| This document provides an overview of the msm_gpiomux interface, which |
| is used to provide gpio pin multiplexing and configuration on mach-msm |
| targets. |
| |
| History |
| ======= |
| |
| The first-generation API for gpio configuration & multiplexing on msm |
| is the function gpio_tlmm_config(). This function has a few notable |
| shortcomings, which led to its deprecation and replacement by gpiomux: |
| |
| The 'disable' parameter: Setting the second parameter to |
| gpio_tlmm_config to GPIO_CFG_DISABLE tells the peripheral |
| processor in charge of the subsystem to perform a look-up into a |
| low-power table and apply the low-power/sleep setting for the pin. |
| As the msm family evolved this became problematic. Not all pins |
| have sleep settings, not all peripheral processors will accept requests |
| to apply said sleep settings, and not all msm targets have their gpio |
| subsystems managed by a peripheral processor. In order to get consistent |
| behavior on all targets, drivers are forced to ignore this parameter, |
| rendering it useless. |
| |
| The 'direction' flag: for all mux-settings other than raw-gpio (0), |
| the output-enable bit of a gpio is hard-wired to a known |
| input (usually VDD or ground). For those settings, the direction flag |
| is meaningless at best, and deceptive at worst. In addition, using the |
| direction flag to change output-enable (OE) directly can cause trouble in |
| gpiolib, which has no visibility into gpio direction changes made |
| in this way. Direction control in gpio mode should be made through gpiolib. |
| |
| Key Features of gpiomux |
| ======================= |
| |
| - A consistent interface across all generations of msm. Drivers can expect |
| the same results on every target. |
| - gpiomux plays nicely with gpiolib. Functions that should belong to gpiolib |
| are left to gpiolib and not duplicated here. gpiomux is written with the |
| intent that gpio_chips will call gpiomux reference-counting methods |
| from their request() and free() hooks, providing full integration. |
| - Tabular configuration. Instead of having to call gpio_tlmm_config |
| hundreds of times, gpio configuration is placed in a single table. |
| - Per-gpio sleep. Each gpio is individually reference counted, allowing only |
| those lines which are in use to be put in high-power states. |
| - 0 means 'do nothing': all flags are designed so that the default memset-zero |
| equates to a sensible default of 'no configuration', preventing users |
| from having to provide hundreds of 'no-op' configs for unused or |
| unwanted lines. |
| |
| Usage |
| ===== |
| |
| To use gpiomux, provide configuration information for relevant gpio lines |
| in the msm_gpiomux_configs table. Since a 0 equates to "unconfigured", |
| only those lines to be managed by gpiomux need to be specified. Here |
| is a completely fictional example: |
| |
| struct msm_gpiomux_config msm_gpiomux_configs[GPIOMUX_NGPIOS] = { |
| [12] = { |
| .active = GPIOMUX_VALID | GPIOMUX_DRV_8MA | GPIOMUX_FUNC_1, |
| .suspended = GPIOMUX_VALID | GPIOMUX_PULL_DOWN, |
| }, |
| [34] = { |
| .suspended = GPIOMUX_VALID | GPIOMUX_PULL_DOWN, |
| }, |
| }; |
| |
| To indicate that a gpio is in use, call msm_gpiomux_get() to increase |
| its reference count. To decrease the reference count, call msm_gpiomux_put(). |
| |
| The effect of this configuration is as follows: |
| |
| When the system boots, gpios 12 and 34 will be initialized with their |
| 'suspended' configurations. All other gpios, which were left unconfigured, |
| will not be touched. |
| |
| When msm_gpiomux_get() is called on gpio 12 to raise its reference count |
| above 0, its active configuration will be applied. Since no other gpio |
| line has a valid active configuration, msm_gpiomux_get() will have no |
| effect on any other line. |
| |
| When msm_gpiomux_put() is called on gpio 12 or 34 to drop their reference |
| count to 0, their suspended configurations will be applied. |
| Since no other gpio line has a valid suspended configuration, no other |
| gpio line will be effected by msm_gpiomux_put(). Since gpio 34 has no valid |
| active configuration, this is effectively a no-op for gpio 34 as well, |
| with one small caveat, see the section "About Output-Enable Settings". |
| |
| All of the GPIOMUX_VALID flags may seem like unnecessary overhead, but |
| they address some important issues. As unused entries (all those |
| except 12 and 34) are zero-filled, gpiomux needs a way to distinguish |
| the used fields from the unused. In addition, the all-zero pattern |
| is a valid configuration! Therefore, gpiomux defines an additional bit |
| which is used to indicate when a field is used. This has the pleasant |
| side-effect of allowing calls to msm_gpiomux_write to use '0' to indicate |
| that a value should not be changed: |
| |
| msm_gpiomux_write(0, GPIOMUX_VALID, 0); |
| |
| replaces the active configuration of gpio 0 with an all-zero configuration, |
| but leaves the suspended configuration as it was. |
| |
| Static Configurations |
| ===================== |
| |
| To install a static configuration, which is applied at boot and does |
| not change after that, install a configuration with a suspended component |
| but no active component, as in the previous example: |
| |
| [34] = { |
| .suspended = GPIOMUX_VALID | GPIOMUX_PULL_DOWN, |
| }, |
| |
| The suspended setting is applied during boot, and the lack of any valid |
| active setting prevents any other setting from being applied at runtime. |
| If other subsystems attempting to access the line is a concern, one could |
| *really* anchor the configuration down by calling msm_gpiomux_get on the |
| line at initialization to move the line into active mode. With the line |
| held, it will never be re-suspended, and with no valid active configuration, |
| no new configurations will be applied. |
| |
| But then, if having other subsystems grabbing for the line is truly a concern, |
| it should be reserved with gpio_request instead, which carries an implicit |
| msm_gpiomux_get. |
| |
| gpiomux and gpiolib |
| =================== |
| |
| It is expected that msm gpio_chips will call msm_gpiomux_get() and |
| msm_gpiomux_put() from their request and free hooks, like this fictional |
| example: |
| |
| static int request(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned offset) |
| { |
| return msm_gpiomux_get(chip->base + offset); |
| } |
| |
| static void free(struct gpio_chip *chip, unsigned offset) |
| { |
| msm_gpiomux_put(chip->base + offset); |
| } |
| |
| ...somewhere in a gpio_chip declaration... |
| .request = request, |
| .free = free, |
| |
| This provides important functionality: |
| - It guarantees that a gpio line will have its 'active' config applied |
| when the line is requested, and will not be suspended while the line |
| remains requested; and |
| - It guarantees that gpio-direction settings from gpiolib behave sensibly. |
| See "About Output-Enable Settings." |
| |
| This mechanism allows for "auto-request" of gpiomux lines via gpiolib |
| when it is suitable. Drivers wishing more exact control are, of course, |
| free to also use msm_gpiomux_set and msm_gpiomux_get. |
| |
| About Output-Enable Settings |
| ============================ |
| |
| Some msm targets do not have the ability to query the current gpio |
| configuration setting. This means that changes made to the output-enable |
| (OE) bit by gpiolib cannot be consistently detected and preserved by gpiomux. |
| Therefore, when gpiomux applies a configuration setting, any direction |
| settings which may have been applied by gpiolib are lost and the default |
| input settings are re-applied. |
| |
| For this reason, drivers should not assume that gpio direction settings |
| continue to hold if they free and then re-request a gpio. This seems like |
| common sense - after all, anybody could have obtained the line in the |
| meantime - but it needs saying. |
| |
| This also means that calls to msm_gpiomux_write will reset the OE bit, |
| which means that if the gpio line is held by a client of gpiolib and |
| msm_gpiomux_write is called, the direction setting has been lost and |
| gpiolib's internal state has been broken. |
| Release gpio lines before reconfiguring them. |