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From: Jacek Anaszewski <j.anaszewski@samsung.com>
To: mark.rutland@arm.com
Cc: swarren@wwwdotorg.org,
	Jacek Anaszewski <j.anaszewski@samsung.com>,
	devicetree@vger.kernel.org, linux-iio@vger.kernel.org,
	Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>,
	maxime.ripard@free-electrons.com, lars@metafoo.de,
	l.czerwinski@samsung.com, rob.herring@calxeda.com,
	pawel.moll@arm.com, ian.campbell@citrix.com,
	s.nawrocki@samsung.com
Subject: Re: passing two interrupts two an I2C driver
Date: Wed, 21 Aug 2013 13:53:54 +0200	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <5214AA52.2060209@samsung.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20130819084227.GC3719@e106331-lin.cambridge.arm.com>

On 08/19/2013 10:42 AM, Mark Rutland wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 07:48:55PM +0100, Stephen Warren wrote:
>> On 08/16/2013 08:47 AM, Jacek Anaszewski wrote:
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> I'd like to consult the implementation of DT binding for the I2C device
>>> that exposes two interrupt pins (INT1 and INT2). Both pins can be
>>> configured to generate either data ready interrupts or event interrupts.
>>> I want to implement DT binding that will handle also the situation
>>> when only one of the interrupt sources is routed from the device
>>> to the CPU.
>>>
>>> Below is my implementation using interrupt-map:
>>
>>> +  - interrupt-parent : phandle to the interrupt map subnode
>>
>> When using interrupt-parent to point at an interrupt map, I believe you
>> usually just point at the current node; there's no need to a child node.
>>
>>> +  - interrupts : interrupt mapping for LPS331AP interrupt sources:
>>> +                2 sources: 0 - data ready, 1 - threshold event
>>
>>> +  - irq-map : irq sub-node defining interrupt map
>>> +             (all properties listed below are required):
>>
>> So, this node isn't required.
>>
>>> +      - #interrupt-cells : should be 1
>>
>>> +      - #address-cells : should be 0
>>> +      - #size-cells : should be 0
>>
>> There are no addressed entities in this node, so I don't see why those
>> two properties are needed.
>>
>>> +      - interrupt-map : table of entries consisting of three child elements:
>>> +         - unit_interrupt_specifier - 0 : data ready, 1 : threshold event
>>> +         - interrupt parent phandle
>>> +         - parent unit interrupt specifier consisiting of two elements:
>>> +             - index of the interrupt within the controller
>>> +             - flags : should be 0
>>
>> It's up to the binding for the node referenced by the phandle to define
>> how many cells need be present for "flags", and their meaning. This
>> binding shouldn't attempt to describe those. Equally, the concept of
>> interrupt-map should be defined elsewwere (e.g.
>> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/interrupts.txt);
>> it's a generic that shouldn't need duplication in each binding that uses
>> interrupts.
>>
>>> +Example:
>>> +
>>> +lps331ap@5d {
>>> +       compatible = "st,lps331ap";
>>> +       reg =<0x5d>;
>>> +       drdy-int-pin = /bits/ 8<2>;
>>> +       interrupt-parent =<&irq_map>;
>>> +       interrupts =<0>,<1>;
>>> +
>>> +       irq_map: irq-map {
>>> +               #interrupt-cells =<1>;
>>> +               #address-cells =<0>;
>>> +               #size-cells =<0>;
>>> +               interrupt-map =<0&gpf0 5 0>;
>>> +       };
>>> +};
>>>
>>> And here is how the driver uses this information:
>>>
>>>   - if interrupt-map is empty then the driver configures
>>>     itself to work without interrupt support
>>
>> The presence or lack of interrupt support should be driven by the
>> presence of the interrupts property. interrupt-map should only be used
>> (if present) to assist in the parsing of the interrupts property.
>>
>>>   - if only one interrupt source is available then the driver
>>>     configures the device to generate data ready interrupts on
>>>     the corresponding INTx pin (in this case the driver must know which
>>>     of the device pins is routed to the cpu -
>>>     st,data-ready-interrupt-pin property conveys this information)
>>>   - if both interrupt sources are available then the driver configures
>>>     the device to generate data ready interrupts on the interrupt pin
>>>     corresponding to the interrupt source with index 0 and event
>>>     interrupts to the interrupt source with index 1.
>>>
>>> This solution seems to be a little awkward so I'd like to ask
>>> if there is any neater way to handle presented requirements.
>>> The solution must facilitate passing information about two
>>> interrupt sources two the I2C driver. I have been unable to find
>>> similar solution in the kernel so far.
>>
>> Indeed. I think it would be better to work as follows:
>>
>> interrupts: contains one or two interrupt specifiers. The first entry
>> always defines the data ready interrupt. The second entry, if present,
>> defines the threshold event interrupt. This at least allows the
>> following combinations to be very simple expressed:
>>
>> * no interrrupts
>> * just data
>> * both data and threshold (assuming they're routed to the same parent)
>>
>> (you could swap the order if it's likely to be more common to have just
>> a threshold interrupt without any data interrupt).
>>
>> In order to allow the presence of a threshold interrupt but no data
>> interrupt, then I think you would need interrupt-map:
>>
>> lps331ap: lps331ap@5d {
>> 	compatible = "st,lps331ap";
>> 	reg =<0x5d>;
>> 	interrupt-parent =<&lps331ap>;
>> 	interrupts =<0>,<1>;
>> 	interrupt-map =	<0 0>, /* nowhere */
>> 			<1&gpf0 6 0>;
>> };
>
> The interrupt-names property exists for this purpose (describing
> interrupts which may or may not be present). Describing a nonexistent
> interrupt and mapping it nowhere feels like a hack to me when we can
> describe exactly what's present.
>
> Thanks,
> Mark.

 From what I've figured out in order to obtain the interrupt id
by name the function

platform_get_irq_by_name(struct platform_device *dev, const char *name)

has to be exploited. Unfortunately required platform_device structure
is not available in the struct i2c_client that is passed to the
probe function of an i2c driver. Is there some different way to parse
the interrupt-names property from the I2C driver?

Thanks,
Jacek

  parent reply	other threads:[~2013-08-21 11:53 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 17+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2013-08-16 14:47 passing two interrupts two an I2C driver Jacek Anaszewski
2013-08-16 18:48 ` Stephen Warren
2013-08-19  8:42   ` Mark Rutland
2013-08-19 16:09     ` Stephen Warren
2013-08-20  8:44       ` Mark Rutland
2013-08-20 16:25         ` Stephen Warren
2013-08-21  8:54           ` Mark Rutland
2013-08-22 12:45             ` Rob Herring
2013-08-22 20:26               ` Stephen Warren
2013-08-21 11:53     ` Jacek Anaszewski [this message]
2013-08-21 12:34       ` Pawel Moll
2013-08-21 12:37       ` Pawel Moll
2013-08-21 17:54         ` Mark Brown
2013-08-22  9:23           ` Pawel Moll
2013-08-22 11:26             ` Mark Brown
2013-08-22 11:44               ` Pawel Moll
2013-08-22 13:19                 ` Mark Brown

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