On 06/16/2015 02:42 AM, Tomeu Vizoso wrote:
On 2 June 2015 at 17:40, Stephen Warren <swar...@wwwdotorg.org> wrote:
On 06/02/2015 05:28 AM, Linus Walleij wrote:

On Tue, May 26, 2015 at 9:41 PM, Stephen Warren <swar...@wwwdotorg.org>
wrote:

On 05/25/2015 08:53 AM, Tomeu Vizoso wrote:


Specify how the GPIOs map to the pins in T124, so the dependency is
explicit.

Signed-off-by: Tomeu Vizoso <tomeu.viz...@collabora.com>
---
    arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra124.dtsi | 1 +
    1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)

diff --git a/arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra124.dtsi
b/arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra124.dtsi
index 13cc7ca..5d1d35f 100644
--- a/arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra124.dtsi
+++ b/arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra124.dtsi
@@ -254,6 +254,7 @@
                  gpio-controller;
                  #interrupt-cells = <2>;
                  interrupt-controller;
+               gpio-ranges = <&pinmux 0 0 250>;



We should be consistent between SoCs. Why not make the same change for
all
Tegra SoCs?


Agreed.

I think this change will cause the GPIO subsystem to call into the
pinctrl
subsystem and create/add/register a new GPIO<->pinctrl range structure.
The
pinctrl driver already does this, so I think we'll end up with two
duplicate
entries in the pinctrl device's gpio_ranges list. This probably won't
cause
a problem, but I wanted to make sure you'd thought about it to make sure.


That sounds like duplication indeed, I would expect that first a patch
adds the ranges to the dts[i] files and then a second patch delete the
same ranges from the pinctrl driver then, if these shall come in from
the device tree.


We can't delete the gpio-range-registration code from the Tegra pinmux
driver, or old DTs won't work correctly. We could make it conditional based
upon whether the DT contains the property or not.

I've been looking at this and haven't found a good solution. From what
I see, the pinctrl driver doesn't have a reference to the gpio device
node so cannot tell if it needs to add the range or not.

Well, we know what the node must be called, so the pinctrl driver could search for it by name.

The gpio driver can tell whether it should add the range or not, but
if it has to because the gpio-ranges property isn't there, then it
doesn't have the reference to the pinctrl device to set the range to.

So, given that pinctrl_add_gpio_range is deprecated already, wonder if
the lesser evil isn't leaving the duplicated entries for now. On newer
SoC revisions such as T210 we can stop calling pinctrl_add_gpio_range
at all.

Or, we can accept that nobody is going to boot a newer kernel with an
older DT on the affected boards and just rely on the presence of the
gpio-ranges property :)

Isn't the simplest solution to just leave it as it is? Nothing's broken is it?

For any new SoCs we add, we can certainly switch to a new scheme if we want, but we need to catch/implement that early before the base .dtsi file is included in its first kernel release.
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