[PATCH 5/5] USB: Add Cypress c67x00 OTG controller driver to Kconfig and Makefiles
David Brownell
david-b at pacbell.net
Sun Nov 25 07:12:27 EST 2007
On Friday 23 November 2007, Grant Likely wrote:
> +config USB_C67X00_DRV
> + tristate "Cypress C67x00 support"
> + # only allowed to be =y if both USB!=m and USB_GADGET!=m
This is wrong. Remember that since this is a dual-role driver,
there are exactly three possible driver modes ... and the driver
must support only one of them at a time:
- Host-only ... only allowed if host side USB is enabled. The
controller driver can be statically linked iff usbcore is too.
- Peripheral-only ... only allowed if peripheral side USB is
enabled. Only one port may be used as the peripheral; the
controller driver can be linked statically or as a module.
- OTG ... only allowed if both host and peripheral side USB
are enabled. Only one port can be the OTG port, but other
ports can be used for host functionality. Static/modular
linkage follows (more restrictive) the host-only rule.
And of course, what a given board supports is controlled by the
connectors it has ... A, B, or AB. (Possibly AB plus n*A.) So
the driver should probably be able to make sense of having OTG
support, but needing to cope with a non-OTG board ... or having
an OTG board, a driver that only copes with one role.
Hmmm ... your patches don't include peripheral mode support yet.
Either all these gadget hooks should vanish, or you should try
to get the controller mode stuff right from the beginning.
I've appended the relevant Kconfig bits from the musb_hdrc
driver, which (despite some glitches) are pretty much correct.
- Dave
> + depends on (!USB && USB_GADGET) || (!USB_GADGET && USB) || (USB && USB_GADGET)
> + default n
> + help
> + The Cypress C67x00 (EZ-Host/EZ-OTG) chips are dual-role
> + host/peripheral USB controllers.
> +
> + To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
> + module will be called c67x00.
> +
> +config USB_C67X00_HCD
> + bool "Cypress C67X00 Host support"
> + depends on USB_C67X00_DRV
> + depends on USB
> + default y
> + help
> + This enables the host functionality of the Cypress C67X00.
>
================
#
# USB Dual Role (OTG-ready) Controller Drivers
# for silicon based on Mentor Graphics INVENTRA designs
#
comment "Enable Host or Gadget support to see Inventra options"
depends on !USB && USB_GADGET=n
# (M)HDRC = (Multipoint) Highspeed Dual-Role Controller
config USB_MUSB_HDRC
depends on USB || USB_GADGET
tristate 'Inventra Highspeed Dual Role Controller (TI, ...)'
help
Say Y here if your system has a dual role high speed USB
controller based on the Mentor Graphics silicon IP. Then
configure options to match your silicon and the board
it's being used with, including the USB peripheral role,
or the USB host role, or both.
Texas Instruments parts using this IP include DaVinci 644x,
OMAP 243x, OMAP 343x, and TUSB 6010.
If you do not know what this is, please say N.
To compile this driver as a module, choose M here; the
module will be called "musb_hdrc".
config USB_MUSB_SOC
boolean
depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC
default y if ARCH_DAVINCI
default y if ARCH_OMAP2430
default y if ARCH_OMAP343X
help
Use a static <asm/arch/hdrc_cnf.h> file to describe how the
controller is configured (endpoints, mechanisms, etc) on the
current iteration of a given system-on-chip.
comment "DaVinci 644x USB support"
depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC && ARCH_DAVINCI
comment "OMAP 243x high speed USB support"
depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC && ARCH_OMAP2430
comment "OMAP 343x high speed USB support"
depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC && ARCH_OMAP343X
config USB_TUSB6010
boolean "TUSB 6010 support"
depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC && !USB_MUSB_SOC
default y
help
The TUSB 6010 chip, from Texas Instruments, connects a discrete
HDRC core using a 16-bit parallel bus. It can use system-specific
external DMA controllers.
choice
prompt "Driver Mode"
depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC
help
Dual-Role devices can support both host and peripheral roles,
as well as a the special "OTG Device" role which can switch
between both roles as needed.
# use USB_MUSB_HDRC_HCD not USB_MUSB_HOST to #ifdef host side support;
# OTG needs both roles, not just USB_MUSB_HOST.
config USB_MUSB_HOST
depends on USB
bool "USB Host"
help
Say Y here if your system supports the USB host role.
If it has a USB "A" (rectangular), "Mini-A" (uncommon),
or "Mini-AB" connector, it supports the host role.
(With a "Mini-AB" connector, you should enable USB OTG.)
# use USB_GADGET_MUSB_HDRC not USB_MUSB_PERIPHERAL to #ifdef peripheral
# side support ... OTG needs both roles
config USB_MUSB_PERIPHERAL
depends on USB_GADGET
bool "USB Peripheral (gadget stack)"
select USB_GADGET_MUSB_HDRC
help
Say Y here if your system supports the USB peripheral role.
If it has a USB "B" (squarish), "Mini-B", or "Mini-AB"
connector, it supports the peripheral role.
(With a "Mini-AB" connector, you should enable USB OTG.)
config USB_MUSB_OTG
depends on USB && USB_GADGET && EXPERIMENTAL
bool "Both host and peripheral: USB OTG (On The Go) Device"
select USB_GADGET_MUSB_HDRC
select USB_OTG
select PM
help
The most notable feature of USB OTG is support for a
"Dual-Role" device, which can act as either a device
or a host. The initial role choice can be changed
later, when two dual-role devices talk to each other.
Select this if your system has a Mini-AB connector, or
to simplify certain kinds of configuration.
To implement your OTG Targeted Peripherals List (TPL), enable
USB_OTG_WHITELIST and update "drivers/usb/core/otg_whitelist.h"
to match your requirements.
endchoice
# enable peripheral support (including with OTG)
config USB_GADGET_MUSB_HDRC
bool
depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC && (USB_MUSB_PERIPHERAL || USB_MUSB_OTG)
# enables host support (including with OTG)
config USB_MUSB_HDRC_HCD
bool
depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC && (USB_MUSB_HOST || USB_MUSB_OTG)
select USB_OTG if USB_GADGET_MUSB_HDRC
default y
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