Re: [PATCH v2] extcon: otg_gpio: add driver for USB OTG port controlled by GPIO(s)

From: David Cohen
Date: Fri Feb 20 2015 - 14:15:29 EST


Hi Linus and Robert,

CC'ing Heikki as it involves a RFC from him.

On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 10:53:44AM +0100, Linus Walleij wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 7:41 AM, Robert Baldyga <r.baldyga@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > Hi David,
> >
> > On 02/19/2015 08:59 PM, David Cohen wrote:
> >> Some Intel platforms have an USB OTG port fully (or partially)
> >> controlled by GPIOs:
> >>
> >> (1) USB ID is connected directly to a pulled up GPIO.
> >>
> >> Optionally:
> >> (2) VBUS is enabled/disabled by a GPIO
> >> (3) Platform has 2 USB controllers connected to same port: one for
> >> device and one for host role. D+/- are switched between phys.
> >> according to this GPIO level.
> >>
> >> This driver configures USB OTG port for device or host role according to
> >> USB ID value.
> >> - If USB ID's GPIO level is low, OTG port is configured for host role
> >> by sourcing VBUS and switching D+/- to host phy.
> >> - If USB ID's GPIO level is high, by standard, the OTG port is
> >> configured for device role by not sourcing VBUS and switching D+/- to
> >> device controller.
> >
> > IMO it's not very elegant to handle VBUS power on/off in extcon driver.
> > Creating fixed regulator would allow to make VBUS handling more generic.

I agree. But please, see below.

>
> IMHO it's just layers of abstraction piled on top of each other here.
>
> I would put this adjacent to the phy driver somewhere in drivers/usb/*
> and make the actual USB-driver thing handle its GPIOs directly.
> But I guess David and Felipe have already discussed that as we're
> seeing this patch?

Felipe suggested to "divide to conquer" instead of having a single
extcon driver to handle all these functions:

- The mux functions would be controlled by a possible new pinctrl-gpio
driver (Linus, your input here would be nice :)
- The VBUS would be a fixed regulator
- The USB ID would make usage of existent extcon-gpio

But the on fw side, this is a single ACPI device representing a virtual
device for USB OTG port, which is nothing but a bunch of independent
GPIOs.

I could make a mfd driver to register devices for those simpler and more
generic drivers, but according to [1] community recognized it as a hack
with ACPI since I'd need to give them the GPIO without requesting on
mfd.

I'm open for suggestions :)

Br, David

[1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/12/18/82

>
> Yours,
> Linus Walleij
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/