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Message-ID: <520D4805.8070007@codeaurora.org>
Date: Thu, 15 Aug 2013 14:28:37 -0700
From: Hanumant Singh <hanumant@...eaurora.org>
To: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@...aro.org>
CC: Bjorn Andersson <bjorn@...o.se>,
"linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] pinctrl: msm: Add support for MSM TLMM pinmux
On 8/15/2013 1:47 PM, Linus Walleij wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 7:44 PM, Hanumant Singh <hanumant@...eaurora.org> wrote:
>
>> Ok i can switch to using pin groups defined in per soc files.
>> But in our case we have one soc going into different types of boards.
>> (atleast 3). In each of the boards the same external devices end up using
>> different pins. For ex camera on board 1 uses different pin group
>> then the same camera on board 2. Both having the same SOC.
>> So in this case the design would be to have all possible pin groups
>> for different boards enumerated in the same soc-pinctrl.c file?
>
> Sorry I don't get this at all.
>
> What pin groups and functions that exist on a SoC is what you put into
> a SoC driver. Because this is a hardware characteristic.
>
> How these are combined on a board into different states is what you put
> into the device tree. (Or platform data.)
>
For example lets say for a given SOC A it goes into boards 1, 2, and 3.
Each of the boards has a display panel. The display panel uses two pins
1) a reset pin 2) an interrupt pin.
In the combination of SOC A + board 1
- Display panel reset = pin no 5.
- Display panel interrupt = pin no 9.
In combination of SOC A + board 2
- Display panel reset = pin no 4.
- Display panel interrupt = pin no 9.
In combination of SOC A + board 3
- Display panel reset = pin no 7.
- Display panel interrupt = pin no 2.
The pin groupings to be used by the display panel can be {5,9}, {4,9},
or {7,2}
These different pin groups and their function setting will be present in
soc-pinctrl.c. The function setting is the same on all 3 cases.
The DT entry will correspond to the different states of these pins for
the different boards.
Is this understanding correct?
>> Also in this implementation I will have.
>> 1) pinctrl-msm.c => DT parsing and interface to framework.
>> 2) pinctrl-msm-tlmm<version>.c => Register programming and pin types
>> supported by a particular TLMM pinmux version.
>> 3) pinctrl-<soc>.c => All the pins/pin groups supported by a given SOC.
>
> Seems OK.
>
>> As I
>> mentioned we will have a bloat of these, since we have entire families of
>> SOC using a given TLMM version but with unique pin groupings.
>
> Bring 'em on. But is that really different groups you are talking about,
> and not just combinations of groups with functions for a certain board
> as I describe above?
>
> If you have many SoC subdrivers, consider creating a subdir as some
> drivers already have.
Actually the SOC files, as I see it, will only contain the different pin
groupings and the function setting for a given soc. The real driver
implementation will be in 1) and 2) (the device being the TLMM pinmux
version 3). I will currently refrain from creating a special msm
directory. Maybe that can be a step 2) once we start adding more SOC's?
I will be starting the patch with msm8974 SOC only.
Thanks
Hanumant
--
Sent by an employee of the Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc.
The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of the Code Aurora Forum.
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