On 20/05/15 16:40, Thierry Reding wrote:
> * PGP Signed by an unknown key
> 
> On Wed, May 20, 2015 at 02:46:07PM +0100, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>
>> On 19/05/15 15:46, Thierry Reding wrote:
>>>> Old Signed by an unknown key
>>>
>>> On Mon, May 18, 2015 at 04:33:49PM +0100, Jon Hunter wrote:
>>>> Background:
>>>> ==========
>>>> On tegra124 and tegra132 devices the pads used by the Display Port 
>>>> Auxiliary
>>>> (DPAUX) channel are multiplexed such that they can also be used by one of 
>>>> the
>>>> internal i2c controllers. Note that this is different from i2c-over-AUX
>>>> supported by the DPAUX controller. The register that configures these pads 
>>>> is
>>>> part of the DPAUX controllers register set and so requires the clock for 
>>>> the
>>>> DPAUX controller to be enabled to access the register as well as keeping 
>>>> the
>>>> SOR (serial output resource) power domain enabled.
>>>>
>>>> Currently, there is no pinctrl device for these pads and so cannot be 
>>>> easily
>>>> mapped to function as an i2c interface. Furthermore, when using the pads 
>>>> for
>>>> the DPAUX channel, the DPAUX driver (drivers/gpu/drm/tegra/dpaux.c) 
>>>> directly
>>>> writes the to appropriate register to setup the pads.
>>>>
>>>> There are some products based upon the tegra132 that use these pads for an
>>>> internal i2c controller and hence we want to support this configuration in 
>>>> the
>>>> kernel.
>>>
>>> Good timing, I was going to (reluctantly) add this to my long TODO list.
>>> I generally like the proposal.
>>
>> Ok, great.
>>  
>>>> Proposal:
>>>> ========
>>>> Add a DPAUX MFD device that consists of a DPAUX controller, for the Display
>>>> Port Auxiliary related functionality and a DPAUX pad controller, for 
>>>> handling
>>>> the pinctrl for the DPAUX pads. Both the DPAUX controller and DPAUX pad
>>>> controller need to access the DPAUX register set and therefore, by making 
>>>> the
>>>> MFD compatible with "simple-mfd" and "syscon", a regmap for the DPAUX 
>>>> registers
>>>> will be created to synchronise register accesses made by the drivers.
>>>
>>> Can we not do without an MFD here? Not only would it break DT ABI, but
>>> it's also way more complicated than it needs to be in my opinion, we're
>>> only sharing a single register (or perhaps even two) after all. Keeping
>>> everything in a single DT node would also make the binding less awkward
>>> because the power domain doesn't apply to the pad controller part of
>>> DPAUX.
>>>
>>> Can't the dpaux driver simply register the pinmux controller itself?
>>
>> Do you think something that looks like the below?
>>
>> +Example (tegra124 DPAUX):
>> +
>> +/ {
>> +       ...
>> +
>> +       host1x {
>> +               compatible = "nvidia,tegra124-host1x", "simple-bus";
>> +               ...
>> +
>> +               dpaux: dpaux@0,545c0000 {
>> +                       compatible = "nvidia,tegra124-dpaux",
>> +                       reg = <0x0 0x545c0000 0x0 0x40000>;
>> +                       interrupts = <GIC_SPI 159 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
>> +                       clocks = <&tegra_car TEGRA124_CLK_DPAUX>,
>> +                                <&tegra_car TEGRA124_CLK_PLL_DP>;
>> +                       clock-names = "dpaux", "parent";
>> +                       resets = <&tegra_car 181>;
>> +                       reset-names = "dpaux";
>> +                       pinctrl-0 = <&dpaux_state>;
>> +                       pinctrl-names = "default";
>> +                       status = "disabled";
>> +
>> +                       dpaux_padctl@0,545c0124 {
>> +                               compatible = "nvidia,tegra124-dpaux-padctl";
>> +
>> +                               dpaux_state: dpaux_state0 {
>> +                                       dpaux {
>> +                                               nvidia,function = "dpaux";
>> +                                       };
>> +                               };
>> +
>> +                               i2c_state: i2c_state0 {
>> +                                       i2c {
>> +                                               nvidia,function = "i2c";
>> +                                       };
>> +                               };
>> +                       };
> 
> Why even have this subnode? Couldn't we simply have this:
> 
>       host1x@... {
>               ...
> 
>               dpaux@... {
>                       compatible = "nvidia,tegra124-dpaux";
>                       ...
>                       pinctrl-0 = <&dpaux_aux_state>;
>                       pinctrl-1 = <&dpaux_i2c_state>;
>                       pinctrl-names = "aux", "i2c";
>                       ...
> 
>                       dpaux_aux_state: pinmux-aux {
>                               ...
>                       };
> 
>                       dpaux_i2c_state: pinmux-i2c {
>                               ...
>                       };
>               };
>       };
> 
> ?
> 
> We might need to add in indices to tell apart DPAUX and DPAUX1, though
> perhaps we could refer to these states by path instead of phandle to
> avoid that. Anyway, I don't see any particular reason why a subnode
> would be necessary.

My thinking was that we would have a pinctrl driver for dpaux in
drivers/pinctrl/pinctrl-tegra-dpaux.c and therefore, I had assumed that
we would need a sub-node and compatible string to probe the device.

Are you sugguesting that the pinctrl driver for dpaux lives in
drivers/gpu/drm/tegra/dpaux.c?

Sorry if I am misunderstanding something here.

Jon
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