linux/arch/arm/mach-davinci/include/mach/gpio.h
Russell King 8f3c4537bb ARM: gpio: make trivial GPIOLIB implementation the default
Rather than marking the mach/gpio.h header files which want to use the
trivial GPIOLIB implementation, mark those which do not want to use it
instead.  This means that by default, you get the trivial implementation
and only have to do something extra if you need to.  This should
encourage the use of the trivial default implementation.

As an additional bonus, several gpio.h header files become empty.

Acked-by: H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
Tested-by: Jamie Iles <jamie@jamieiles.com>
Acked-by: Kukjin Kim <kgene.kim@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
2011-08-12 08:54:19 +01:00

159 lines
4.5 KiB
C

/*
* TI DaVinci GPIO Support
*
* Copyright (c) 2006 David Brownell
* Copyright (c) 2007, MontaVista Software, Inc. <source@mvista.com>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*/
#ifndef __DAVINCI_GPIO_H
#define __DAVINCI_GPIO_H
#include <linux/io.h>
#include <linux/spinlock.h>
#include <asm-generic/gpio.h>
#include <mach/irqs.h>
#include <mach/common.h>
#define __ARM_GPIOLIB_COMPLEX
#define DAVINCI_GPIO_BASE 0x01C67000
enum davinci_gpio_type {
GPIO_TYPE_DAVINCI = 0,
GPIO_TYPE_TNETV107X,
};
/*
* basic gpio routines
*
* board-specific init should be done by arch/.../.../board-XXX.c (maybe
* initializing banks together) rather than boot loaders; kexec() won't
* go through boot loaders.
*
* the gpio clock will be turned on when gpios are used, and you may also
* need to pay attention to PINMUX registers to be sure those pins are
* used as gpios, not with other peripherals.
*
* On-chip GPIOs are numbered 0..(DAVINCI_N_GPIO-1). For documentation,
* and maybe for later updates, code may write GPIO(N). These may be
* all 1.8V signals, all 3.3V ones, or a mix of the two. A given chip
* may not support all the GPIOs in that range.
*
* GPIOs can also be on external chips, numbered after the ones built-in
* to the DaVinci chip. For now, they won't be usable as IRQ sources.
*/
#define GPIO(X) (X) /* 0 <= X <= (DAVINCI_N_GPIO - 1) */
/* Convert GPIO signal to GPIO pin number */
#define GPIO_TO_PIN(bank, gpio) (16 * (bank) + (gpio))
struct davinci_gpio_controller {
struct gpio_chip chip;
int irq_base;
spinlock_t lock;
void __iomem *regs;
void __iomem *set_data;
void __iomem *clr_data;
void __iomem *in_data;
};
/* The __gpio_to_controller() and __gpio_mask() functions inline to constants
* with constant parameters; or in outlined code they execute at runtime.
*
* You'd access the controller directly when reading or writing more than
* one gpio value at a time, and to support wired logic where the value
* being driven by the cpu need not match the value read back.
*
* These are NOT part of the cross-platform GPIO interface
*/
static inline struct davinci_gpio_controller *
__gpio_to_controller(unsigned gpio)
{
struct davinci_gpio_controller *ctlrs = davinci_soc_info.gpio_ctlrs;
int index = gpio / 32;
if (!ctlrs || index >= davinci_soc_info.gpio_ctlrs_num)
return NULL;
return ctlrs + index;
}
static inline u32 __gpio_mask(unsigned gpio)
{
return 1 << (gpio % 32);
}
/*
* The get/set/clear functions will inline when called with constant
* parameters referencing built-in GPIOs, for low-overhead bitbanging.
*
* gpio_set_value() will inline only on traditional Davinci style controllers
* with distinct set/clear registers.
*
* Otherwise, calls with variable parameters or referencing external
* GPIOs (e.g. on GPIO expander chips) use outlined functions.
*/
static inline void gpio_set_value(unsigned gpio, int value)
{
if (__builtin_constant_p(value) && gpio < davinci_soc_info.gpio_num) {
struct davinci_gpio_controller *ctlr;
u32 mask;
ctlr = __gpio_to_controller(gpio);
if (ctlr->set_data != ctlr->clr_data) {
mask = __gpio_mask(gpio);
if (value)
__raw_writel(mask, ctlr->set_data);
else
__raw_writel(mask, ctlr->clr_data);
return;
}
}
__gpio_set_value(gpio, value);
}
/* Returns zero or nonzero; works for gpios configured as inputs OR
* as outputs, at least for built-in GPIOs.
*
* NOTE: for built-in GPIOs, changes in reported values are synchronized
* to the GPIO clock. This is easily seen after calling gpio_set_value()
* and then immediately gpio_get_value(), where the gpio_get_value() will
* return the old value until the GPIO clock ticks and the new value gets
* latched.
*/
static inline int gpio_get_value(unsigned gpio)
{
struct davinci_gpio_controller *ctlr;
if (!__builtin_constant_p(gpio) || gpio >= davinci_soc_info.gpio_num)
return __gpio_get_value(gpio);
ctlr = __gpio_to_controller(gpio);
return __gpio_mask(gpio) & __raw_readl(ctlr->in_data);
}
static inline int gpio_cansleep(unsigned gpio)
{
if (__builtin_constant_p(gpio) && gpio < davinci_soc_info.gpio_num)
return 0;
else
return __gpio_cansleep(gpio);
}
static inline int irq_to_gpio(unsigned irq)
{
/* don't support the reverse mapping */
return -ENOSYS;
}
#endif /* __DAVINCI_GPIO_H */