[PATCH v2 01/12] ARM: Orion: DT support for IRQ and GPIO Controllers
Andrew Lunn
andrew at lunn.ch
Sat Jul 7 07:00:09 EST 2012
On Fri, Jul 06, 2012 at 08:08:23PM +0000, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Thursday 05 July 2012, Andrew Lunn wrote:
> > > I think the latter one needs to be
> > >
> > > +static int __initdata gpio1_irqs[4] = {
> > > + IRQ_DOVE_HIGH_GPIO,
> > > + IRQ_DOVE_HIGH_GPIO,
> > > + IRQ_DOVE_HIGH_GPIO,
> > > + IRQ_DOVE_HIGH_GPIO,
> > > +};
> > >
> > > so we register all four parts to the same primary IRQ. The
> > > same is true for the devicetree representation.
> >
> > Nope, does not work like that.
> >
> > It does not matter which IRQ of a GPIO chip fires. It looks at the IRQ
> > cause bits for all lines and fires off the secondary ISR as needed for
> > the whole chip. So in effect, there is a mapping IRQ->GPIO chip, not
> > IRQ->1/4 of GPIO chip. With what you suggest above, you would end up
> > with four chained interrupt handlers, all being handled by the same
> > interrupt handler for one chio, and the last three in the chain would
> > never do anything since the first one does all the work.
>
> Does it really?
>
> The handler function I'm looking at is
>
>
> static void gpio_irq_handler(unsigned int irq, struct irq_desc *desc)
> {
> int irqoff;
> BUG_ON(irq < IRQ_DOVE_GPIO_0_7 || irq > IRQ_DOVE_HIGH_GPIO);
>
> irqoff = irq <= IRQ_DOVE_GPIO_16_23 ? irq - IRQ_DOVE_GPIO_0_7 :
> 3 + irq - IRQ_DOVE_GPIO_24_31;
>
> orion_gpio_irq_handler(irqoff << 3);
> if (irq == IRQ_DOVE_HIGH_GPIO) {
> orion_gpio_irq_handler(40);
> orion_gpio_irq_handler(48);
> orion_gpio_irq_handler(56);
> }
> }
void orion_gpio_irq_handler(int pinoff)
{
struct orion_gpio_chip *ochip;
u32 cause, type;
int i;
ochip = orion_gpio_chip_find(pinoff);
if (ochip == NULL)
return;
cause = readl(GPIO_DATA_IN(ochip)) & readl(GPIO_LEVEL_MASK(ochip));
cause |= readl(GPIO_EDGE_CAUSE(ochip)) & readl(GPIO_EDGE_MASK(ochip));
for (i = 0; i < ochip->chip.ngpio; i++) {
int irq;
irq = ochip->secondary_irq_base + i;
if (!(cause & (1 << i)))
continue;
type = irqd_get_trigger_type(irq_get_irq_data(irq));
if ((type & IRQ_TYPE_SENSE_MASK) == IRQ_TYPE_EDGE_BOTH) {
/* Swap polarity (race with GPIO line) */
u32 polarity;
polarity = readl(GPIO_IN_POL(ochip));
polarity ^= 1 << i;
writel(polarity, GPIO_IN_POL(ochip));
}
generic_handle_irq(irq);
}
}
orion_gpio_chip_find(pinoff) when called with pinoff 32, 40, 48, or 56
will return the same gpio chip. The loop:
for (i = 0; i < ochip->chip.ngpio; i++) {
will iterate over all lines of the controller.
> My reading of this is a manual hardwired implementation of a
> primary handler that triggers the secondary handler four times
> when it's called with a specific argument.
Here is your mistake. It not a secondary handler. It is a function
which might trigger a secondary handler, if the status bit requires
that the secondary handler should be called..
> If you want to keep that behavior, this handler cannot be
> generic across all mvebu socs, whereas registering four
> chained handlers for the same primary interrupt would have
> the same effect at a very small runtime overhead without the
> need for any special case.
I would say the current code does redundant stuff.
This code has also been tested on a Dove by Sebastian Hesselbarth and
he did not notice anything strange happening on his system.
Andrew
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