Re: [PATCH 5/8] pinctrl: aspeed: Enable capture of off-SCU pinmux state

From: Andrew Jeffery
Date: Thu Sep 29 2016 - 03:55:24 EST


On Thu, 2016-09-29 at 16:15 +0930, Joel Stanley wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 12:20 AM, Andrew Jeffery <andrew@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > The System Control Unit IP in the Aspeed SoCs is typically where the
> > pinmux configuration is found.
> >
> > But not always.
> >
> > On the AST2400 and AST2500 a number of pins depend on state in one of
> > the SIO, LPC or GFX IP blocks, so add support to at least capture what
> > that state is. The pinctrl engine for the Aspeed SoCs doesn't try to
> > inspect or modify the state of the off-SCU IP blocks. Instead, it logs
> > the state requirement with the expectation that the platform
> > designer/maintainer arranges for the appropriate configuration to be
> > applied through the associated drivers.
> This is unfortunate.
>
> This patch kicks the can down the road, but doesn't solve the problem
> for a user who wants to configure some functionality that depends on
> the non-SCU bits. Because of this I'm not sure if we want to put it in
> the tree.

I agree that there's not much functionality from a user's perspective,
but the "kicking the can down the road" assessment might be a little
harsh. Given the lack of user functionality it becomes more difficult
to argue for the patch's inclusion given the additional complexity, but
it does mean that the g4/g5 drivers can completely specify their
dependencies and not have the aspeed pinctrl core do the wrong thing
when it encounters the non-SCU IP offsets. It gets us half-way to
having the pinctrl driver actually configure the state (knowing what it
needs to configure), which I feel is more than a kick-the-can-down-the-
road boondoggle.

>
> However, I'm not sure what a proper solution would look like.

So if we accept that a proper solution includes specifying the off-SCU
dependencies, the remaining question is how do we tastefully apply the
desired state on register-spaces the pinctrl driver doesn't own.

> Perhaps
> Linus can point out another SoC that has a similar problem?

Or failing that, an approach that is acceptable...

Cheers,

Andrew

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