctrl-exynos5440.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_S3C24XX) += pinctrl-s3c24xx.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_S3C64XX) += pinctrl-s3c64xx.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_XWAY) += pinctrl-xway.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_LANTIQ) += pinctrl-lantiq.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_TB10X) += pinctrl-tb10x.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_ST) += pinctrl-st.o
obj-$(CONFIG_PINCTRL_VF610) += pinctrl-vf610.o
obj-$(CONFIG_ARCH_BERLIN) += berlin/
obj-$(CONFIG_PLAT_ORION) += mvebu/
obj-$(CONFIG_ARCH_SHMOBILE) += sh-pfc/
obj-$(CONFIG_SUPERH) += sh-pfc/
obj-$(CONFIG_PLAT_SPEAR) += spear/
obj-$(CONFIG_ARCH_VT8500) += vt8500/
obj-$(CONFIG_ARCH_SUNXI) += sunxi/