diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/pinctrl/aspeed/pinctrl-aspeed.c')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/pinctrl/aspeed/pinctrl-aspeed.c | 73 |
1 files changed, 68 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/pinctrl/aspeed/pinctrl-aspeed.c b/drivers/pinctrl/aspeed/pinctrl-aspeed.c index 6a94eaecf638..9c65d560d48f 100644 --- a/drivers/pinctrl/aspeed/pinctrl-aspeed.c +++ b/drivers/pinctrl/aspeed/pinctrl-aspeed.c @@ -286,13 +286,76 @@ int aspeed_pinmux_set_mux(struct pinctrl_dev *pctldev, unsigned int function, static bool aspeed_expr_is_gpio(const struct aspeed_sig_expr *expr) { /* - * The signal type is GPIO if the signal name has "GPIO" as a prefix. - * strncmp (rather than strcmp) is used to implement the prefix - * requirement. + * We need to differentiate between GPIO and non-GPIO signals to + * implement the gpio_request_enable() interface. For better or worse + * the ASPEED pinctrl driver uses the expression names to determine + * whether an expression will mux a pin for GPIO. * - * expr->signal might look like "GPIOT3" in the GPIO case. + * Generally we have the following - A GPIO such as B1 has: + * + * - expr->signal set to "GPIOB1" + * - expr->function set to "GPIOB1" + * + * Using this fact we can determine whether the provided expression is + * a GPIO expression by testing the signal name for the string prefix + * "GPIO". + * + * However, some GPIOs are input-only, and the ASPEED datasheets name + * them differently. An input-only GPIO such as T0 has: + * + * - expr->signal set to "GPIT0" + * - expr->function set to "GPIT0" + * + * It's tempting to generalise the prefix test from "GPIO" to "GPI" to + * account for both GPIOs and GPIs, but in doing so we run aground on + * another feature: + * + * Some pins in the ASPEED BMC SoCs have a "pass-through" GPIO + * function where the input state of one pin is replicated as the + * output state of another (as if they were shorted together - a mux + * configuration that is typically enabled by hardware strapping). + * This feature allows the BMC to pass e.g. power button state through + * to the host while the BMC is yet to boot, but take control of the + * button state once the BMC has booted by muxing each pin as a + * separate, pin-specific GPIO. + * + * Conceptually this pass-through mode is a form of GPIO and is named + * as such in the datasheets, e.g. "GPID0". This naming similarity + * trips us up with the simple GPI-prefixed-signal-name scheme + * discussed above, as the pass-through configuration is not what we + * want when muxing a pin as GPIO for the GPIO subsystem. + * + * On e.g. the AST2400, a pass-through function "GPID0" is grouped on + * balls A18 and D16, where we have: + * + * For ball A18: + * - expr->signal set to "GPID0IN" + * - expr->function set to "GPID0" + * + * For ball D16: + * - expr->signal set to "GPID0OUT" + * - expr->function set to "GPID0" + * + * By contrast, the pin-specific GPIO expressions for the same pins are + * as follows: + * + * For ball A18: + * - expr->signal looks like "GPIOD0" + * - expr->function looks like "GPIOD0" + * + * For ball D16: + * - expr->signal looks like "GPIOD1" + * - expr->function looks like "GPIOD1" + * + * Testing both the signal _and_ function names gives us the means + * differentiate the pass-through GPIO pinmux configuration from the + * pin-specific configuration that the GPIO subsystem is after: An + * expression is a pin-specific (non-pass-through) GPIO configuration + * if the signal prefix is "GPI" and the signal name matches the + * function name. */ - return strncmp(expr->signal, "GPIO", 4) == 0; + return !strncmp(expr->signal, "GPI", 3) && + !strcmp(expr->signal, expr->function); } static bool aspeed_gpio_in_exprs(const struct aspeed_sig_expr **exprs) |