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Message-ID: <4a506332-2374-b164-5159-5d097ce667a1@ti.com>
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2021 09:44:03 +0530
From: Aswath Govindraju <a-govindraju@...com>
To: Peter Rosin <peda@...ntia.se>
CC: Nishanth Menon <nm@...com>, Vignesh Raghavendra <vigneshr@...com>,
Rob Herring <robh+dt@...nel.org>,
Wolfgang Grandegger <wg@...ndegger.com>,
Marc Kleine-Budde <mkl@...gutronix.de>,
Kishon Vijay Abraham I <kishon@...com>,
Vinod Koul <vkoul@...nel.org>, <devicetree@...r.kernel.org>,
<linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>, <linux-can@...r.kernel.org>,
<linux-phy@...ts.infradead.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH RFC v2 3/4] mux: Add support for reading mux enable state
from DT
Hi Peter,
On 23/11/21 12:29 am, Peter Rosin wrote:
> Hi!
>
> On 2021-11-22 13:56, Aswath Govindraju wrote:
>> In some cases, we might need to provide the state of the mux to be set for
>> the operation of a given peripheral. Therefore, pass this information using
>> the second argument of the mux-controls property.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Aswath Govindraju <a-govindraju@...com>
>> ---
>>
>> Notes:
>> - The function mux_control_get() always return the mux_control for a single
>> line. So, control for mutiple lines cannot be represented in the
>> mux-controls property.
>> - For representing multiple lines of control, multiple entries need to be
>> used along with mux-names for reading them.
>> - If a device uses both the states of the mux line then #mux-control-cells
>> can be set to 1 and enable_state will not be set in this case.
>>
>> drivers/mux/core.c | 20 ++++++++++++++++++--
>> include/linux/mux/consumer.h | 1 +
>> include/linux/mux/driver.h | 1 +
>> 3 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/drivers/mux/core.c b/drivers/mux/core.c
>> index 22f4709768d1..51140748d2d6 100644
>> --- a/drivers/mux/core.c
>> +++ b/drivers/mux/core.c
>> @@ -294,6 +294,18 @@ unsigned int mux_control_states(struct mux_control *mux)
>> }
>> EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mux_control_states);
>>
>> +/**
>> + * mux_control_enable_state() - Query for the enable state.
>> + * @mux: The mux-control to query.
>> + *
>> + * Return: State to be set in the mux to enable a given device
>> + */
>> +unsigned int mux_control_enable_state(struct mux_control *mux)
>> +{
>> + return mux->enable_state;
>> +}
>> +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mux_control_enable_state);
>> +
>> /*
>> * The mux->lock must be down when calling this function.
>> */
>> @@ -481,8 +493,7 @@ struct mux_control *mux_control_get(struct device *dev, const char *mux_name)
>> if (!mux_chip)
>> return ERR_PTR(-EPROBE_DEFER);
>>
>> - if (args.args_count > 1 ||
>> - (!args.args_count && (mux_chip->controllers > 1))) {
>> + if (!args.args_count && mux_chip->controllers > 1) {
>> dev_err(dev, "%pOF: wrong #mux-control-cells for %pOF\n",
>> np, args.np);
>> put_device(&mux_chip->dev);
>> @@ -500,6 +511,11 @@ struct mux_control *mux_control_get(struct device *dev, const char *mux_name)
>> return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL);
>> }
>>
>> + if (args.args_count == 2) {
>> + mux_chip->mux[controller].enable_state = args.args[1];
>> + mux_chip->mux[controller].idle_state = !args.args[1];
>
> Please leave the idle state alone. The idle state is a property of
> the mux-control itself, and not the business of any particular
> consumer. Consumers can only say what state the mux control should
> have when they have selected the mux-control, and have no say about
> what state the mux-control has when they do not have it selected.
> There is no conflict with having the same idle state as the state the
> mux would normally have. That could even be seen as an optimization,
> since then there might be no need to operate the mux for most
> accesses.
>
Got it. Will not touch idle_state.
>> + }
>> +
>> return &mux_chip->mux[controller];
>> }
>> EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mux_control_get);
>> diff --git a/include/linux/mux/consumer.h b/include/linux/mux/consumer.h
>> index 7a09b040ac39..cb861eab8aad 100644
>> --- a/include/linux/mux/consumer.h
>> +++ b/include/linux/mux/consumer.h
>> @@ -16,6 +16,7 @@ struct device;
>> struct mux_control;
>>
>> unsigned int mux_control_states(struct mux_control *mux);
>> +unsigned int mux_control_enable_state(struct mux_control *mux);
>> int __must_check mux_control_select_delay(struct mux_control *mux,
>> unsigned int state,
>> unsigned int delay_us);
>> diff --git a/include/linux/mux/driver.h b/include/linux/mux/driver.h
>> index 18824064f8c0..7db378dabdb2 100644
>> --- a/include/linux/mux/driver.h
>> +++ b/include/linux/mux/driver.h
>> @@ -48,6 +48,7 @@ struct mux_control {
>> int cached_state;
>>
>> unsigned int states;
>> + unsigned int enable_state;
>
> This is the wrong place to store the state you need. The mux_control
> is a shared resource and can have many consumers. Storing the needed
> value for exactly one consumer in the mux control is therefore
> broken. It would get overwritten when consumer #2 (and 3 etc etc)
> wants to use some other state from the same shared mux control.
>
Sorry, forgot the distinction that multiple consumers can get the mux
and only one can select the mux.
> Doing this properly means that you need a new struct tying together
> a mux-control and a state. With an API looking something like this:
>
> struct mux_state {
> struct mux_control *mux;
> unsigned int state;
> };
>
> struct mux_state *mux_state_get(struct device *dev, const char *mux_name)
> {
> struct mux_state *mux_state = kzalloc(sizeof(*mux_state), GFP_KERNEL);
>
> if (!mux_state)
> return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
>
> mux_state->mux = ...; /* mux_control_get(...) perhaps? */
> /* error checking and recovery, etc etc etc */
> mux_state->state = ...;
>
> return mux_state;
> }
>
> void mux_state_put(struct mux_state *mux_state)
> {
> mux_control_put(mux_state->mux);
> free(mux_state);
> }
>
> int mux_state_select_delay(struct mux_state *mux_state,
> unsigned int delay_us)
> {
> return mux_control_select_delay(mux_state->mux, mux_state->state,
> delay_us);
> }
>
> int mux_state_select(struct mux_state *mux_state)
> {
> return mux_state_select_delay(mux_state, 0);
> }
>
> int mux_state_try_select_delay(struct mux_state *mux_state)
> unsigned int delay_us);
> {
> return mux_control_try_select_delay(mux_state->mux, mux_state->state,
> delay_us);
> }
>
> int mux_state_try_select(struct mux_state *mux_state)
> {
> return mux_state_try_select_delay(mux_state, 0);
> }
>
> int mux_state_deselect(struct mux_control *mux)
> {
> return mux_control_deselect(mux_state->mux);
> }
>
> (written directly in the mail client, never compiled, here be dragons)
>
> mux_state_get is obviously the difficult function to write, and
> the above call to mux_control_get is not appropriate as-is. I
I am sorry but I did not understand why mux_control_get is not
appropriate. We should be able to call the function and get the mux right?
> think mux_control_get perhaps needs to be refactored into a
> flexible helper that takes a couple of extra arguments that
> indicate if you want an optional get and/or a particular state.
> And then mux_control_get can just be a wrapper around that helper.
> Adding mux_control_get_optional would be a matter of adding a new
> wrapper. And the mux_state->mux assignment above would need yet
> another wrapper for the flexible helper, one that also make the
> flexible helper return the requested state from the mux-control
> property.
>
The problem that I see with the optional apis as wrappers around
mux_control_get is the following print in mux_control_get,
dev_err(dev, "%pOF: failed to get mux-control %s(%i)\n",
This gets printed whenever it can't find mux-controls device tree property.
Thank you providing your comments and reference implementation.
Regards,
Aswath
> I realize that this might be a big piece to chew, but you want to
> do something new here, and I think it is best to do it right from
> the start instead of having weird code that only makes it harder
> to do it right later. Ad it's not that complicated.
>
> Cheers,
> Peter
>
>> int idle_state;
>>
>> ktime_t last_change;
>>
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