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Date:      Mon, 25 Jul 2016 22:41:40 -0700
From:      Nathan Whitehorn <nwhitehorn@freebsd.org>
To:        Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com>
Cc:        Michal Meloun <mmel@freebsd.org>, Svatopluk Kraus <skra@freebsd.org>, "freebsd-arch@freebsd.org" <freebsd-arch@freebsd.org>, "freebsd-arm@freebsd.org" <freebsd-arm@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: INTRNG (Was: svn commit: r301453....)
Message-ID:  <ab44ddb1-515b-94ac-6b12-673b7c53d658@freebsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <CANCZdfpz=z3gc3pyb_Qssa3vGJSnPv_r6J-SWDPPpE9zPYB9=w@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <201606051620.u55GKD5S066398@repo.freebsd.org> <b9606755-69cb-2cb0-04d7-6be32e4cb89e@freebsd.org> <578E0B5D.3070105@FreeBSD.org> <e026f6fc-76ed-5dbe-00fc-365b6d7bcf94@freebsd.org> <578F6075.7010500@FreeBSD.org> <05a80ac6-4285-ec9d-36e9-2f92c609f746@freebsd.org> <57907B0F.9070204@FreeBSD.org> <9d2a224c-b787-2875-5984-a7a2354e8695@freebsd.org> <57934ABD.6010807@FreeBSD.org> <4e7a3e8f-cc21-f5f2-e3e0-4dbd554a4cd0@freebsd.org> <5794720F.4050303@FreeBSD.org> <8bfd8668-bc49-e109-e610-b5cd470be3ec@freebsd.org> <57950005.6070403@FreeBSD.org> <f82018ee-51e7-60fa-2682-f0ef307a52b5@freebsd.org> <57961549.4020105@FreeBSD.org> <e2cace17-0924-2084-5fcf-626f87e41cc3@freebsd.org> <CANCZdfr%2BZ4XxXRY0yMiWXwp=8iKq54y3uJ9-OfAOdfxAs1qdtw@mail.gmail.com> <f94bfd25-fabf-efc3-55c9-cfdfd9e4d6e6@freebsd.org> <CANCZdfpz=z3gc3pyb_Qssa3vGJSnPv_r6J-SWDPPpE9zPYB9=w@mail.gmail.com>

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On 07/25/16 21:24, Warner Losh wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 25, 2016 at 10:48 AM, Nathan Whitehorn
> <nwhitehorn@freebsd.org> wrote:
>>
>> On 07/25/16 09:32, Warner Losh wrote:
>>> On Mon, Jul 25, 2016 at 8:05 AM, Nathan Whitehorn
>>> <nwhitehorn@freebsd.org> wrote:
>>>> That wasn't my question. Are these particular device drivers allocating
>>>> interrupts both on the GPIOs in their "interrupts" property (which are
>>>> entirely GPIOs in this example) *and* on the GPIOs listed as resources
>>>> but
>>>> not listed as interrupts? If they are, then you need a switching
>>>> mechanism,
>>>> but that seems pretty unlikely given the names of the non-interrupt GPIOs
>>>> (they look like outputs). It would also be a somewhat deranged way to set
>>>> up
>>>> a device tree -- not that that rules it out or anything.
>>> On Atmel, there's a situation that this covers, I think.
>>>
>>> The MCI device has an interrupt in the core:
>>>
>>>                           mmc0: mmc@fffa8000 {
>>>                                   compatible = "atmel,hsmci";
>>>                                   reg = <0xfffa8000 0x600>;
>>>                                   interrupts = <9 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH 0>;
>>>                                   #address-cells = <1>;
>>>                                   #size-cells = <0>;
>>>                                   pinctrl-names = "default";
>>>                                   clocks = <&mci0_clk>;
>>>                                   clock-names = "mci_clk";
>>>                                   status = "disabled";
>>>                           };
>>>
>>> and in other places wires in GPIO interrupts for things like card
>>> eject / insertion.
>>>
>>>                           mmc0: mmc@f0008000 {
>>>                                   pinctrl-0 = <
>>>                                           &pinctrl_board_mmc0
>>>                                           &pinctrl_mmc0_slot0_clk_cmd_dat0
>>>                                           &pinctrl_mmc0_slot0_dat1_3>;
>>>                                   status = "okay";
>>>                                   slot@0 {
>>>                                           reg = <0>;
>>>                                           bus-width = <4>;
>>>                                           cd-gpios = <&pioD 15
>>> GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>;
>>>                                   };
>>>                           };
>>>
>>> an interrupt is registered on the cd-gpios pin for when the card changes.
>>> At
>>> least in linux, FreeBSD doesn't (yet) implement this, but will someday if
>>> I get
>>> back to the armv6 atmel work I started (see at91-cosino.dts for example,
>>> there's
>>> others).
>>>
>>> I think this is an example of what you are asking about, or did I get
>>> lost in the
>>> twisty maze of conversation zigs and zags...
>>>
>>> Warner
>>>
>> Where we would run into (minor) problems is if the interrupt parent for the
>> first mmc0 is the GPIO controller. More generally, if &pioD has interrupt
>> children specified in some way that is not a <pin, active high/whatever>
>> tuple somewhere else in the tree then you would have to have methods to
>> parse both interrupt specifiers as-obtained-from-interrupts-properties (or
>> equivalent) and specifiers as-obtained-from-gpio-properties. If the tree
>> picks one format and sticks with it, you can get away with just the one.
>> Glancing through the DTS source for this board, that doesn't appear to be
>> the case and the property formatting is uniform, but I might have missed
>> something in one of the many #includes.
> Interrupts and GPIO specifiers are different in subtle ways. The interrupt
> parent for mmc0 is an AIC, which is also the ultimate parent of the GPIO
> controller.

That is what it looked like.

> But the properties for the GPIO pins that act as interrupts and
> the interrupt specifiers are different.

So there are devices with both interrupts = <foo bar>, #interrupt-parent 
= <&gpio> and gpios = <&gpio bleh baz> where "Bleh baz" is formatted 
different than "foo bar" and both are meant to be treated as interrupts?

It's fine if there are, but I haven't seen any such device trees yet.

>> As a general point, GPIO weirdness would be easy enough case to handle if it
>> did come up (add some mapping method, as above) that I think we shouldn't
>> worry too much about it from an architectural point of view. If a board
>> appears that is set up this way, we can roll with the punches at that point
>> and add whatever small amount of shim code that is required. It would be
>> annoyance, sure, but not a real complication.
> I suspect that either I don't understand the issue, or we'll have such boards
> very quickly. The Atmel design is fairly clean in comparison to other
> franken-horrors
> I've seen...

People do weird things for sure. My point is just that the details of 
how (implicit) GPIO interrupts are formatted just isn't that important. 
It's easy enough to add special code for devices that are set up in 
bizarre ways as they are spotted in the wild and that special code is so 
minor that it doesn't matter for the design of the API. This is a point 
I was just curious about, since I had never actually seen device trees 
set up that way.

The issue with this patch is, at its core, whether you have an 
architecture that relies on the newbus hierarchy (like r301453) or that 
allows links outside of that hierarchy that can cross branches or go the 
"wrong" way, like the previously existing code. There are some other 
differences, of varying degrees of importance, but that's the really 
fundamental one. I haven't seen any cases where r301453 provides 
functionality absent in the already existing system, but there seem to 
be a large number of cases (see the first email I sent to freebsd-arch 
or https://wiki.freebsd.org/Complicated_Interrupts) that the API in 
r301453 cannot accommodate and that are needed to support a variety of 
hardware. Since having two APIs will be a significant maintenance 
burden, if there are cases the existing code can't handle, I would like 
to know about them; otherwise, I think we should back out r301453 and 
stick to the standard device tree interrupt mapping mechanism on ARM 
instead. I'm happy to help implement any necessary enhancements there 
(for example, dealing with weirdly-encoded GPIOs).
-Nathan

>
> Warner
>




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