Re: [PATCH v1 03/11] dt-bindings: pwm: rockchip: add rockchip,rk3128-pwm

From: Robin Murphy
Date: Thu Sep 29 2022 - 11:42:51 EST


On 2022-09-29 11:26, Johan Jonker wrote:


On 9/28/22 13:59, Thierry Reding wrote:
On Tue, Sep 13, 2022 at 04:38:32PM +0200, Johan Jonker wrote:


On 9/12/22 18:21, Rob Herring wrote:
On Sat, Sep 10, 2022 at 09:48:04PM +0200, Johan Jonker wrote:
Reduced CC.

Hi Rob,


Seemed like a simple enough warning to fix...

Some examples for comment.
Let us know what would be the better solution?

===========================================================================

option1:

combpwm0: combpwm0 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-combpwm";
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 39 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
#address-cells = <2>;
#size-cells = <2>;

pwm0: pwm@20040000 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm";
reg = <0x20040000 0x10>;
};

pwm1: pwm@20040010 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm";
reg = <0x20040010 0x10>;
};

pwm2: pwm@20040020 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm";
reg = <0x20040020 0x10>;
};

pwm3: pwm@20040030 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm";
reg = <0x20040030 0x10>;
};
};

PRO:
- Existing driver might still work.
CON:
- New compatible needed to service the combined interrupts.
- Driver change needed.

===========================================================================
option 2:

combpwm0: pwm@10280000 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm";
reg = <0x10280000 0x40>;
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 38 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <0>;

pwm4: pwm-4@0 {
reg = <0x0>;
};

pwm5: pwm-5@10 {
reg = <0x10>;
};

pwm6: pwm-6@20 {
reg = <0x20>;
};

pwm7: pwm-7@30 {
reg = <0x30>;
};
};

CON:
- Driver change needed.
- Not compatible with current drivers.

===========================================================================

Current situation:

pwm0: pwm@20040000 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm", "rockchip,rk3288-pwm";
reg = <0x20040000 0x10>;
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 39 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
};

pwm1: pwm@20040010 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm", "rockchip,rk3288-pwm";
reg = <0x20040010 0x10>;
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 39 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
};

pwm2: pwm@20040020 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm", "rockchip,rk3288-pwm";
reg = <0x20040020 0x10>;
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 39 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
};

pwm3: pwm@20040030 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm", "rockchip,rk3288-pwm";
reg = <0x20040030 0x10>;
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 39 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
};

CON:
- The property "interrupts 39" can only be claimed ones by one probe function at the time.
- Has a fall-back string for rk3288, but unknown identical behavior for interrupts ???


To be honest, all three descriptions look wrong to me. From the above it
looks like this is simply one PWM controller with four channels, so it
should really be described as such, i.e.:

pwm@20040030 {
compatible = "rockchip,rv1108-pwm";
reg = <0x20040030 0x40>;
interrupts = <GIC_SPI 39 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
};


Each PWM channel has it's own pinctrl.
Not all channel pins are always in use for PWM exclusively.
Your proposal would not allow pins to be used for other functions.

Why would you think that? It would just mean moving the pinctrl selection down to the board level like for GPIOs - we manage just fine with a single DT node per GPIO bank, and semantically PWMs have no reason do be different. In fact on newer SoCs some PWM channels can be muxed to multiple pins, so pinctrl really has to be at the board level already in those casesa.

The TRMs seem pretty clear that the "new" PWM block from RK3288 onwards is a single module with 4 channels, not 4 independent controllers, so it seems to have been an unfortunate mistake not to create a new binding for it at that point. It would be a little fiddly, but far from impossible, to make the driver support both the existing binding and a new one (and I don't see how we could use the interrupt on newer SoCs *without* a binding change, given that the interrupt status register is outside any channel's current "reg"), but an old kernel with a new DT would be more problematic. If we kept the existing compatibles then an old driver would always use channel 0 regardless of what the consumer requested; using new compatibles as well means the old kernel loses PWM functionality entirely, which is arguably "safe", but I'm not sure if it's really better or worse :/

Robin.

More ideas with this interrupt? Please advise.

===

The SoCs PWM are configurable to operate in continuous mode (default mainline) or one-shot mode or capture mode.
Is there any good example for one-shot mode interrupt use?


Looking through existing Rockchip SoC DTSI files, though, it looks like
this has been done the wrong way since the beginning, so not sure if you
still want to fix it up.

This whole problem of dealing with a shared interrupt wouldn't be a
problem if this was described properly.

Thierry

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