* Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag @ 2014-02-10 14:33 Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-10 14:50 ` Alexandre Courbot 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-10 14:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-gpio; +Cc: Linus Walleij, Alexandre Courbot, Stephen Warren Hello everybody, While working on Dt support for a driver that uses GPIO I came to ponder about the correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag. I'm bringing the question to the mailing list to get feedback. When a device has an active low input, the fact that the input is active low is a property of the device, and thus known to the driver. On the other hand, if an inverter is present on the board, that information isn't known to device drivers and need to be expressed in DT. Does the active low flag express the latter only, or both of them ? To ask the question differently, should the low flag model the inverter inside the device, known to the device driver, effectively moving handling of that inverter out of the device driver to the core code, or should it stop at the device boundary and only model the board ? As an example, if my device datasheet states that the reset input is active low, an no inverter is present on the GPIO line, should I set the GPIO active low flag in DT and set the GPIO value to 1 in software (assuming I use the gpiod_* API) to make the reset signal active, or should I set the GPIO active high flag in DT and the the GPIO value to 0 in software ? Let's also keep in mind that devices can have programmable polarities for inputs connected to GPIO-driven signals, in which case the internal polarity inversion is dynamic and can't be expressed in the GPIO propery in DT. -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-10 14:33 Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-10 14:50 ` Alexandre Courbot 2014-02-10 15:13 ` Laurent Pinchart 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Alexandre Courbot @ 2014-02-10 14:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laurent Pinchart Cc: linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij, Stephen Warren Hi Laurent, On Mon, Feb 10, 2014 at 11:33 PM, Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@ideasonboard.com> wrote: > Hello everybody, > > While working on Dt support for a driver that uses GPIO I came to ponder about > the correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag. I'm bringing the question to > the mailing list to get feedback. > > When a device has an active low input, the fact that the input is active low > is a property of the device, and thus known to the driver. On the other hand, > if an inverter is present on the board, that information isn't known to device > drivers and need to be expressed in DT. > > Does the active low flag express the latter only, or both of them ? To ask the > question differently, should the low flag model the inverter inside the > device, known to the device driver, effectively moving handling of that > inverter out of the device driver to the core code, or should it stop at the > device boundary and only model the board ? The intent behind the current behavior of the gpiod interface is to avoid the need for code like this: if (pb->enable_gpio_flags & PWM_BACKLIGHT_GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW) gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 0); else gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); which could simply be replaced by: gpiod_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); and the GPIO framework will invert the signal if needed according to the active low property of the GPIO. This behavior is based on the assumption that the active low flag represents an inverter present on the board, and thus unknown to the device driver. Now I just hope this assumption is correct. On the other hand I'm not sure I would understand the need for it if it were to model a property of the device, as the driver would be aware of it anyway, and thus should not need to be told about it explicitly. > As an example, if my device datasheet states that the reset input is active > low, an no inverter is present on the GPIO line, should I set the GPIO active > low flag in DT and set the GPIO value to 1 in software (assuming I use the > gpiod_* API) to make the reset signal active, or should I set the GPIO active > high flag in DT and the the GPIO value to 0 in software ? If your datasheet explicitly states that the reset input is active low, then this fact should be captured by the compatible property already (since the active low status is true for each and every compatible device) and I don't think your node would need to state it in addition. Unless, of course, there is an inverter on the way. This is my understanding but let's see what others have to say and let's also make sure to update the documentation to lift the ambiguity. :) Alex. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-10 14:50 ` Alexandre Courbot @ 2014-02-10 15:13 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-10 16:56 ` Stephen Warren 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-10 15:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alexandre Courbot Cc: linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij, Stephen Warren Hi Alexander, Thank you for your quick answer. On Monday 10 February 2014 23:50:40 Alexandre Courbot wrote: > On Mon, Feb 10, 2014 at 11:33 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > Hello everybody, > > > > While working on Dt support for a driver that uses GPIO I came to ponder > > about the correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag. I'm bringing the > > question to the mailing list to get feedback. > > > > When a device has an active low input, the fact that the input is active > > low is a property of the device, and thus known to the driver. On the > > other hand, if an inverter is present on the board, that information > > isn't known to device drivers and need to be expressed in DT. > > > > Does the active low flag express the latter only, or both of them ? To ask > > the question differently, should the low flag model the inverter inside > > the device, known to the device driver, effectively moving handling of > > that inverter out of the device driver to the core code, or should it > > stop at the device boundary and only model the board ? > > The intent behind the current behavior of the gpiod interface is to > avoid the need for code like this: > > if (pb->enable_gpio_flags & PWM_BACKLIGHT_GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW) > gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 0); > else > gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); > > which could simply be replaced by: > > gpiod_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); > > and the GPIO framework will invert the signal if needed according to > the active low property of the GPIO. Yes, I had got that so far. > This behavior is based on the assumption that the active low flag > represents an inverter present on the board, and thus unknown to the > device driver. Now I just hope this assumption is correct. On the > other hand I'm not sure I would understand the need for it if it were > to model a property of the device, as the driver would be aware of it > anyway, and thus should not need to be told about it explicitly. > > > As an example, if my device datasheet states that the reset input is > > active low, an no inverter is present on the GPIO line, should I set the > > GPIO active low flag in DT and set the GPIO value to 1 in software > > (assuming I use the gpiod_* API) to make the reset signal active, or > > should I set the GPIO active high flag in DT and the the GPIO value to 0 > > in software ? > > If your datasheet explicitly states that the reset input is active low, then > this fact should be captured by the compatible property already (since the > active low status is true for each and every compatible device) and I don't > think your node would need to state it in addition. Unless, of course, there > is an inverter on the way. Just to clarify. Any inverter on the board would of course need to be modeled in DT, using the active low/high flag. The inverter inside the device is indeed captured by the compatible property, so I would expect my driver to assert reset with gpiod_set_value(dev->reset, 0); and use the active high flag in DT. This will result in a low level on the reset pin, asserting the reset. If an inverter is then present on the board, the active low flag would be specified in DT, resulting in a high level on the input of the inverter and a low level on the reset pin, without any change to the driver. I think this is my preferred way of operation, as opposed to calling gpiod_set_value(dev->reset, 1); in the driver and setting the active low flag in DT when no inverter is present on the board and the active high flag when an inverter is present. Now, this should be documented, and device drivers will likely need to be reviewed. I'm pretty sure most devices with active low inputs currently use the active low flag in DT, in contradiction with the above. > This is my understanding but let's see what others have to say and let's > also make sure to update the documentation to lift the ambiguity. :) -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-10 15:13 ` Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-10 16:56 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-10 16:57 ` Stephen Warren 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-10 16:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laurent Pinchart, Alexandre Courbot Cc: linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij On 02/10/2014 08:13 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > Hi Alexander, > > Thank you for your quick answer. > > On Monday 10 February 2014 23:50:40 Alexandre Courbot wrote: >> On Mon, Feb 10, 2014 at 11:33 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>> Hello everybody, >>> >>> While working on Dt support for a driver that uses GPIO I came to ponder >>> about the correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag. I'm bringing the >>> question to the mailing list to get feedback. >>> >>> When a device has an active low input, the fact that the input is active >>> low is a property of the device, and thus known to the driver. On the >>> other hand, if an inverter is present on the board, that information >>> isn't known to device drivers and need to be expressed in DT. >>> >>> Does the active low flag express the latter only, or both of them ? To ask >>> the question differently, should the low flag model the inverter inside >>> the device, known to the device driver, effectively moving handling of >>> that inverter out of the device driver to the core code, or should it >>> stop at the device boundary and only model the board ? >> >> The intent behind the current behavior of the gpiod interface is to >> avoid the need for code like this: >> >> if (pb->enable_gpio_flags & PWM_BACKLIGHT_GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW) >> gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 0); >> else >> gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); >> >> which could simply be replaced by: >> >> gpiod_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); >> >> and the GPIO framework will invert the signal if needed according to >> the active low property of the GPIO. > > Yes, I had got that so far. > >> This behavior is based on the assumption that the active low flag >> represents an inverter present on the board, and thus unknown to the >> device driver. Now I just hope this assumption is correct. On the >> other hand I'm not sure I would understand the need for it if it were >> to model a property of the device, as the driver would be aware of it >> anyway, and thus should not need to be told about it explicitly. >> >>> As an example, if my device datasheet states that the reset input is >>> active low, an no inverter is present on the GPIO line, should I set the >>> GPIO active low flag in DT and set the GPIO value to 1 in software >>> (assuming I use the gpiod_* API) to make the reset signal active, or >>> should I set the GPIO active high flag in DT and the the GPIO value to 0 >>> in software ? >> >> If your datasheet explicitly states that the reset input is active low, then >> this fact should be captured by the compatible property already (since the >> active low status is true for each and every compatible device) and I don't >> think your node would need to state it in addition. Unless, of course, there >> is an inverter on the way. > > Just to clarify. > > Any inverter on the board would of course need to be modeled in DT, using the > active low/high flag. The inverter inside the device is indeed captured by the > compatible property, so I would expect my driver to assert reset with > > gpiod_set_value(dev->reset, 0); > > and use the active high flag in DT. I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal on the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most consistent with existing DT properties. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-10 16:56 ` Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-10 16:57 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-10 17:52 ` Laurent Pinchart 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-10 16:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laurent Pinchart, Alexandre Courbot Cc: linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: > On 02/10/2014 08:13 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >> Hi Alexander, >> >> Thank you for your quick answer. >> >> On Monday 10 February 2014 23:50:40 Alexandre Courbot wrote: >>> On Mon, Feb 10, 2014 at 11:33 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>>> Hello everybody, >>>> >>>> While working on Dt support for a driver that uses GPIO I came to ponder >>>> about the correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag. I'm bringing the >>>> question to the mailing list to get feedback. >>>> >>>> When a device has an active low input, the fact that the input is active >>>> low is a property of the device, and thus known to the driver. On the >>>> other hand, if an inverter is present on the board, that information >>>> isn't known to device drivers and need to be expressed in DT. >>>> >>>> Does the active low flag express the latter only, or both of them ? To ask >>>> the question differently, should the low flag model the inverter inside >>>> the device, known to the device driver, effectively moving handling of >>>> that inverter out of the device driver to the core code, or should it >>>> stop at the device boundary and only model the board ? >>> >>> The intent behind the current behavior of the gpiod interface is to >>> avoid the need for code like this: >>> >>> if (pb->enable_gpio_flags & PWM_BACKLIGHT_GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW) >>> gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 0); >>> else >>> gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); >>> >>> which could simply be replaced by: >>> >>> gpiod_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); >>> >>> and the GPIO framework will invert the signal if needed according to >>> the active low property of the GPIO. >> >> Yes, I had got that so far. >> >>> This behavior is based on the assumption that the active low flag >>> represents an inverter present on the board, and thus unknown to the >>> device driver. Now I just hope this assumption is correct. On the >>> other hand I'm not sure I would understand the need for it if it were >>> to model a property of the device, as the driver would be aware of it >>> anyway, and thus should not need to be told about it explicitly. >>> >>>> As an example, if my device datasheet states that the reset input is >>>> active low, an no inverter is present on the GPIO line, should I set the >>>> GPIO active low flag in DT and set the GPIO value to 1 in software >>>> (assuming I use the gpiod_* API) to make the reset signal active, or >>>> should I set the GPIO active high flag in DT and the the GPIO value to 0 >>>> in software ? >>> >>> If your datasheet explicitly states that the reset input is active low, then >>> this fact should be captured by the compatible property already (since the >>> active low status is true for each and every compatible device) and I don't >>> think your node would need to state it in addition. Unless, of course, there >>> is an inverter on the way. >> >> Just to clarify. >> >> Any inverter on the board would of course need to be modeled in DT, using the >> active low/high flag. The inverter inside the device is indeed captured by the >> compatible property, so I would expect my driver to assert reset with >> >> gpiod_set_value(dev->reset, 0); >> >> and use the active high flag in DT. > > I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal on > the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most > consistent with existing DT properties. (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account for any board-induced inversion) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-10 16:57 ` Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-10 17:52 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-10 23:04 ` Stephen Warren 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-10 17:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stephen Warren Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij Hi Stephen, On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: > On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: > > On 02/10/2014 08:13 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >> On Monday 10 February 2014 23:50:40 Alexandre Courbot wrote: > >>> On Mon, Feb 10, 2014 at 11:33 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >>>> Hello everybody, > >>>> > >>>> While working on Dt support for a driver that uses GPIO I came to > >>>> ponder about the correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag. I'm > >>>> bringing the question to the mailing list to get feedback. > >>>> > >>>> When a device has an active low input, the fact that the input is > >>>> active low is a property of the device, and thus known to the driver. > >>>> On the other hand, if an inverter is present on the board, that > >>>> information isn't known to device drivers and need to be expressed in > >>>> DT. > >>>> > >>>> Does the active low flag express the latter only, or both of them ? To > >>>> ask the question differently, should the low flag model the inverter > >>>> inside the device, known to the device driver, effectively moving > >>>> handling of that inverter out of the device driver to the core code, or > >>>> should it stop at the device boundary and only model the board ? > >>> > >>> The intent behind the current behavior of the gpiod interface is to > >>> > >>> avoid the need for code like this: > >>> if (pb->enable_gpio_flags & PWM_BACKLIGHT_GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW) > >>> gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 0); > >>> else > >>> gpio_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); > >>> > >>> which could simply be replaced by: > >>> gpiod_set_value(pb->enable_gpio, 1); > >>> > >>> and the GPIO framework will invert the signal if needed according to > >>> the active low property of the GPIO. > >> > >> Yes, I had got that so far. > >> > >>> This behavior is based on the assumption that the active low flag > >>> represents an inverter present on the board, and thus unknown to the > >>> device driver. Now I just hope this assumption is correct. On the > >>> other hand I'm not sure I would understand the need for it if it were > >>> to model a property of the device, as the driver would be aware of it > >>> anyway, and thus should not need to be told about it explicitly. > >>> > >>>> As an example, if my device datasheet states that the reset input is > >>>> active low, an no inverter is present on the GPIO line, should I set > >>>> the GPIO active low flag in DT and set the GPIO value to 1 in software > >>>> (assuming I use the gpiod_* API) to make the reset signal active, or > >>>> should I set the GPIO active high flag in DT and the the GPIO value to > >>>> 0 in software ? > >>> > >>> If your datasheet explicitly states that the reset input is active low, > >>> then this fact should be captured by the compatible property already > >>> (since the active low status is true for each and every compatible > >>> device) and I don't think your node would need to state it in addition. > >>> Unless, of course, there is an inverter on the way. > >> > >> Just to clarify. > >> > >> Any inverter on the board would of course need to be modeled in DT, using > >> the active low/high flag. The inverter inside the device is indeed > >> captured by the compatible property, so I would expect my driver to > >> assert reset with > >> > >> gpiod_set_value(dev->reset, 0); > >> > >> and use the active high flag in DT. > > > > I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal on > > the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most > > consistent with existing DT properties. > > (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account for > any board-induced inversion) Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to achieve a high level at the target device input pin, or the physical level at the GPIO source device output to assert the signal at the target device input pin ? The first case wouldn't take the receiver device internal inverter into account while the second case would. In the second case, how should we handle receiver devices that have configurable signal polarities (essentially enabling/disabling the internal inverter from a software-controller configuration) ? -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-10 17:52 ` Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-10 23:04 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-10 23:21 ` Laurent Pinchart 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-10 23:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laurent Pinchart Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij On 02/10/2014 10:52 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: >> On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: ... >>> I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal on >>> the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most >>> consistent with existing DT properties. >> >> (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account for >> any board-induced inversion) > > Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to achieve a > high level at the target device input pin, or the physical level at the GPIO > source device output to assert the signal at the target device input pin ? The > first case wouldn't take the receiver device internal inverter into account > while the second case would. In the second case, how should we handle receiver > devices that have configurable signal polarities (essentially > enabling/disabling the internal inverter from a software-controller > configuration) ? I would expect the flag to represent the physical level that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. I don't think we should make the level flag influence any kind of configurable level within the device; that's a separate orthogonal, but related, concept. It'd be best if the DT binding for the device either (a) provided a separate property to configure that, or (b) picked a single one of the configurable values, and documented that all DTs should assume that value. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-10 23:04 ` Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-10 23:21 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-12 16:50 ` Stephen Warren 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-10 23:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stephen Warren Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij Hi Stephen, On Monday 10 February 2014 16:04:30 Stephen Warren wrote: > On 02/10/2014 10:52 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: > >> On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: > ... > > >>> I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal on > >>> the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most > >>> consistent with existing DT properties. > >> > >> (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account for > >> any board-induced inversion) > > > > Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to > > achieve a high level at the target device input pin, or the physical > > level at the GPIO source device output to assert the signal at the target > > device input pin ? The first case wouldn't take the receiver device > > internal inverter into account while the second case would. In the second > > case, how should we handle receiver devices that have configurable signal > > polarities (essentially enabling/disabling the internal inverter from a > > software-controller configuration) ? > > I would expect the flag to represent the physical level that achieves (or > represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. I assume you mean "the physical level at the GPIO controller output". > I don't think we should make the level flag influence any kind of > configurable level within the device; that's a separate orthogonal, but > related, concept. It'd be best if the DT binding for the device either > (a) provided a separate property to configure that, or (b) picked a > single one of the configurable values, and documented that all DTs > should assume that value. Agreed. I've phrased my question incorrectly though. My concern with devices that have configurable input polarities is that the "physical level [at the GPIO controller output] that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device" depends on runtime configuration of the device, and is thus ill-defined. We could consider that the flag represents the physical level at the GPIO controller output that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device, for the default configuration of the device. The default configuration of the device would then need to be defined. I'm unsure whether the default configuration should be constant, or could depend on other DT properties. -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-10 23:21 ` Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-12 16:50 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-13 14:43 ` Laurent Pinchart 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-12 16:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laurent Pinchart Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij On 02/10/2014 04:21 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > Hi Stephen, > > On Monday 10 February 2014 16:04:30 Stephen Warren wrote: >> On 02/10/2014 10:52 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>> On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: >>>> On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: >> ... >> >>>>> I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal on >>>>> the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most >>>>> consistent with existing DT properties. >>>> >>>> (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account for >>>> any board-induced inversion) >>> >>> Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to >>> achieve a high level at the target device input pin, or the physical >>> level at the GPIO source device output to assert the signal at the target >>> device input pin ? The first case wouldn't take the receiver device >>> internal inverter into account while the second case would. In the second >>> case, how should we handle receiver devices that have configurable signal >>> polarities (essentially enabling/disabling the internal inverter from a >>> software-controller configuration) ? >> >> I would expect the flag to represent the physical level that achieves (or >> represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. > > I assume you mean "the physical level at the GPIO controller output". Yes. >> I don't think we should make the level flag influence any kind of >> configurable level within the device; that's a separate orthogonal, but >> related, concept. It'd be best if the DT binding for the device either >> (a) provided a separate property to configure that, or (b) picked a >> single one of the configurable values, and documented that all DTs >> should assume that value. > > Agreed. I've phrased my question incorrectly though. > > My concern with devices that have configurable input polarities is that the s/input/output/ I assume? > "physical level [at the GPIO controller output] that achieves (or represents, > for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device" depends on runtime > configuration of the device, and is thus ill-defined. I think for DT, we can define what the runtime state must be, as I mentioned above. > We could consider that the flag represents the physical level at the GPIO > controller output that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a logically > asserted value at the device, for the default configuration of the device. The > default configuration of the device would then need to be defined. I'm unsure > whether the default configuration should be constant, or could depend on other > DT properties. Either would work, so long as the exact meaning of the DT content was well-defined, and statically defined. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-12 16:50 ` Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-13 14:43 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-13 16:49 ` Stephen Warren 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-13 14:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stephen Warren Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij Hi Stephen, On Wednesday 12 February 2014 09:50:37 Stephen Warren wrote: > On 02/10/2014 04:21 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > On Monday 10 February 2014 16:04:30 Stephen Warren wrote: > >> On 02/10/2014 10:52 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >>> On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: > >>>> On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: > >> ... > >> > >>>>> I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal on > >>>>> the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most > >>>>> consistent with existing DT properties. > >>>> > >>>> (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account for > >>>> any board-induced inversion) > >>> > >>> Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to > >>> achieve a high level at the target device input pin, or the physical > >>> level at the GPIO source device output to assert the signal at the > >>> target device input pin ? The first case wouldn't take the receiver > >>> device internal inverter into account while the second case would. In > >>> the second case, how should we handle receiver devices that have > >>> configurable signal polarities (essentially enabling/disabling the > >>> internal inverter from a software-controller configuration) ? > >> > >> I would expect the flag to represent the physical level that achieves (or > >> represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. > > > > I assume you mean "the physical level at the GPIO controller output". > > Yes. > > >> I don't think we should make the level flag influence any kind of > >> configurable level within the device; that's a separate orthogonal, but > >> related, concept. It'd be best if the DT binding for the device either > >> (a) provided a separate property to configure that, or (b) picked a > >> single one of the configurable values, and documented that all DTs > >> should assume that value. > > > > Agreed. I've phrased my question incorrectly though. > > > > My concern with devices that have configurable input polarities is that > > the > > s/input/output/ I assume? No, I mean input. Think about video vertical/horizontal sync inputs, they usually have configurable polarities on the receiver side. In that case the physical level at the GPIO controller output that achieves a logically asserted value at the device depends on how the device is configured at runtime. Moving the input's internal inverter out of the GPIO flag would solve this problem in that the flag would instead represent the physical level at the GPIO controller output that achieves a high level at the device (option 'a'). That might be considered counterintuitive though. The other option ('b') I can think of is the one I mentioned, representing "the physical level at the GPIO controller output that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device, for the default configuration of the device" with the default configuration of the device defined in the DT bindings. Option 'b' is more complex in the sense that it requires expressing more information in the DT bindings. > > "physical level [at the GPIO controller output] that achieves (or > > represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device" depends > > on runtime configuration of the device, and is thus ill-defined. > > I think for DT, we can define what the runtime state must be, as I mentioned > above. > > > We could consider that the flag represents the physical level at the GPIO > > controller output that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a logically > > asserted value at the device, for the default configuration of the device. > > The default configuration of the device would then need to be defined. > > I'm unsure whether the default configuration should be constant, or could > > depend on other DT properties. > > Either would work, so long as the exact meaning of the DT content was well- > defined, and statically defined. -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-13 14:43 ` Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-13 16:49 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-14 23:48 ` Laurent Pinchart 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-13 16:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laurent Pinchart Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij On 02/13/2014 07:43 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > Hi Stephen, > > On Wednesday 12 February 2014 09:50:37 Stephen Warren wrote: >> On 02/10/2014 04:21 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>> On Monday 10 February 2014 16:04:30 Stephen Warren wrote: >>>> On 02/10/2014 10:52 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>>>> On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: >>>>>> On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: >>>> ... >>>> >>>>>>> I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal on >>>>>>> the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most >>>>>>> consistent with existing DT properties. >>>>>> >>>>>> (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account for >>>>>> any board-induced inversion) >>>>> >>>>> Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to >>>>> achieve a high level at the target device input pin, or the physical >>>>> level at the GPIO source device output to assert the signal at the >>>>> target device input pin ? The first case wouldn't take the receiver >>>>> device internal inverter into account while the second case would. In >>>>> the second case, how should we handle receiver devices that have >>>>> configurable signal polarities (essentially enabling/disabling the >>>>> internal inverter from a software-controller configuration) ? >>>> >>>> I would expect the flag to represent the physical level that achieves (or >>>> represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. >>> >>> I assume you mean "the physical level at the GPIO controller output". >> >> Yes. >> >>>> I don't think we should make the level flag influence any kind of >>>> configurable level within the device; that's a separate orthogonal, but >>>> related, concept. It'd be best if the DT binding for the device either >>>> (a) provided a separate property to configure that, or (b) picked a >>>> single one of the configurable values, and documented that all DTs >>>> should assume that value. >>> >>> Agreed. I've phrased my question incorrectly though. >>> >>> My concern with devices that have configurable input polarities is that >>> the >> >> s/input/output/ I assume? > > No, I mean input. OK, I guess I was thinking about GPIO inputs then; the same discussion applies in reverse. > Think about video vertical/horizontal sync inputs, they > usually have configurable polarities on the receiver side. In that case the > physical level at the GPIO controller output that achieves a logically > asserted value at the device depends on how the device is configured at > runtime. Sure. I think the GPIO specifier should specify the signal polarity required to get a logically asserted signal to the device. If the device can be configured to accept different signal polarities as logically asserted, then that must indeed be a separate DT property to the GPIO specifier, since the GPIO specifier's format and semantics are only meaningful (and parsable/interpretable) to the GPIO controller, and not the GPIO consumer. Similarly, for inputs to the GPIO controller, the GPIO specifier should specify the value at the GPIO controller too, and any configuration of the output polarity of the device should be a separate property of that device. The same argument applies to IRQs. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-13 16:49 ` Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-14 23:48 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-15 0:07 ` Stephen Warren 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-14 23:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stephen Warren Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij Hi Stephen, On Thursday 13 February 2014 09:49:57 Stephen Warren wrote: > On 02/13/2014 07:43 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > On Wednesday 12 February 2014 09:50:37 Stephen Warren wrote: > >> On 02/10/2014 04:21 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >>> On Monday 10 February 2014 16:04:30 Stephen Warren wrote: > >>>> On 02/10/2014 10:52 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >>>>> On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: > >>>>>> On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: > >>>> ... > >>>> > >>>>>>> I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal > >>>>>>> on the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most > >>>>>>> consistent with existing DT properties. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account > >>>>>> for any board-induced inversion) > >>>>> > >>>>> Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to > >>>>> achieve a high level at the target device input pin, or the physical > >>>>> level at the GPIO source device output to assert the signal at the > >>>>> target device input pin ? The first case wouldn't take the receiver > >>>>> device internal inverter into account while the second case would. In > >>>>> the second case, how should we handle receiver devices that have > >>>>> configurable signal polarities (essentially enabling/disabling the > >>>>> internal inverter from a software-controller configuration) ? > >>>> > >>>> I would expect the flag to represent the physical level that achieves > >>>> (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. > >>> > >>> I assume you mean "the physical level at the GPIO controller output". > >> > >> Yes. > >> > >>>> I don't think we should make the level flag influence any kind of > >>>> configurable level within the device; that's a separate orthogonal, but > >>>> related, concept. It'd be best if the DT binding for the device either > >>>> (a) provided a separate property to configure that, or (b) picked a > >>>> single one of the configurable values, and documented that all DTs > >>>> should assume that value. > >>> > >>> Agreed. I've phrased my question incorrectly though. > >>> > >>> My concern with devices that have configurable input polarities is that > >>> the > >> > >> s/input/output/ I assume? > > > > No, I mean input. > > OK, I guess I was thinking about GPIO inputs then; the same discussion > applies in reverse. > > > Think about video vertical/horizontal sync inputs, they usually have > > configurable polarities on the receiver side. In that case the physical > > level at the GPIO controller output that achieves a logically asserted > > value at the device depends on how the device is configured at runtime. > > Sure. > > I think the GPIO specifier should specify the signal polarity required > to get a logically asserted signal to the device. If the device can be > configured to accept different signal polarities as logically asserted, > then that must indeed be a separate DT property to the GPIO specifier, > since the GPIO specifier's format and semantics are only meaningful (and > parsable/interpretable) to the GPIO controller, and not the GPIO consumer. Agreed, but that's not my point (or maybe I've just not understood that you got my point). The small detail that made me concerned in the first place is that, when the device input polarity is configurable, the "logically asserted signal" state becomes dynamic. How do we define the DT GPIO polarity in that case ? Let me take a (slightly made up) example. Let's assume a chip with a control input signal connected to a GPIO output of an SoC without any inverter on the board. The input polarity is runtime configurable (through I2C for instance). The chip has two modes of operation (USB host or USB function for instance, or ethernet link speed, ...), and for some reason, we need the input to be active high in mode A and active low in mode B. This is handled in the chip device driver that configures the input polarity based on the mode. The chip DT bindings will have a property that contains a reference to the GPIO connected to the control input, and a flag to set the GPIO polarity. We want that flag to express the physical level at the GPIO source to achieve an asserted level at the chip input. That's active high in mode A and active low in mode B (and would be the opposite if we had an inverter on the board). Now, as the mode of operation is fully dynamic, what value should the DT flag have (assuming there's no default mode from a chip point of view) ? > Similarly, for inputs to the GPIO controller, the GPIO specifier should > specify the value at the GPIO controller too, and any configuration of > the output polarity of the device should be a separate property of that > device. > > The same argument applies to IRQs. -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-14 23:48 ` Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-15 0:07 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-15 0:20 ` Laurent Pinchart 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-15 0:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laurent Pinchart Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij On 02/14/2014 04:48 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > Hi Stephen, > > On Thursday 13 February 2014 09:49:57 Stephen Warren wrote: >> On 02/13/2014 07:43 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>> On Wednesday 12 February 2014 09:50:37 Stephen Warren wrote: >>>> On 02/10/2014 04:21 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>>>> On Monday 10 February 2014 16:04:30 Stephen Warren wrote: >>>>>> On 02/10/2014 10:52 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>>>>>> On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: >>>>>>>> On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: >>>>>> ... >>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal >>>>>>>>> on the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most >>>>>>>>> consistent with existing DT properties. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account >>>>>>>> for any board-induced inversion) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to >>>>>>> achieve a high level at the target device input pin, or the physical >>>>>>> level at the GPIO source device output to assert the signal at the >>>>>>> target device input pin ? The first case wouldn't take the receiver >>>>>>> device internal inverter into account while the second case would. In >>>>>>> the second case, how should we handle receiver devices that have >>>>>>> configurable signal polarities (essentially enabling/disabling the >>>>>>> internal inverter from a software-controller configuration) ? >>>>>> >>>>>> I would expect the flag to represent the physical level that achieves >>>>>> (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. >>>>> >>>>> I assume you mean "the physical level at the GPIO controller output". >>>> >>>> Yes. >>>> >>>>>> I don't think we should make the level flag influence any kind of >>>>>> configurable level within the device; that's a separate orthogonal, but >>>>>> related, concept. It'd be best if the DT binding for the device either >>>>>> (a) provided a separate property to configure that, or (b) picked a >>>>>> single one of the configurable values, and documented that all DTs >>>>>> should assume that value. >>>>> >>>>> Agreed. I've phrased my question incorrectly though. >>>>> >>>>> My concern with devices that have configurable input polarities is that >>>>> the >>>> >>>> s/input/output/ I assume? >>> >>> No, I mean input. >> >> OK, I guess I was thinking about GPIO inputs then; the same discussion >> applies in reverse. >> >>> Think about video vertical/horizontal sync inputs, they usually have >>> configurable polarities on the receiver side. In that case the physical >>> level at the GPIO controller output that achieves a logically asserted >>> value at the device depends on how the device is configured at runtime. >> >> Sure. >> >> I think the GPIO specifier should specify the signal polarity required >> to get a logically asserted signal to the device. If the device can be >> configured to accept different signal polarities as logically asserted, >> then that must indeed be a separate DT property to the GPIO specifier, >> since the GPIO specifier's format and semantics are only meaningful (and >> parsable/interpretable) to the GPIO controller, and not the GPIO consumer. > > Agreed, but that's not my point (or maybe I've just not understood that you > got my point). The small detail that made me concerned in the first place is > that, when the device input polarity is configurable, the "logically asserted > signal" state becomes dynamic. How do we define the DT GPIO polarity in that > case ? Pick whichever polarity you want. Write that polarity into the GPIO specifier's flags. If there's an inverter on the board between the GPIO controller pin and the remote device pin, you need an extra property in the device to specify how to program the polarity of the signal at the device end too. Perhaps the following will make my thoughts clearer: http://www.spinics.net/lists/arm-kernel/msg307927.html [PATCH 1/2] mfd: palmas: support IRQ inversion at the board level http://www.spinics.net/lists/arm-kernel/msg307926.html [PATCH 2/2] ARM: tegra: fix Dalmore PMIC IRQ polarity > Let me take a (slightly made up) example. Let's assume a chip with a control > input signal connected to a GPIO output of an SoC without any inverter on the > board. The input polarity is runtime configurable (through I2C for instance). > The chip has two modes of operation (USB host or USB function for instance, or > ethernet link speed, ...), and for some reason, we need the input to be active > high in mode A and active low in mode B. This is handled in the chip device > driver that configures the input polarity based on the mode. Oh, if you're talking about fiddling around at run-time, then that's just something the driver has to deal with internally. In that case, let's just make the GPIO active-high in DT. When the driver programs the device into whatever mode requires it to be active-low, the driver needs to be written to set that GPIO value correctly. I don't think DT has any influence on this at all, since DT is about a static setup, whereas your use-case is dynamic. > The chip DT bindings will have a property that contains a reference to the > GPIO connected to the control input, and a flag to set the GPIO polarity. We > want that flag to express the physical level at the GPIO source to achieve an > asserted level at the chip input. That's active high in mode A and active low > in mode B (and would be the opposite if we had an inverter on the board). Now, > as the mode of operation is fully dynamic, what value should the DT flag have > (assuming there's no default mode from a chip point of view) ? > >> Similarly, for inputs to the GPIO controller, the GPIO specifier should >> specify the value at the GPIO controller too, and any configuration of >> the output polarity of the device should be a separate property of that >> device. >> >> The same argument applies to IRQs. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-15 0:07 ` Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-15 0:20 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-18 17:58 ` Stephen Warren 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-15 0:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stephen Warren Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij Hi Stephen, On Friday 14 February 2014 17:07:32 Stephen Warren wrote: > On 02/14/2014 04:48 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > On Thursday 13 February 2014 09:49:57 Stephen Warren wrote: > >> On 02/13/2014 07:43 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >>> On Wednesday 12 February 2014 09:50:37 Stephen Warren wrote: > >>>> On 02/10/2014 04:21 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >>>>> On Monday 10 February 2014 16:04:30 Stephen Warren wrote: > >>>>>> On 02/10/2014 10:52 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >>>>>>> On Monday 10 February 2014 09:57:43 Stephen Warren wrote: > >>>>>>>> On 02/10/2014 09:56 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: > >>>>>> ... > >>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> I think the flag should represent the physical level of the signal > >>>>>>>>> on the board at the device pin. I'm pretty sure that's what's most > >>>>>>>>> consistent with existing DT properties. > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> (That would have to be the GPIO source device, in order to account > >>>>>>>> for any board-induced inversion) > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> Would that be the physical level at the GPIO source device output to > >>>>>>> achieve a high level at the target device input pin, or the physical > >>>>>>> level at the GPIO source device output to assert the signal at the > >>>>>>> target device input pin ? The first case wouldn't take the receiver > >>>>>>> device internal inverter into account while the second case would. > >>>>>>> In the second case, how should we handle receiver devices that have > >>>>>>> configurable signal polarities (essentially enabling/disabling the > >>>>>>> internal inverter from a software-controller configuration) ? > >>>>>> > >>>>>> I would expect the flag to represent the physical level that achieves > >>>>>> (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. > >>>>> > >>>>> I assume you mean "the physical level at the GPIO controller output". > >>>> > >>>> Yes. > >>>> > >>>>>> I don't think we should make the level flag influence any kind of > >>>>>> configurable level within the device; that's a separate orthogonal, > >>>>>> but related, concept. It'd be best if the DT binding for the device > >>>>>> either (a) provided a separate property to configure that, or (b) > >>>>>> picked a single one of the configurable values, and documented that > >>>>>> all DTs should assume that value. > >>>>> > >>>>> Agreed. I've phrased my question incorrectly though. > >>>>> > >>>>> My concern with devices that have configurable input polarities is > >>>>> that the > >>>> > >>>> s/input/output/ I assume? > >>> > >>> No, I mean input. > >> > >> OK, I guess I was thinking about GPIO inputs then; the same discussion > >> applies in reverse. > >> > >>> Think about video vertical/horizontal sync inputs, they usually have > >>> configurable polarities on the receiver side. In that case the physical > >>> level at the GPIO controller output that achieves a logically asserted > >>> value at the device depends on how the device is configured at runtime. > >> > >> Sure. > >> > >> I think the GPIO specifier should specify the signal polarity required > >> to get a logically asserted signal to the device. If the device can be > >> configured to accept different signal polarities as logically asserted, > >> then that must indeed be a separate DT property to the GPIO specifier, > >> since the GPIO specifier's format and semantics are only meaningful (and > >> parsable/interpretable) to the GPIO controller, and not the GPIO > >> consumer. > > > > Agreed, but that's not my point (or maybe I've just not understood that > > you > > got my point). The small detail that made me concerned in the first place > > is that, when the device input polarity is configurable, the "logically > > asserted signal" state becomes dynamic. How do we define the DT GPIO > > polarity in that case ? > > Pick whichever polarity you want. Write that polarity into the GPIO > specifier's flags. If there's an inverter on the board between the GPIO > controller pin and the remote device pin, you need an extra property in > the device to specify how to program the polarity of the signal at the > device end too. > > Perhaps the following will make my thoughts clearer: > > http://www.spinics.net/lists/arm-kernel/msg307927.html > [PATCH 1/2] mfd: palmas: support IRQ inversion at the board level > > http://www.spinics.net/lists/arm-kernel/msg307926.html > [PATCH 2/2] ARM: tegra: fix Dalmore PMIC IRQ polarity > > > Let me take a (slightly made up) example. Let's assume a chip with a > > control input signal connected to a GPIO output of an SoC without any > > inverter on the board. The input polarity is runtime configurable > > (through I2C for instance). The chip has two modes of operation (USB host > > or USB function for instance, or ethernet link speed, ...), and for some > > reason, we need the input to be active high in mode A and active low in > > mode B. This is handled in the chip device driver that configures the > > input polarity based on the mode. > > Oh, if you're talking about fiddling around at run-time, then that's > just something the driver has to deal with internally. In that case, > let's just make the GPIO active-high in DT. When the driver programs the > device into whatever mode requires it to be active-low, the driver needs > to be written to set that GPIO value correctly. I don't think DT has any > influence on this at all, since DT is about a static setup, whereas your > use-case is dynamic. Except that there could be an inverter, which would need to be expressed in DT. I propose wording the documentation as follows. The GPIO polarity flag should represent the physical level that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. When the device signal polarity is dynamically configurable (as opposed to the statically configured case where the polarity is set based on DT properties only) the flag should bet set to the polarity required by the default logically asserted value, and that default logically asserted value should be documented in the device DT bindings. > > The chip DT bindings will have a property that contains a reference to the > > GPIO connected to the control input, and a flag to set the GPIO polarity. > > We want that flag to express the physical level at the GPIO source to > > achieve an asserted level at the chip input. That's active high in mode A > > and active low in mode B (and would be the opposite if we had an inverter > > on the board). Now, as the mode of operation is fully dynamic, what value > > should the DT flag have (assuming there's no default mode from a chip > > point of view) ? > > > >> Similarly, for inputs to the GPIO controller, the GPIO specifier should > >> specify the value at the GPIO controller too, and any configuration of > >> the output polarity of the device should be a separate property of that > >> device. > >> > >> The same argument applies to IRQs. -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-15 0:20 ` Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-18 17:58 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-19 0:19 ` Laurent Pinchart 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-18 17:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laurent Pinchart Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij On 02/14/2014 05:20 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > On Friday 14 February 2014 17:07:32 Stephen Warren wrote: ... >> Oh, if you're talking about fiddling around at run-time, then that's >> just something the driver has to deal with internally. In that case, >> let's just make the GPIO active-high in DT. When the driver programs the >> device into whatever mode requires it to be active-low, the driver needs >> to be written to set that GPIO value correctly. I don't think DT has any >> influence on this at all, since DT is about a static setup, whereas your >> use-case is dynamic. > > Except that there could be an inverter, which would need to be expressed in > DT. Of course, but that statement doesn't invalidate anything I said. > I propose wording the documentation as follows. > > The GPIO polarity flag should represent the physical level that achieves (or > represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. When the > device signal polarity is dynamically configurable (as opposed to the > statically configured case where the polarity is set based on DT properties > only) the flag should bet set to the polarity required by the default > logically asserted value, and that default logically asserted value should be > documented in the device DT bindings. To me, that wording: a) Doesn't explicitly state that the GPIO specifier should contain the level at the GPIO controller rather than at the device. b) Implies that devices with configurable polarity should derive the polarity from the GPIO specifier, whereas in fact this is exactly what we don't want. How about: The GPIO specifier's polarity flag should represent the physical level at the GPIO controller that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. Note that if the board inverts the signal between the GPIO controller and device, then the GPIO specifier will represent the opposite physical level than signal at the device's. When the device's signal polarity is configurable, the binding for the device must either: a) Define a single static polarity for the signal, with the expectation that any software using that binding would statically program the device to use that signal polarity. The static choice of polarity may be either: a1) Defined statically by the DT binding itself. or: a2) Dictated by a binding-specific DT property. In particular, the polarity cannot be derived from the GPIO specifier, since that would prevent the DT from separately representing the two orthogonal concepts of: configurable signal polarity in the device, and possible board-level signal inversion. or: b) Pick a single option for device signal polarity, and document this choice in the binding. The GPIO specifier should represent the polarity of the signal (at the GPIO controller) assuming that the device is configured for this particular signal polarity choice. If the software chooses to program the device to generate or receive a signal of the opposite polarity, software will be responsible for correctly interpreting (inverting) the GPIO signal at the GPIO controller. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag 2014-02-18 17:58 ` Stephen Warren @ 2014-02-19 0:19 ` Laurent Pinchart 0 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Laurent Pinchart @ 2014-02-19 0:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stephen Warren Cc: Alexandre Courbot, linux-gpio@vger.kernel.org, Linus Walleij Hi Stephen, On Tuesday 18 February 2014 10:58:30 Stephen Warren wrote: > On 02/14/2014 05:20 PM, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > > On Friday 14 February 2014 17:07:32 Stephen Warren wrote: > ... > > >> Oh, if you're talking about fiddling around at run-time, then that's > >> just something the driver has to deal with internally. In that case, > >> let's just make the GPIO active-high in DT. When the driver programs the > >> device into whatever mode requires it to be active-low, the driver needs > >> to be written to set that GPIO value correctly. I don't think DT has any > >> influence on this at all, since DT is about a static setup, whereas your > >> use-case is dynamic. > > > > Except that there could be an inverter, which would need to be expressed > > in DT. > > Of course, but that statement doesn't invalidate anything I said. > > > I propose wording the documentation as follows. > > > > The GPIO polarity flag should represent the physical level that achieves > > (or represents, for inputs) a logically asserted value at the device. > > When the device signal polarity is dynamically configurable (as opposed > > to the statically configured case where the polarity is set based on DT > > properties only) the flag should bet set to the polarity required by the > > default logically asserted value, and that default logically asserted > > value should be documented in the device DT bindings. > > To me, that wording: > > a) Doesn't explicitly state that the GPIO specifier should contain the > level at the GPIO controller rather than at the device. > > b) Implies that devices with configurable polarity should derive the > polarity from the GPIO specifier, whereas in fact this is exactly what > we don't want. > > How about: > > The GPIO specifier's polarity flag should represent the physical level > at the GPIO controller that achieves (or represents, for inputs) a > logically asserted value at the device. Note that if the board inverts > the signal between the GPIO controller and device, then the GPIO > specifier will represent the opposite physical level than signal at the > device's. "Note that" sounds to me like we're introducing an exception. I would replace it with "In particular,". Apart from that your proposal looks perfect to me. Thanks a lot for coping with my constant nitpicking on this issue :-) Would you like to submit a documentation patch ? > When the device's signal polarity is configurable, the binding for the > device must either: > > a) Define a single static polarity for the signal, with the expectation > that any software using that binding would statically program the device > to use that signal polarity. > > The static choice of polarity may be either: > > a1) Defined statically by the DT binding itself. > > or: > > a2) Dictated by a binding-specific DT property. > > In particular, the polarity cannot be derived from the GPIO specifier, > since that would prevent the DT from separately representing the two > orthogonal concepts of: configurable signal polarity in the device, and > possible board-level signal inversion. > > or: > > b) Pick a single option for device signal polarity, and document this > choice in the binding. The GPIO specifier should represent the polarity > of the signal (at the GPIO controller) assuming that the device is > configured for this particular signal polarity choice. If the software > chooses to program the device to generate or receive a signal of the > opposite polarity, software will be responsible for correctly > interpreting (inverting) the GPIO signal at the GPIO controller. -- Regards, Laurent Pinchart ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2014-02-19 0:18 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 16+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2014-02-10 14:33 Correct meaning of the GPIO active low flag Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-10 14:50 ` Alexandre Courbot 2014-02-10 15:13 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-10 16:56 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-10 16:57 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-10 17:52 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-10 23:04 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-10 23:21 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-12 16:50 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-13 14:43 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-13 16:49 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-14 23:48 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-15 0:07 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-15 0:20 ` Laurent Pinchart 2014-02-18 17:58 ` Stephen Warren 2014-02-19 0:19 ` Laurent Pinchart
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