[PATCH 2/2] pwm: Add PWM polarity flag macros for DT
Stephen Warren
swarren at wwwdotorg.org
Sat Jul 13 00:42:41 EST 2013
On 07/12/2013 05:01 AM, Laurent Pinchart wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Thursday 11 July 2013 14:06:44 Stephen Warren wrote:
>> On 07/11/2013 01:32 PM, Thierry Reding wrote:
>>> On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 at 11:50:48AM -0600, Stephen Warren wrote:
>>>> On 07/11/2013 09:36 AM, Thierry Reding wrote:
>>>>> On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 at 04:37:48PM +0200, Laurent Pinchart
>>>>> wrote: [...]
>>>>>
>>>>>> diff --git
>>>>>> a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pwm/atmel-tcb-pwm.txt
>>>>>> b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pwm/atmel-tcb-pwm.txt
>>>>>> index de0eaed..be09be4 100644 ---
>>>>>> a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pwm/atmel-tcb-pwm.txt
>>>>>> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pwm/atmel-tcb-pwm.txt
>>>>>> @@ -4,9 +4,9 @@ Required properties: - compatible: should be
>>>>>> "atmel,tcb-pwm" - #pwm-cells: Should be 3. The first cell
>>>>>> specifies the per-chip index of the PWM to use, the second
>>>>>> cell is the period in nanoseconds and - bit 0 in the third
>>>>>> cell is used to encode the polarity of PWM output. - Set bit
>>>>>> 0 of the third cell in PWM specifier to 1 for inverse
>>>>>> polarity & - set to 0 for normal polarity. + the third cell
>>>>>> is used to encode the polarity of PWM output. Set the +
>>>>>> PWM_POLARITY_NORMAL flag for normal polarity or the
>>>>>> PWM_POLARITY_INVERSED + flag for inverted polarity. PWM
>>>>>> flags are defined in <dt-bindings/pwm/pwm.h>. - tc-block: The
>>>>>> Timer Counter block to use as a PWM chip.
>>>>>
>>>>>> Example:
>>>>> I'd prefer for the original text to stay in place and the reference to
>>>>> the dt-bindings/pwm/pwm.h file to go below that block.
>>>>
>>>> I disagree here. The whole point of creating header files for the
>>>> constants in binding definitions was so that you wouldn't have to
>>>> duplicate all the values into the binding definitions. Rather, you'd
>>>> simply say "see <dt-bindings/xxx.h>".
>>>
>>> But that's not something that this patch solves.
>>
>> Well, if the comments I made on the patch re: that <linux/pwm.h> should
>> simply #include <dt-bindings/pwm/pwm.h> instead of duplicating the
>> constants, then yet this patch will solve that. There will be a single place
>> where the constants are defined.
>
> As explained in another reply, this would require replacing the enum with an
> unsigned int. I can write a patch if we agree on this.
>
>>> And it could be solved even in the absence of the header file defining the
>>> symbolic constants. If all the standard flags that dt-bindings/pwm/pwm.txt
>>> now specifies were to be listed in pwm.txt (they actually are) then
>>> referring to that document as the canonical source works equally well.
>>
>> If that's all the happens, then there will still be duplication
>> between pwm.txt and <linux/pwm.h>.
>
> I've explicitly mentioned the flags in individual DT bindings to ease adding
> new flags in the future. At the moment the defined flags are either all
> supported or not used at all by drivers. If we later add a new flag supported
> by a subset of drivers only the driver bindings should list supported flags
> for each driver.
>
> I'm fine with removing the explicit mentions of individual flags right now and
> adding it back when needed if you think that's better.
I think the values for any common system-wide flags should be defined
once in some system-wide place, and the values for any HW-specific
values should be defined only in the documentation for that specific HW.
You could try and avoid conflicts by either:
a) Allocating system-wide flags from bit 0 up, and HW-specific flags
from bit 31 down.
or:
b) Using 1 cell for standard flags, and a separate cell for any
HW-specific flags. Drivers can quite easily adapt to adding extra cells
to #pwm-cells, thus making adding a HW-specific cell later
backwards-compatible.
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