[PATCH] ARM: vexpress: initial device tree support
Stephen Warren
swarren at nvidia.com
Wed Jan 11 10:55:05 EST 2012
Mitch Bradley wrote at Tuesday, January 10, 2012 3:36 PM:
> On 1/10/2012 11:58 AM, Timur Tabi wrote:
> > Jamie Lokier wrote:
> >
> >> It still needs to know *which* I2C bus master is connected to the
> >> display. Some graphics hardware has multiple, e.g. one to talk with
> >> the DVI/HDMI transmitter, another connected by cable to the display.
> >
> > Yes, this is my problem. I have multiple I2C busses on my system, and there's no way to guess which
> one is connected to the DVI port. A phandle in the device tree is the only way I can figure out which
> I2C bus to use. But there's another problem. I can use of_find_i2c_device_by_node() to determine the
> i2c_client (and therefore, the i2c_adapter) to use for fb_ddc_read(). However, that function only
> works if the I2C device was probed. That typically is done by the I2C driver for the device, but
> there is no "edid" device driver. So my framebuffer driver is going to have to pretend to be one.
>
> It seems to me that having the framebuffer driver handle the EDID
> "driver" function is exactly the right thing. The framebuffer driver is
> the only thing that cares about EDID information. Given a phandle
> reference to an I2C interface, the "driver" is just "call the I2C read
> routine" - plus, in your case, toggling the GPIO pin.
>
> That GPIO pin thing is annoying, but not sufficiently complex or common
> that it warrants having a separate EDID driver. You could define a
> platform-specific property to tell your framebuffer driver that it needs
> to do that GPIO thing. It's a hack, but the GPIO thing is inherently a
> hack, so there will be some ugliness somewhere as a result.
Shouldn't there be an I2C bus mux driver to handle this? The kernel
already has support for bus muxes controller over I2C. I think here you
just need to implement the same thing, but with the control via a GPIO.
In the future I hope to implement something similar but controller using
an SoC's pinmux HW (where a single controller's I2C signals can be routed
to different sets of pins on the SoC using its pinmux) - a feature which
at least some Tegra boards use for sharing DDC and something else. Such
a mux can be explicitly represented in DT, with multiple I2C child bus
nodes, I think.
> > I wish there were some way to obtain the i2c_adapter struct more easily.
> >
> >> I have worked with devices that shared the same I2C for DDC and
> >> talking with on-board devices. (That was a bad idea, as some monitors
> >> clamp the lines high or low excessively even when switched off.) Point
> >> here is sometimes there's a dedicated one for DDC; sometimes there isn't.
> >
> > I also have this problem. I need to toggle a GPIO in order to get the I2C bus connected to the DVI
> port. The same I2C bus is used for the audio codec and a bunch of other devices. Our SOC has four
> I2C busses, so I don't understand why the board designed didn't dedicate one for the DDC. But I can
> easily work around this issue.
--
nvpublic
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