Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-12-03 Thread Jonathan Cameron
On 29/11/16 16:02, Peter Rosin wrote:
> On 2016-11-27 13:00, Jonathan Cameron wrote:
>> On 23/11/16 11:47, Peter Rosin wrote:
>>> On 2016-11-22 21:58, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
 On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
 [...]
> I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
> to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
> to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
> controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
> code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
> hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
> the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.
>
> So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
> and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
> writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
> what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
> controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
> instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
> generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
> since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
> controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).

 While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
 be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
 of restrictions on what can actually be represented.
>>>
>>> This is a characterization without any specifics. But is the
>>> characterization true? You have two complaints, complexity
>>> and restrictions with bindings.
>>>
 There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
 it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
 Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind 
 and
 the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. 
 The
 latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
 devicetree can offer.

 And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
 way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
 form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
 that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
 discrete components.
>>>
>>> So, there are three "new" concepts:
>>>
>>> 1. Sticking a mux in front of an AD-converter. That's not all that
>>> novel, nor complex. Quite the opposite, I'd say. In fact, I find it
>>> a bit amazing that there is no in-kernel support for it.
>> As ever first person who needs it and has the skills to write it gets to do 
>> it ;)
>> Congratulations Peter ;)
>>>
>>> 2. Reusing the same GPIO-pins to drive different muxes. There are
>>> obviously chips that work this way (as Jonathan pointed out) and
>>> these will at some point get used in Linux devices. I guess they
>>> already are used, but that people handle them in userspace. Or
>>> something? If this is complex, which I question, it will still need
>>> support at some point. At least that's what I believe.
>>>
>>> 3. Using the same GPIO pins to mux things handled by different
>>> subsystems. Right, this is a bit crazy, and I'd rather not have this
>>> requirement, but this HW is what it is so I'll need to handle it in
>>> some way. It is also what stops me from falling back to a userspace
>>> solution, which is probably connected to why #1 and #2 is not supported
>>> by the kernel; everybody probably does muxing in userspace. Which is
>>> not necessarily a good idea, nor how it's supposed to be done...
>>>
>>> So, the only thing that's out of the ordinary (as I see it), is #3.
>>> The question that then needs an answer is how the in-kernel solution
>>> for #1 and #2 would look if we do not consider #3.
>>>
>>> And I claim that the desired solution to #1 and #2 is pretty close
>>> to my proposal.
>>>
>>> A. You do not want mux-controller drivers in every subsystem that
>>> needs them.
>> Agreed.
>>>
>>> B. You do not want every mux-consumer to know the specifics of how to
>>> operate every kind of mux; there are muxes that are not controlled
>>> with GPIO pins...
>>>
>>> C. When you implement muxing in a subsystem, there will in some cases
>>> be a need to handle parallel muxing, where there is a need to share
>>> mux-controllers.
>>>
>>> It just feels right to separate out the mux-controller and refer to
>>> it from where a mux is needed. It solves #1 and #2. And, of course,
>>> as a bonus #3 is also solved. But my bias is obvious.
>>>
>>> And that leads us to the restrictions with the bindings. And the same
>>> thing happens; the solution for #2 also solves #3.
>>>
>>> So how do you refer to a mux-controller from where it's needed? My
>>> first proposal used a dt phandle, for the second round I put them in
>>> the parent 

Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-12-03 Thread Jonathan Cameron
On 29/11/16 16:02, Peter Rosin wrote:
> On 2016-11-27 13:00, Jonathan Cameron wrote:
>> On 23/11/16 11:47, Peter Rosin wrote:
>>> On 2016-11-22 21:58, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
 On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
 [...]
> I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
> to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
> to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
> controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
> code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
> hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
> the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.
>
> So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
> and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
> writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
> what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
> controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
> instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
> generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
> since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
> controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).

 While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
 be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
 of restrictions on what can actually be represented.
>>>
>>> This is a characterization without any specifics. But is the
>>> characterization true? You have two complaints, complexity
>>> and restrictions with bindings.
>>>
 There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
 it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
 Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind 
 and
 the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. 
 The
 latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
 devicetree can offer.

 And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
 way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
 form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
 that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
 discrete components.
>>>
>>> So, there are three "new" concepts:
>>>
>>> 1. Sticking a mux in front of an AD-converter. That's not all that
>>> novel, nor complex. Quite the opposite, I'd say. In fact, I find it
>>> a bit amazing that there is no in-kernel support for it.
>> As ever first person who needs it and has the skills to write it gets to do 
>> it ;)
>> Congratulations Peter ;)
>>>
>>> 2. Reusing the same GPIO-pins to drive different muxes. There are
>>> obviously chips that work this way (as Jonathan pointed out) and
>>> these will at some point get used in Linux devices. I guess they
>>> already are used, but that people handle them in userspace. Or
>>> something? If this is complex, which I question, it will still need
>>> support at some point. At least that's what I believe.
>>>
>>> 3. Using the same GPIO pins to mux things handled by different
>>> subsystems. Right, this is a bit crazy, and I'd rather not have this
>>> requirement, but this HW is what it is so I'll need to handle it in
>>> some way. It is also what stops me from falling back to a userspace
>>> solution, which is probably connected to why #1 and #2 is not supported
>>> by the kernel; everybody probably does muxing in userspace. Which is
>>> not necessarily a good idea, nor how it's supposed to be done...
>>>
>>> So, the only thing that's out of the ordinary (as I see it), is #3.
>>> The question that then needs an answer is how the in-kernel solution
>>> for #1 and #2 would look if we do not consider #3.
>>>
>>> And I claim that the desired solution to #1 and #2 is pretty close
>>> to my proposal.
>>>
>>> A. You do not want mux-controller drivers in every subsystem that
>>> needs them.
>> Agreed.
>>>
>>> B. You do not want every mux-consumer to know the specifics of how to
>>> operate every kind of mux; there are muxes that are not controlled
>>> with GPIO pins...
>>>
>>> C. When you implement muxing in a subsystem, there will in some cases
>>> be a need to handle parallel muxing, where there is a need to share
>>> mux-controllers.
>>>
>>> It just feels right to separate out the mux-controller and refer to
>>> it from where a mux is needed. It solves #1 and #2. And, of course,
>>> as a bonus #3 is also solved. But my bias is obvious.
>>>
>>> And that leads us to the restrictions with the bindings. And the same
>>> thing happens; the solution for #2 also solves #3.
>>>
>>> So how do you refer to a mux-controller from where it's needed? My
>>> first proposal used a dt phandle, for the second round I put them in
>>> the parent 

Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-11-29 Thread Peter Rosin
On 2016-11-27 13:00, Jonathan Cameron wrote:
> On 23/11/16 11:47, Peter Rosin wrote:
>> On 2016-11-22 21:58, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
>>> On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
>>> [...]
 I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
 to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
 to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
 controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
 code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
 hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
 the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.

 So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
 and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
 writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
 what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
 controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
 instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
 generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
 since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
 controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).
>>>
>>> While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
>>> be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
>>> of restrictions on what can actually be represented.
>>
>> This is a characterization without any specifics. But is the
>> characterization true? You have two complaints, complexity
>> and restrictions with bindings.
>>
>>> There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
>>> it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
>>> Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind and
>>> the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. The
>>> latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
>>> devicetree can offer.
>>>
>>> And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
>>> way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
>>> form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
>>> that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
>>> discrete components.
>>
>> So, there are three "new" concepts:
>>
>> 1. Sticking a mux in front of an AD-converter. That's not all that
>> novel, nor complex. Quite the opposite, I'd say. In fact, I find it
>> a bit amazing that there is no in-kernel support for it.
> As ever first person who needs it and has the skills to write it gets to do 
> it ;)
> Congratulations Peter ;)
>>
>> 2. Reusing the same GPIO-pins to drive different muxes. There are
>> obviously chips that work this way (as Jonathan pointed out) and
>> these will at some point get used in Linux devices. I guess they
>> already are used, but that people handle them in userspace. Or
>> something? If this is complex, which I question, it will still need
>> support at some point. At least that's what I believe.
>>
>> 3. Using the same GPIO pins to mux things handled by different
>> subsystems. Right, this is a bit crazy, and I'd rather not have this
>> requirement, but this HW is what it is so I'll need to handle it in
>> some way. It is also what stops me from falling back to a userspace
>> solution, which is probably connected to why #1 and #2 is not supported
>> by the kernel; everybody probably does muxing in userspace. Which is
>> not necessarily a good idea, nor how it's supposed to be done...
>>
>> So, the only thing that's out of the ordinary (as I see it), is #3.
>> The question that then needs an answer is how the in-kernel solution
>> for #1 and #2 would look if we do not consider #3.
>>
>> And I claim that the desired solution to #1 and #2 is pretty close
>> to my proposal.
>>
>> A. You do not want mux-controller drivers in every subsystem that
>> needs them.
> Agreed.
>>
>> B. You do not want every mux-consumer to know the specifics of how to
>> operate every kind of mux; there are muxes that are not controlled
>> with GPIO pins...
>>
>> C. When you implement muxing in a subsystem, there will in some cases
>> be a need to handle parallel muxing, where there is a need to share
>> mux-controllers.
>>
>> It just feels right to separate out the mux-controller and refer to
>> it from where a mux is needed. It solves #1 and #2. And, of course,
>> as a bonus #3 is also solved. But my bias is obvious.
>>
>> And that leads us to the restrictions with the bindings. And the same
>> thing happens; the solution for #2 also solves #3.
>>
>> So how do you refer to a mux-controller from where it's needed? My
>> first proposal used a dt phandle, for the second round I put them in
>> the parent node. It would be super if it was possible for the mux-
>> consumer to create the mux-controller device from the same dt
>> node that is already 

Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-11-29 Thread Peter Rosin
On 2016-11-27 13:00, Jonathan Cameron wrote:
> On 23/11/16 11:47, Peter Rosin wrote:
>> On 2016-11-22 21:58, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
>>> On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
>>> [...]
 I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
 to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
 to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
 controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
 code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
 hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
 the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.

 So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
 and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
 writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
 what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
 controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
 instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
 generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
 since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
 controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).
>>>
>>> While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
>>> be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
>>> of restrictions on what can actually be represented.
>>
>> This is a characterization without any specifics. But is the
>> characterization true? You have two complaints, complexity
>> and restrictions with bindings.
>>
>>> There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
>>> it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
>>> Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind and
>>> the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. The
>>> latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
>>> devicetree can offer.
>>>
>>> And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
>>> way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
>>> form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
>>> that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
>>> discrete components.
>>
>> So, there are three "new" concepts:
>>
>> 1. Sticking a mux in front of an AD-converter. That's not all that
>> novel, nor complex. Quite the opposite, I'd say. In fact, I find it
>> a bit amazing that there is no in-kernel support for it.
> As ever first person who needs it and has the skills to write it gets to do 
> it ;)
> Congratulations Peter ;)
>>
>> 2. Reusing the same GPIO-pins to drive different muxes. There are
>> obviously chips that work this way (as Jonathan pointed out) and
>> these will at some point get used in Linux devices. I guess they
>> already are used, but that people handle them in userspace. Or
>> something? If this is complex, which I question, it will still need
>> support at some point. At least that's what I believe.
>>
>> 3. Using the same GPIO pins to mux things handled by different
>> subsystems. Right, this is a bit crazy, and I'd rather not have this
>> requirement, but this HW is what it is so I'll need to handle it in
>> some way. It is also what stops me from falling back to a userspace
>> solution, which is probably connected to why #1 and #2 is not supported
>> by the kernel; everybody probably does muxing in userspace. Which is
>> not necessarily a good idea, nor how it's supposed to be done...
>>
>> So, the only thing that's out of the ordinary (as I see it), is #3.
>> The question that then needs an answer is how the in-kernel solution
>> for #1 and #2 would look if we do not consider #3.
>>
>> And I claim that the desired solution to #1 and #2 is pretty close
>> to my proposal.
>>
>> A. You do not want mux-controller drivers in every subsystem that
>> needs them.
> Agreed.
>>
>> B. You do not want every mux-consumer to know the specifics of how to
>> operate every kind of mux; there are muxes that are not controlled
>> with GPIO pins...
>>
>> C. When you implement muxing in a subsystem, there will in some cases
>> be a need to handle parallel muxing, where there is a need to share
>> mux-controllers.
>>
>> It just feels right to separate out the mux-controller and refer to
>> it from where a mux is needed. It solves #1 and #2. And, of course,
>> as a bonus #3 is also solved. But my bias is obvious.
>>
>> And that leads us to the restrictions with the bindings. And the same
>> thing happens; the solution for #2 also solves #3.
>>
>> So how do you refer to a mux-controller from where it's needed? My
>> first proposal used a dt phandle, for the second round I put them in
>> the parent node. It would be super if it was possible for the mux-
>> consumer to create the mux-controller device from the same dt
>> node that is already 

Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-11-27 Thread Jonathan Cameron
On 23/11/16 11:47, Peter Rosin wrote:
> On 2016-11-22 21:58, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
>> On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
>> [...]
>>> I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
>>> to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
>>> to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
>>> controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
>>> code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
>>> hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
>>> the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.
>>>
>>> So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
>>> and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
>>> writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
>>> what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
>>> controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
>>> instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
>>> generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
>>> since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
>>> controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).
>>
>> While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
>> be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
>> of restrictions on what can actually be represented.
> 
> This is a characterization without any specifics. But is the
> characterization true? You have two complaints, complexity
> and restrictions with bindings.
> 
>> There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
>> it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
>> Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind and
>> the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. The
>> latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
>> devicetree can offer.
>>
>> And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
>> way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
>> form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
>> that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
>> discrete components.
> 
> So, there are three "new" concepts:
> 
> 1. Sticking a mux in front of an AD-converter. That's not all that
> novel, nor complex. Quite the opposite, I'd say. In fact, I find it
> a bit amazing that there is no in-kernel support for it.
As ever first person who needs it and has the skills to write it gets to do it 
;)
Congratulations Peter ;)
> 
> 2. Reusing the same GPIO-pins to drive different muxes. There are
> obviously chips that work this way (as Jonathan pointed out) and
> these will at some point get used in Linux devices. I guess they
> already are used, but that people handle them in userspace. Or
> something? If this is complex, which I question, it will still need
> support at some point. At least that's what I believe.
> 
> 3. Using the same GPIO pins to mux things handled by different
> subsystems. Right, this is a bit crazy, and I'd rather not have this
> requirement, but this HW is what it is so I'll need to handle it in
> some way. It is also what stops me from falling back to a userspace
> solution, which is probably connected to why #1 and #2 is not supported
> by the kernel; everybody probably does muxing in userspace. Which is
> not necessarily a good idea, nor how it's supposed to be done...
> 
> So, the only thing that's out of the ordinary (as I see it), is #3.
> The question that then needs an answer is how the in-kernel solution
> for #1 and #2 would look if we do not consider #3.
> 
> And I claim that the desired solution to #1 and #2 is pretty close
> to my proposal.
> 
> A. You do not want mux-controller drivers in every subsystem that
> needs them.
Agreed.
> 
> B. You do not want every mux-consumer to know the specifics of how to
> operate every kind of mux; there are muxes that are not controlled
> with GPIO pins...
> 
> C. When you implement muxing in a subsystem, there will in some cases
> be a need to handle parallel muxing, where there is a need to share
> mux-controllers.
> 
> It just feels right to separate out the mux-controller and refer to
> it from where a mux is needed. It solves #1 and #2. And, of course,
> as a bonus #3 is also solved. But my bias is obvious.
> 
> And that leads us to the restrictions with the bindings. And the same
> thing happens; the solution for #2 also solves #3.
> 
> So how do you refer to a mux-controller from where it's needed? My
> first proposal used a dt phandle, for the second round I put them in
> the parent node. It would be super if it was possible for the mux-
> consumer to create the mux-controller device from the same dt
> node that is already bound to the mux-consumer. The problem is that
> the mux-consumer should not hard-code which mux-controller device it
> should create. 

Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-11-27 Thread Jonathan Cameron
On 23/11/16 11:47, Peter Rosin wrote:
> On 2016-11-22 21:58, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
>> On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
>> [...]
>>> I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
>>> to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
>>> to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
>>> controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
>>> code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
>>> hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
>>> the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.
>>>
>>> So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
>>> and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
>>> writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
>>> what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
>>> controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
>>> instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
>>> generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
>>> since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
>>> controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).
>>
>> While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
>> be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
>> of restrictions on what can actually be represented.
> 
> This is a characterization without any specifics. But is the
> characterization true? You have two complaints, complexity
> and restrictions with bindings.
> 
>> There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
>> it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
>> Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind and
>> the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. The
>> latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
>> devicetree can offer.
>>
>> And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
>> way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
>> form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
>> that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
>> discrete components.
> 
> So, there are three "new" concepts:
> 
> 1. Sticking a mux in front of an AD-converter. That's not all that
> novel, nor complex. Quite the opposite, I'd say. In fact, I find it
> a bit amazing that there is no in-kernel support for it.
As ever first person who needs it and has the skills to write it gets to do it 
;)
Congratulations Peter ;)
> 
> 2. Reusing the same GPIO-pins to drive different muxes. There are
> obviously chips that work this way (as Jonathan pointed out) and
> these will at some point get used in Linux devices. I guess they
> already are used, but that people handle them in userspace. Or
> something? If this is complex, which I question, it will still need
> support at some point. At least that's what I believe.
> 
> 3. Using the same GPIO pins to mux things handled by different
> subsystems. Right, this is a bit crazy, and I'd rather not have this
> requirement, but this HW is what it is so I'll need to handle it in
> some way. It is also what stops me from falling back to a userspace
> solution, which is probably connected to why #1 and #2 is not supported
> by the kernel; everybody probably does muxing in userspace. Which is
> not necessarily a good idea, nor how it's supposed to be done...
> 
> So, the only thing that's out of the ordinary (as I see it), is #3.
> The question that then needs an answer is how the in-kernel solution
> for #1 and #2 would look if we do not consider #3.
> 
> And I claim that the desired solution to #1 and #2 is pretty close
> to my proposal.
> 
> A. You do not want mux-controller drivers in every subsystem that
> needs them.
Agreed.
> 
> B. You do not want every mux-consumer to know the specifics of how to
> operate every kind of mux; there are muxes that are not controlled
> with GPIO pins...
> 
> C. When you implement muxing in a subsystem, there will in some cases
> be a need to handle parallel muxing, where there is a need to share
> mux-controllers.
> 
> It just feels right to separate out the mux-controller and refer to
> it from where a mux is needed. It solves #1 and #2. And, of course,
> as a bonus #3 is also solved. But my bias is obvious.
> 
> And that leads us to the restrictions with the bindings. And the same
> thing happens; the solution for #2 also solves #3.
> 
> So how do you refer to a mux-controller from where it's needed? My
> first proposal used a dt phandle, for the second round I put them in
> the parent node. It would be super if it was possible for the mux-
> consumer to create the mux-controller device from the same dt
> node that is already bound to the mux-consumer. The problem is that
> the mux-consumer should not hard-code which mux-controller device it
> should create. 

Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-11-23 Thread Peter Rosin
On 2016-11-22 21:58, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
> On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
> [...]
>> I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
>> to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
>> to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
>> controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
>> code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
>> hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
>> the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.
>>
>> So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
>> and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
>> writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
>> what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
>> controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
>> instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
>> generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
>> since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
>> controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).
> 
> While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
> be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
> of restrictions on what can actually be represented.

This is a characterization without any specifics. But is the
characterization true? You have two complaints, complexity
and restrictions with bindings.

> There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
> it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
> Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind and
> the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. The
> latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
> devicetree can offer.
> 
> And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
> way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
> form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
> that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
> discrete components.

So, there are three "new" concepts:

1. Sticking a mux in front of an AD-converter. That's not all that
novel, nor complex. Quite the opposite, I'd say. In fact, I find it
a bit amazing that there is no in-kernel support for it.

2. Reusing the same GPIO-pins to drive different muxes. There are
obviously chips that work this way (as Jonathan pointed out) and
these will at some point get used in Linux devices. I guess they
already are used, but that people handle them in userspace. Or
something? If this is complex, which I question, it will still need
support at some point. At least that's what I believe.

3. Using the same GPIO pins to mux things handled by different
subsystems. Right, this is a bit crazy, and I'd rather not have this
requirement, but this HW is what it is so I'll need to handle it in
some way. It is also what stops me from falling back to a userspace
solution, which is probably connected to why #1 and #2 is not supported
by the kernel; everybody probably does muxing in userspace. Which is
not necessarily a good idea, nor how it's supposed to be done...

So, the only thing that's out of the ordinary (as I see it), is #3.
The question that then needs an answer is how the in-kernel solution
for #1 and #2 would look if we do not consider #3.

And I claim that the desired solution to #1 and #2 is pretty close
to my proposal.

A. You do not want mux-controller drivers in every subsystem that
needs them.

B. You do not want every mux-consumer to know the specifics of how to
operate every kind of mux; there are muxes that are not controlled
with GPIO pins...

C. When you implement muxing in a subsystem, there will in some cases
be a need to handle parallel muxing, where there is a need to share
mux-controllers.

It just feels right to separate out the mux-controller and refer to
it from where a mux is needed. It solves #1 and #2. And, of course,
as a bonus #3 is also solved. But my bias is obvious.

And that leads us to the restrictions with the bindings. And the same
thing happens; the solution for #2 also solves #3.

So how do you refer to a mux-controller from where it's needed? My
first proposal used a dt phandle, for the second round I put them in
the parent node. It would be super if it was possible for the mux-
consumer to create the mux-controller device from the same dt
node that is already bound to the mux-consumer. The problem is that
the mux-consumer should not hard-code which mux-controller device it
should create. The best I can think of is some kind of 'mux-compatible'
attribute, that works like the standard 'compatible' attribute. That
would simplify the bindings for the normal case (#1) where the mux-
controller isn't shared (#2 and #3). Maybe it's possible to fix this
issue somehow? I simply don't know?

Cheers,

Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-11-23 Thread Peter Rosin
On 2016-11-22 21:58, Lars-Peter Clausen wrote:
> On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
> [...]
>> I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
>> to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
>> to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
>> controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
>> code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
>> hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
>> the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.
>>
>> So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
>> and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
>> writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
>> what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
>> controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
>> instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
>> generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
>> since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
>> controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).
> 
> While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
> be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
> of restrictions on what can actually be represented.

This is a characterization without any specifics. But is the
characterization true? You have two complaints, complexity
and restrictions with bindings.

> There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
> it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
> Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind and
> the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. The
> latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
> devicetree can offer.
> 
> And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
> way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
> form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
> that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
> discrete components.

So, there are three "new" concepts:

1. Sticking a mux in front of an AD-converter. That's not all that
novel, nor complex. Quite the opposite, I'd say. In fact, I find it
a bit amazing that there is no in-kernel support for it.

2. Reusing the same GPIO-pins to drive different muxes. There are
obviously chips that work this way (as Jonathan pointed out) and
these will at some point get used in Linux devices. I guess they
already are used, but that people handle them in userspace. Or
something? If this is complex, which I question, it will still need
support at some point. At least that's what I believe.

3. Using the same GPIO pins to mux things handled by different
subsystems. Right, this is a bit crazy, and I'd rather not have this
requirement, but this HW is what it is so I'll need to handle it in
some way. It is also what stops me from falling back to a userspace
solution, which is probably connected to why #1 and #2 is not supported
by the kernel; everybody probably does muxing in userspace. Which is
not necessarily a good idea, nor how it's supposed to be done...

So, the only thing that's out of the ordinary (as I see it), is #3.
The question that then needs an answer is how the in-kernel solution
for #1 and #2 would look if we do not consider #3.

And I claim that the desired solution to #1 and #2 is pretty close
to my proposal.

A. You do not want mux-controller drivers in every subsystem that
needs them.

B. You do not want every mux-consumer to know the specifics of how to
operate every kind of mux; there are muxes that are not controlled
with GPIO pins...

C. When you implement muxing in a subsystem, there will in some cases
be a need to handle parallel muxing, where there is a need to share
mux-controllers.

It just feels right to separate out the mux-controller and refer to
it from where a mux is needed. It solves #1 and #2. And, of course,
as a bonus #3 is also solved. But my bias is obvious.

And that leads us to the restrictions with the bindings. And the same
thing happens; the solution for #2 also solves #3.

So how do you refer to a mux-controller from where it's needed? My
first proposal used a dt phandle, for the second round I put them in
the parent node. It would be super if it was possible for the mux-
consumer to create the mux-controller device from the same dt
node that is already bound to the mux-consumer. The problem is that
the mux-consumer should not hard-code which mux-controller device it
should create. The best I can think of is some kind of 'mux-compatible'
attribute, that works like the standard 'compatible' attribute. That
would simplify the bindings for the normal case (#1) where the mux-
controller isn't shared (#2 and #3). Maybe it's possible to fix this
issue somehow? I simply don't know?

Cheers,

Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-11-22 Thread Lars-Peter Clausen
On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
[...]
> I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
> to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
> to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
> controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
> code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
> hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
> the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.
> 
> So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
> and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
> writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
> what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
> controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
> instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
> generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
> since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
> controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).

While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
of restrictions on what can actually be represented.

There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind and
the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. The
latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
devicetree can offer.

And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
discrete components.


Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] mux controller abstraction and iio/i2c muxes

2016-11-22 Thread Lars-Peter Clausen
On 11/21/2016 02:17 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
[...]
> I have a piece of hardware that is using the same 3 GPIO pins
> to control four 8-way muxes. Three of them control ADC lines
> to an ADS1015 chip with an iio driver, and the last one
> controls the SDA line of an i2c bus. We have some deployed
> code to handle this, but you do not want to see it or ever
> hear about it. I'm not sure why I even mention it. Anyway,
> the situation has nagged me to no end for quite some time.
> 
> So, after first getting more intimate with the i2c muxing code
> and later discovering the drivers/iio/inkern.c file and
> writing a couple of drivers making use of it, I came up with
> what I think is an acceptable solution; add a generic mux
> controller driver (and subsystem) that is shared between all
> instances, and combine that with an iio mux driver and a new
> generic i2c mux driver. The new i2c mux I called "simple"
> since it is only hooking the i2c muxing and the new mux
> controller (much like the alsa simple card driver does for ASoC).

While abstracting this properly is all nice and good and the way it should
be done, but it also adds a lot of complexity and the devicetree adds a lot
of restrictions on what can actually be represented.

There is a certain point where the fabric on a PCB becomes so complex that
it deserves to be a device on its own (like the audio fabric drivers).
Especially when the hardware is built with a certain application in mind and
the driver is supposed to impose policy which reflects this application. The
latter can often not properly be described with the primitives the
devicetree can offer.

And I think your setup is very borderline what can be done in a declarative
way only and it adds a lot of complexity over a more imperative solution in
form of a driver. I think it is worth investigating about having a driver
that is specific to your fabric and handles the interdependencies of the
discrete components.