diff options
author | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> | 2022-01-11 12:31:35 -0800 |
---|---|---|
committer | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> | 2022-01-11 12:31:35 -0800 |
commit | c288ea679840de4dee2ce6da5d0f139e3774ad86 (patch) | |
tree | 0997ce04fa671113349ad10025bbabb3155f3018 /Documentation/devicetree | |
parent | 1151e3cd5a7375ebc839ad3e6c51d87700fe019e (diff) | |
parent | ffe31c9ed35d70069ee76d6b6d41ac86a17d7a07 (diff) |
Merge tag 'gpio-updates-for-v5.17' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/brgl/linux
Pull gpio updates from Bartosz Golaszewski:
"The gpio-sim module is back, this time without any changes to
configfs. This results in a less elegant user-space interface but I
never got any follow-up on the committable items and didn't want to
delay this module for several more months.
Other than that we have support for several new models and some
support going away. We started working on converting GPIO drivers to
using fwnode exclusively in order to limit references to OF symbols to
gpiolib-of.c exclusively. We also have regular tweaks and improvements
all over the place.
Summary:
- new testing module: gpio-sim that is scheduled to replace
gpio-mockup
- initial changes aiming at converting all GPIO drivers to using the
fwnode interface and limiting any references to OF symbols to
gpiolib-of.c
- add support for Tegra234 and Tegra241 to gpio-tegra186
- add support for new models (SSD201 and SSD202D) to gpio-msc313
- add basic support for interrupts to gpio-aggregator
- add support for AMDIF031 HID device to gpio-amdpt
- drop support for unused platforms in gpio-xlp
- cleanup leftovers from the removal of the legacy Samsung Exynos
GPIO driver
- use raw spinlocks in gpio-aspeed and gpio-aspeed-sgpio to make
PREEMPT_RT happy
- generalize the common 'ngpios' device property by reading it in the
core gpiolib code so that we can remove duplicate reads from
drivers
- allow line names from device properties to override names set by
drivers
- code shrink in gpiod_add_lookup_table()
- add new model to the DT bindings for gpio-vf610
- convert DT bindings for tegra devices to YAML
- improvements to interrupt handling in gpio-rcar and gpio-rockchip
- updates to intel drivers from Andy (details in the merge commit)
- some minor tweaks, improvements and coding-style fixes all around
the subsystem"
* tag 'gpio-updates-for-v5.17' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/brgl/linux: (59 commits)
gpio: rcar: Propagate errors from devm_request_irq()
gpio: rcar: Use platform_get_irq() to get the interrupt
gpio: ts5500: Use platform_get_irq() to get the interrupt
gpio: dwapb: Switch to use fwnode instead of of_node
gpiolib: acpi: make fwnode take precedence in struct gpio_chip
dt-bindings: gpio: samsung: drop unused bindings
gpio: max3191x: Use bitmap_free() to free bitmap
gpio: regmap: Switch to use fwnode instead of of_node
gpio: tegra186: Add support for Tegra241
dt-bindings: gpio: Add Tegra241 support
gpio: brcmstb: Use local variable to access OF node
gpio: Remove unused local OF node pointers
gpio: sim: add missing fwnode_handle_put() in gpio_sim_probe()
gpio: msc313: Add support for SSD201 and SSD202D
gpio: msc313: Code clean ups
dt-bindings: gpio: msc313: Add offsets for ssd20xd
dt-bindings: gpio: msc313: Add compatible for ssd20xd
gpio: sim: fix uninitialized ret variable
gpio: Propagate firmware node from a parent device
gpio: Setup parent device and get rid of unnecessary of_node assignment
...
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/devicetree')
8 files changed, 332 insertions, 248 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio-samsung.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio-samsung.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 5375625e8cd2..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio-samsung.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,41 +0,0 @@ -Samsung Exynos4 GPIO Controller - -Required properties: -- compatible: Compatible property value should be "samsung,exynos4-gpio>". - -- reg: Physical base address of the controller and length of memory mapped - region. - -- #gpio-cells: Should be 4. The syntax of the gpio specifier used by client nodes - should be the following with values derived from the SoC user manual. - <[phandle of the gpio controller node] - [pin number within the gpio controller] - [mux function] - [flags and pull up/down] - [drive strength]> - - Values for gpio specifier: - - Pin number: is a value between 0 to 7. - - Flags and Pull Up/Down: 0 - Pull Up/Down Disabled. - 1 - Pull Down Enabled. - 3 - Pull Up Enabled. - Bit 16 (0x00010000) - Input is active low. - - Drive Strength: 0 - 1x, - 1 - 3x, - 2 - 2x, - 3 - 4x - -- gpio-controller: Specifies that the node is a gpio controller. -- #address-cells: should be 1. -- #size-cells: should be 1. - -Example: - - gpa0: gpio-controller@11400000 { - #address-cells = <1>; - #size-cells = <1>; - compatible = "samsung,exynos4-gpio"; - reg = <0x11400000 0x20>; - #gpio-cells = <4>; - gpio-controller; - }; diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio-vf610.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio-vf610.yaml index 19738a457a58..e1359391d3a4 100644 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio-vf610.yaml +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio-vf610.yaml @@ -24,6 +24,9 @@ properties: - items: - const: fsl,imx7ulp-gpio - const: fsl,vf610-gpio + - items: + - const: fsl,imx8ulp-gpio + - const: fsl,imx7ulp-gpio reg: description: The first reg tuple represents the PORT module, the second tuple diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/mstar,msc313-gpio.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/mstar,msc313-gpio.yaml index fe1e1c63ffe3..18fe90387b87 100644 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/mstar,msc313-gpio.yaml +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/mstar,msc313-gpio.yaml @@ -14,7 +14,9 @@ properties: pattern: "^gpio@[0-9a-f]+$" compatible: - const: mstar,msc313-gpio + enum: + - mstar,msc313-gpio + - sstar,ssd20xd-gpio reg: maxItems: 1 diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra186-gpio.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra186-gpio.txt deleted file mode 100644 index adff16c71d21..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra186-gpio.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,165 +0,0 @@ -NVIDIA Tegra186 GPIO controllers - -Tegra186 contains two GPIO controllers; a main controller and an "AON" -controller. This binding document applies to both controllers. The register -layouts for the controllers share many similarities, but also some significant -differences. Hence, this document describes closely related but different -bindings and compatible values. - -The Tegra186 GPIO controller allows software to set the IO direction of, and -read/write the value of, numerous GPIO signals. Routing of GPIO signals to -package balls is under the control of a separate pin controller HW block. Two -major sets of registers exist: - -a) Security registers, which allow configuration of allowed access to the GPIO -register set. These registers exist in a single contiguous block of physical -address space. The size of this block, and the security features available, -varies between the different GPIO controllers. - -Access to this set of registers is not necessary in all circumstances. Code -that wishes to configure access to the GPIO registers needs access to these -registers to do so. Code which simply wishes to read or write GPIO data does not -need access to these registers. - -b) GPIO registers, which allow manipulation of the GPIO signals. In some GPIO -controllers, these registers are exposed via multiple "physical aliases" in -address space, each of which access the same underlying state. See the hardware -documentation for rationale. Any particular GPIO client is expected to access -just one of these physical aliases. - -Tegra HW documentation describes a unified naming convention for all GPIOs -implemented by the SoC. Each GPIO is assigned to a port, and a port may control -a number of GPIOs. Thus, each GPIO is named according to an alphabetical port -name and an integer GPIO name within the port. For example, GPIO_PA0, GPIO_PN6, -or GPIO_PCC3. - -The number of ports implemented by each GPIO controller varies. The number of -implemented GPIOs within each port varies. GPIO registers within a controller -are grouped and laid out according to the port they affect. - -The mapping from port name to the GPIO controller that implements that port, and -the mapping from port name to register offset within a controller, are both -extremely non-linear. The header file <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h> -describes the port-level mapping. In that file, the naming convention for ports -matches the HW documentation. The values chosen for the names are alphabetically -sorted within a particular controller. Drivers need to map between the DT GPIO -IDs and HW register offsets using a lookup table. - -Each GPIO controller can generate a number of interrupt signals. Each signal -represents the aggregate status for all GPIOs within a set of ports. Thus, the -number of interrupt signals generated by a controller varies as a rough function -of the number of ports it implements. Note that the HW documentation refers to -both the overall controller HW module and the sets-of-ports as "controllers". - -Each GPIO controller in fact generates multiple interrupts signals for each set -of ports. Each GPIO may be configured to feed into a specific one of the -interrupt signals generated by a set-of-ports. The intent is for each generated -signal to be routed to a different CPU, thus allowing different CPUs to each -handle subsets of the interrupts within a port. The status of each of these -per-port-set signals is reported via a separate register. Thus, a driver needs -to know which status register to observe. This binding currently defines no -configuration mechanism for this. By default, drivers should use register -GPIO_${port}_INTERRUPT_STATUS_G1_0. Future revisions to the binding could -define a property to configure this. - -Required properties: -- compatible - Array of strings. - One of: - - "nvidia,tegra186-gpio". - - "nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon". - - "nvidia,tegra194-gpio". - - "nvidia,tegra194-gpio-aon". -- reg-names - Array of strings. - Contains a list of names for the register spaces described by the reg - property. May contain the following entries, in any order: - - "gpio": Mandatory. GPIO control registers. This may cover either: - a) The single physical alias that this OS should use. - b) All physical aliases that exist in the controller. This is - appropriate when the OS is responsible for managing assignment of - the physical aliases. - - "security": Optional. Security configuration registers. - Users of this binding MUST look up entries in the reg property by name, - using this reg-names property to do so. -- reg - Array of (physical base address, length) tuples. - Must contain one entry per entry in the reg-names property, in a matching - order. -- interrupts - Array of interrupt specifiers. - The interrupt outputs from the HW block, one per set of ports, in the - order the HW manual describes them. The number of entries required varies - depending on compatible value: - - "nvidia,tegra186-gpio": 6 entries. - - "nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon": 1 entry. - - "nvidia,tegra194-gpio": 6 entries. - - "nvidia,tegra194-gpio-aon": 1 entry. -- gpio-controller - Boolean. - Marks the device node as a GPIO controller/provider. -- #gpio-cells - Single-cell integer. - Must be <2>. - Indicates how many cells are used in a consumer's GPIO specifier. - In the specifier: - - The first cell is the pin number. - See <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h>. - - The second cell contains flags: - - Bit 0 specifies polarity - - 0: Active-high (normal). - - 1: Active-low (inverted). -- interrupt-controller - Boolean. - Marks the device node as an interrupt controller/provider. -- #interrupt-cells - Single-cell integer. - Must be <2>. - Indicates how many cells are used in a consumer's interrupt specifier. - In the specifier: - - The first cell is the GPIO number. - See <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h>. - - The second cell is contains flags: - - Bits [3:0] indicate trigger type and level: - - 1: Low-to-high edge triggered. - - 2: High-to-low edge triggered. - - 4: Active high level-sensitive. - - 8: Active low level-sensitive. - Valid combinations are 1, 2, 3, 4, 8. - -Example: - -#include <dt-bindings/interrupt-controller/irq.h> - -gpio@2200000 { - compatible = "nvidia,tegra186-gpio"; - reg-names = "security", "gpio"; - reg = - <0x0 0x2200000 0x0 0x10000>, - <0x0 0x2210000 0x0 0x10000>; - interrupts = - <0 47 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, - <0 50 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, - <0 53 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, - <0 56 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, - <0 59 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, - <0 180 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>; - gpio-controller; - #gpio-cells = <2>; - interrupt-controller; - #interrupt-cells = <2>; -}; - -gpio@c2f0000 { - compatible = "nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon"; - reg-names = "security", "gpio"; - reg = - <0x0 0xc2f0000 0x0 0x1000>, - <0x0 0xc2f1000 0x0 0x1000>; - interrupts = - <0 60 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>; - gpio-controller; - #gpio-cells = <2>; - interrupt-controller; - #interrupt-cells = <2>; -}; diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra186-gpio.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra186-gpio.yaml new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..4ef06b2ff1ff --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra186-gpio.yaml @@ -0,0 +1,214 @@ +# SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0-only OR BSD-2-Clause) +%YAML 1.2 +--- +$id: http://devicetree.org/schemas/gpio/nvidia,tegra186-gpio.yaml# +$schema: http://devicetree.org/meta-schemas/core.yaml# + +title: NVIDIA Tegra GPIO Controller (Tegra186 and later) + +maintainers: + - Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@gmail.com> + - Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com> + +description: | + Tegra186 contains two GPIO controllers; a main controller and an "AON" + controller. This binding document applies to both controllers. The register + layouts for the controllers share many similarities, but also some + significant differences. Hence, this document describes closely related but + different bindings and compatible values. + + The Tegra186 GPIO controller allows software to set the IO direction of, + and read/write the value of, numerous GPIO signals. Routing of GPIO signals + to package balls is under the control of a separate pin controller hardware + block. Two major sets of registers exist: + + a) Security registers, which allow configuration of allowed access to the + GPIO register set. These registers exist in a single contiguous block + of physical address space. The size of this block, and the security + features available, varies between the different GPIO controllers. + + Access to this set of registers is not necessary in all circumstances. + Code that wishes to configure access to the GPIO registers needs access + to these registers to do so. Code which simply wishes to read or write + GPIO data does not need access to these registers. + + b) GPIO registers, which allow manipulation of the GPIO signals. In some + GPIO controllers, these registers are exposed via multiple "physical + aliases" in address space, each of which access the same underlying + state. See the hardware documentation for rationale. Any particular + GPIO client is expected to access just one of these physical aliases. + + Tegra HW documentation describes a unified naming convention for all GPIOs + implemented by the SoC. Each GPIO is assigned to a port, and a port may + control a number of GPIOs. Thus, each GPIO is named according to an + alphabetical port name and an integer GPIO name within the port. For + example, GPIO_PA0, GPIO_PN6, or GPIO_PCC3. + + The number of ports implemented by each GPIO controller varies. The number + of implemented GPIOs within each port varies. GPIO registers within a + controller are grouped and laid out according to the port they affect. + + The mapping from port name to the GPIO controller that implements that + port, and the mapping from port name to register offset within a + controller, are both extremely non-linear. The header file + <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h> describes the port-level mapping. In + that file, the naming convention for ports matches the HW documentation. + The values chosen for the names are alphabetically sorted within a + particular controller. Drivers need to map between the DT GPIO IDs and HW + register offsets using a lookup table. + + Each GPIO controller can generate a number of interrupt signals. Each + signal represents the aggregate status for all GPIOs within a set of + ports. Thus, the number of interrupt signals generated by a controller + varies as a rough function of the number of ports it implements. Note + that the HW documentation refers to both the overall controller HW + module and the sets-of-ports as "controllers". + + Each GPIO controller in fact generates multiple interrupts signals for + each set of ports. Each GPIO may be configured to feed into a specific + one of the interrupt signals generated by a set-of-ports. The intent is + for each generated signal to be routed to a different CPU, thus allowing + different CPUs to each handle subsets of the interrupts within a port. + The status of each of these per-port-set signals is reported via a + separate register. Thus, a driver needs to know which status register to + observe. This binding currently defines no configuration mechanism for + this. By default, drivers should use register + GPIO_${port}_INTERRUPT_STATUS_G1_0. Future revisions to the binding could + define a property to configure this. + +properties: + compatible: + enum: + - nvidia,tegra186-gpio + - nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon + - nvidia,tegra194-gpio + - nvidia,tegra194-gpio-aon + - nvidia,tegra234-gpio + - nvidia,tegra234-gpio-aon + + reg-names: + items: + - const: security + - const: gpio + minItems: 1 + + reg: + items: + - description: Security configuration registers. + - description: | + GPIO control registers. This may cover either: + + a) The single physical alias that this OS should use. + b) All physical aliases that exist in the controller. This is + appropriate when the OS is responsible for managing assignment + of the physical aliases. + minItems: 1 + + interrupts: + description: The interrupt outputs from the HW block, one per set of + ports, in the order the HW manual describes them. The number of entries + required varies depending on compatible value. + + gpio-controller: true + + "#gpio-cells": + description: | + Indicates how many cells are used in a consumer's GPIO specifier. In the + specifier: + + - The first cell is the pin number. + See <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h>. + - The second cell contains flags: + - Bit 0 specifies polarity + - 0: Active-high (normal). + - 1: Active-low (inverted). + const: 2 + + interrupt-controller: true + + "#interrupt-cells": + description: | + Indicates how many cells are used in a consumer's interrupt specifier. + In the specifier: + + - The first cell is the GPIO number. + See <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h>. + - The second cell is contains flags: + - Bits [3:0] indicate trigger type and level: + - 1: Low-to-high edge triggered. + - 2: High-to-low edge triggered. + - 4: Active high level-sensitive. + - 8: Active low level-sensitive. + + Valid combinations are 1, 2, 3, 4, 8. + const: 2 + +allOf: + - if: + properties: + compatible: + contains: + enum: + - nvidia,tegra186-gpio + - nvidia,tegra194-gpio + - nvidia,tegra234-gpio + then: + properties: + interrupts: + minItems: 6 + maxItems: 48 + + - if: + properties: + compatible: + contains: + enum: + - nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon + - nvidia,tegra194-gpio-aon + - nvidia,tegra234-gpio-aon + then: + properties: + interrupts: + minItems: 1 + maxItems: 4 + +required: + - compatible + - reg + - reg-names + - interrupts + +additionalProperties: false + +examples: + - | + #include <dt-bindings/interrupt-controller/irq.h> + + gpio@2200000 { + compatible = "nvidia,tegra186-gpio"; + reg-names = "security", "gpio"; + reg = <0x2200000 0x10000>, + <0x2210000 0x10000>; + interrupts = <0 47 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <0 50 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <0 53 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <0 56 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <0 59 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <0 180 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>; + gpio-controller; + #gpio-cells = <2>; + interrupt-controller; + #interrupt-cells = <2>; + }; + + gpio@c2f0000 { + compatible = "nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon"; + reg-names = "security", "gpio"; + reg = <0xc2f0000 0x1000>, + <0xc2f1000 0x1000>; + interrupts = <0 60 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>; + gpio-controller; + #gpio-cells = <2>; + interrupt-controller; + #interrupt-cells = <2>; + }; diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra20-gpio.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra20-gpio.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 023c9526e5f8..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra20-gpio.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,40 +0,0 @@ -NVIDIA Tegra GPIO controller - -Required properties: -- compatible : "nvidia,tegra<chip>-gpio" -- reg : Physical base address and length of the controller's registers. -- interrupts : The interrupt outputs from the controller. For Tegra20, - there should be 7 interrupts specified, and for Tegra30, there should - be 8 interrupts specified. -- #gpio-cells : Should be two. The first cell is the pin number and the - second cell is used to specify optional parameters: - - bit 0 specifies polarity (0 for normal, 1 for inverted) -- gpio-controller : Marks the device node as a GPIO controller. -- #interrupt-cells : Should be 2. - The first cell is the GPIO number. - The second cell is used to specify flags: - bits[3:0] trigger type and level flags: - 1 = low-to-high edge triggered. - 2 = high-to-low edge triggered. - 4 = active high level-sensitive. - 8 = active low level-sensitive. - Valid combinations are 1, 2, 3, 4, 8. -- interrupt-controller : Marks the device node as an interrupt controller. - -Example: - -gpio: gpio@6000d000 { - compatible = "nvidia,tegra20-gpio"; - reg = < 0x6000d000 0x1000 >; - interrupts = < 0 32 0x04 - 0 33 0x04 - 0 34 0x04 - 0 35 0x04 - 0 55 0x04 - 0 87 0x04 - 0 89 0x04 >; - #gpio-cells = <2>; - gpio-controller; - #interrupt-cells = <2>; - interrupt-controller; -}; diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra20-gpio.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra20-gpio.yaml new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..94b51749ee76 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/nvidia,tegra20-gpio.yaml @@ -0,0 +1,110 @@ +# SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0-only OR BSD-2-Clause) +%YAML 1.2 +--- +$id: http://devicetree.org/schemas/gpio/nvidia,tegra20-gpio.yaml# +$schema: http://devicetree.org/meta-schemas/core.yaml# + +title: NVIDIA Tegra GPIO Controller (Tegra20 - Tegra210) + +maintainers: + - Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@gmail.com> + - Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com> + +properties: + compatible: + oneOf: + - enum: + - nvidia,tegra20-gpio + - nvidia,tegra30-gpio + + - items: + - enum: + - nvidia,tegra114-gpio + - nvidia,tegra124-gpio + - nvidia,tegra210-gpio + - const: nvidia,tegra30-gpio + + reg: + maxItems: 1 + + interrupts: + description: The interrupt outputs from the controller. For Tegra20, + there should be 7 interrupts specified, and for Tegra30, there should + be 8 interrupts specified. + + "#gpio-cells": + description: The first cell is the pin number and the second cell is used + to specify the GPIO polarity (0 = active high, 1 = active low). + const: 2 + + gpio-controller: true + + gpio-ranges: + maxItems: 1 + + "#interrupt-cells": + description: | + Should be 2. The first cell is the GPIO number. The second cell is + used to specify flags: + + bits[3:0] trigger type and level flags: + 1 = low-to-high edge triggered. + 2 = high-to-low edge triggered. + 4 = active high level-sensitive. + 8 = active low level-sensitive. + + Valid combinations are 1, 2, 3, 4, 8. + const: 2 + + interrupt-controller: true + +allOf: + - if: + properties: + compatible: + contains: + const: nvidia,tegra30-gpio + then: + properties: + interrupts: + minItems: 8 + maxItems: 8 + else: + properties: + interrupts: + minItems: 7 + maxItems: 7 + +required: + - compatible + - reg + - interrupts + - "#gpio-cells" + - gpio-controller + - "#interrupt-cells" + - interrupt-controller + +additionalProperties: + type: object + required: + - gpio-hog + +examples: + - | + #include <dt-bindings/interrupt-controller/arm-gic.h> + + gpio: gpio@6000d000 { + compatible = "nvidia,tegra20-gpio"; + reg = <0x6000d000 0x1000>; + interrupts = <GIC_SPI 32 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <GIC_SPI 33 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <GIC_SPI 34 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <GIC_SPI 35 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <GIC_SPI 55 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <GIC_SPI 87 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>, + <GIC_SPI 89 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>; + #gpio-cells = <2>; + gpio-controller; + #interrupt-cells = <2>; + interrupt-controller; + }; diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/sifive,gpio.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/sifive,gpio.yaml index c2902aac2514..e04349567eeb 100644 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/sifive,gpio.yaml +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/sifive,gpio.yaml @@ -77,7 +77,8 @@ examples: gpio@10060000 { compatible = "sifive,fu540-c000-gpio", "sifive,gpio0"; interrupt-parent = <&plic>; - interrupts = <7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22>; + interrupts = <7>, <8>, <9>, <10>, <11>, <12>, <13>, <14>, <15>, <16>, + <17>, <18>, <19>, <20>, <21>, <22>; reg = <0x10060000 0x1000>; clocks = <&tlclk PRCI_CLK_TLCLK>; gpio-controller; |