Hi Andy,

On Mon, May 08, 2017 at 08:47:17PM +0300, Andy Shevchenko wrote:
> On Mon, May 8, 2017 at 8:25 PM, jmondi <jac...@jmondi.org> wrote:
> > Andy,
> >
> > On Mon, May 08, 2017 at 07:08:32PM +0300, Andy Shevchenko wrote:
> >> On Mon, May 8, 2017 at 7:01 PM, jmondi <jac...@jmondi.org> wrote:
> >> > On Sun, May 07, 2017 at 09:52:49AM +0200, Linus Walleij wrote:
> >> >> On Fri, Apr 28, 2017 at 4:53 PM, Andy Shevchenko
> >> >> <andy.shevche...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> >>
> >> >> > Linus, for me it looks like better to revert that change, until we
> >> >> > will have clear picture why existing configuration parameters can't
> >> >> > work.
> >> >>
> >> >> Yeah I'll revert the binding for fixes.
> >>
> >> > As it seems we won't be able to proceed with the currently proposed 
> >> > solution,
> >> > would that be acceptable now that we use the "pinmux" property to add
> >> > flags as BIDIR
> >>
> >> Can you explain what does this *electrically* mean?
> >
> > I really don't know what to add to what Chris said in his 2 previous
> > replies to the same question, and I don't know if I can even get this
> > information as the most detailed drawing I can provide is what you
> > have seen already at page 2696 Fig. 54.1 of the following document.
> >
> > https://www.renesas.com/en-us/doc/products/mpumcu/doc/rz/r01uh0403ej0300_rz_a1h.pdf?key=ccbb2d79446f1cbd015031061140507c
>
> I didn't see before this document. (I had downloaded what Chris
> referred to, which has less than 1200 pages).
>
> The figure you pointed to is really nice and explains it, thank you.

Oh sorry, I thought you had seen this already :)
>
> So, BiDi in this hardware is just helper to enable Input
> simultaneously when you enable output.
>
> This makes me wonder what prevents you to do this in two steps in software?
> So, basically in terms of pin control framework you define this pin
> configuration as
>
> 1. PIN_CONFIG_INPUT_ENABLE:
> 2. PIN_CONFIG_OUTPUT:
>
> (or wise versa)
>

That could be doable, as when we're collecting generic pin
configuration to apply to the pin I can simply check if both of them
are enabled.

That would feel un-natural in dts anyway, for someone that is not that
into the pin controller sub system details.
If I would have to do something like  this, not knowing all the
reasonable pre-conditions we've been discussing about

pins {
    pinmux = < .. >;
    input-enable;
    output-high; /* or output-low, we can ignore the argument here */
}

In place of

pins {
   pinmux = < .. >;
   renesas,bi-directional;
}

And the hardware manual speaks of "bi-directional" everywhere, I would
be wondering what those guys implementing this were thinking :)

> > From my perspective these flags are configurations internal to the pin
> > controller hardware used to enable/disable input buffers when a pin needs to
> > perform in both direction.
>
> > The level of detail I can provide on this is the logical diagram we have 
> > pointed
> > you to already.
> >
> > As I assume you are trying to get this answer from us in order to
> > avoid duplicating things in pin controller sub-system, and I
> > understand this, but my question here was "can we have those flags as part
> > of the pinmux property argument list, as that property description
> > seems to allow us to do that, instead of making them generic pin
> > configuration properties and upset other developers?"
>
> I guess Linus is better than me could answer to this.
>
> > Anyway, I still fail to see why those configuration flags, only
> > affecting the way the pin controller hardware enables/disables
> > its internal buffers and its internal operations have to be
> > described in term of their externally visible electrically characteristics.
> >
> >> Second question, what makes it differ to what already exists?
> >
> > To me, what already exists are pin configuration properties generic to
> > the whole pin controller subsystem, and I understand you don't want to
> > see duplication there.
> >
> > At the same time, to me, those flags are settings the pin controller
> > wants to have specified by software to overcome its hw design flaws,
> > and are intended to configure its internal buffers in a way it cannot
> > do by itself for some very specific operation modes (they are listed
> > in the hw reference manual, it's not something you can chose to
> > configure or not, if you want a pin working in i2c mode, you HAVE to
> > pass those flags to pin controller).
>
> So, when you configuring pinmux to use group of pins to be i2c, what
> does prevent you to apply those settings implicitly?
>

Chris already gave some valid reasons why it would be hard to do this
considering the different part numbers this driver may handle, but I
would also like to add that I have counted > 100 cases where
bi-directional flag has to be applied just in the first 5 IO ports (on a
total of 13).

As there are RZ systems out there running with just < 9MB of SRAM,
adding a static table (or several, considering the different part numbers)
with at least 300 entries, is a considerable waste :(

For SWIO it would be easier, there are just 16 cases, all of them
listed in the hardware reference manual as Chris said.

Thanks
   j

> --
> With Best Regards,
> Andy Shevchenko

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