diff mbox series

[1/5] iio: xoadc: augment DT bindings a bit

Message ID 20170318133358.22314-1-linus.walleij@linaro.org
State Superseded
Headers show
Series [1/5] iio: xoadc: augment DT bindings a bit | expand

Commit Message

Linus Walleij March 18, 2017, 1:33 p.m. UTC
In order to accommodate in a logical manner for the premuxed channels
in PM8921 and the similarly addressed channels in later PMICs, we
need a twocell arrangement with premux and analog mux setting as
a tuple to uniquely identify a hardware channel.

These bindings are not yet in use, so it should be find to augment
them before we actually start using it in drivers and device trees.

This scheme came out of lengthy discussions and reverse-engineering
and reading of the few information sources we have.

Suggested-by: Björn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>

---
 .../bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt         | 117 ++++++++++++---------
 1 file changed, 69 insertions(+), 48 deletions(-)

-- 
2.9.3

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Comments

Jonathan Cameron March 19, 2017, 9:34 a.m. UTC | #1
On 18/03/17 13:33, Linus Walleij wrote:
> In order to accommodate in a logical manner for the premuxed channels

> in PM8921 and the similarly addressed channels in later PMICs, we

> need a twocell arrangement with premux and analog mux setting as

> a tuple to uniquely identify a hardware channel.

> 

> These bindings are not yet in use, so it should be find to augment

> them before we actually start using it in drivers and device trees.

> 

> This scheme came out of lengthy discussions and reverse-engineering

> and reading of the few information sources we have.

> 

> Suggested-by: Björn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org>

> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>

Hmm.. It kind of feels like the relationships between the different mux
inputs could be nicely described explicitly rather than via describing the
magic mux settings...

But fair enough if not, I guess this isn't that much of a stretch on the
current binding.

A typo inline.

Jonathan
> ---

>  .../bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt         | 117 ++++++++++++---------

>  1 file changed, 69 insertions(+), 48 deletions(-)

> 

> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> index 53cd146d8096..680bb7a29dd5 100644

> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> @@ -19,32 +19,42 @@ Required properties:

>    with PMIC variant but is typically something like 2.2 or 1.8V.

>  

>  The following required properties are standard for IO channels, see

> -iio-bindings.txt for more details:

> +iio-bindings.txt for more details, but noitice that this particular

noitice -> notice (or perhaps note would be better)
> +ADC has a special adressing scheme that require two cells for

> +identifying each ADC channel:

>  

> -- #address-cells: should be set to <1>

> +- #address-cells: should be set to <2>, the first cell is the

> +  prescaler (on PM8058) or premux (on PM8921) with two valid bits

> +  so legal values are 0x00, 0x01 or 0x02. The second cell

> +  is the main analog mux setting (0x00..0x0f). The combination

> +  of prescaler/premux and analog mux uniquely addresses a hardware

> +  channel on all systems.

>  

>  - #size-cells: should be set to <0>

>  

> -- #io-channel-cells: should be set to <1>

> +- #io-channel-cells: should be set to <2>, again the cells are

> +  precaler or premux followed by the analog muxing line.

>  

>  - interrupts: should refer to the parent PMIC interrupt controller

>    and reference the proper ADC interrupt.

>  

>  Required subnodes:

>  

> -The ADC channels are configured as subnodes of the ADC. Since some of

> -them are used for calibrating the ADC, these nodes are compulsory:

> +The ADC channels are configured as subnodes of the ADC.

>  

> -adc-channel@c {

> -	reg = <0x0c>;

> +Since some of them are used for calibrating the ADC, these nodes are

> +compulsory:

> +

> +adc-channel@0c {

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0c>;

>  };

>  

> -adc-channel@d {

> -	reg = <0x0d>;

> +adc-channel@0d {

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0d>;

>  };

>  

> -adc-channel@f {

> -	reg = <0x0f>;

> +adc-channel@0f {

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0f>;

>  };

>  

>  These three nodes are used for absolute and ratiometric calibration

> @@ -52,13 +62,26 @@ and only need to have these reg values: they are by hardware definition

>  1:1 ratio converters that sample 625, 1250 and 0 milliV and create

>  an interpolation calibration for all other ADCs.

>  

> -Optional subnodes: any channels other than channel 0x0c, 0x0d and

> -0x0f are optional.

> +Optional subnodes: any channels other than channels [0x00 0x0c],

> +[0x00 0x0d] and [0x00 0x0f] are optional.

>  

>  Required channel node properties:

>  

>  - reg: should contain the hardware channel number in the range

> -  0 .. 0x0f (4 bits). The hardware only supports 16 channels.

> +  0 .. 0xff (8 bits).

> +

> +  On PM8058 the hardware only supports 16 channels, but we get the same

> +  channels repeating with its input divided down by 1 or 3. Channels 00,

> +  10, 20, ... f0 are the raw values, 04, 14, 24 .. f4 are "unity" channels

> +  divided by 1, and 08, 18, 28 .. f8 are channels divided by 3. Bits 0

> +  and 1 of the channel index should always be 0.

> +

> +  On PM8921 the hardware supports more than 16 channels through a complex

> +  routing matrix using a premux, so 00, 10, 20 .. f0 are the basic raw

> +  channels while another set of channels appear for 04, 14, 24 .. f4,

> +  and again some of the same channels appear again divided down by 3

> +  in 08, 18, 28 .. f8. Again bits 0 and 1 of the channel index should

> +  always be 0.

>  

>  Optional channel node properties:

>  

> @@ -94,56 +117,54 @@ Example:

>  xoadc: xoadc@197 {

>  	compatible = "qcom,pm8058-adc";

>  	reg = <0x197>;

> -	interrupt-parent = <&pm8058>;

> -	interrupts = <76 1>;

> -	#address-cells = <1>;

> +	interrupts-extended = <&pm8058 76 IRQ_TYPE_EDGE_RISING>;

What has the above got to do with this patch?

> +	#address-cells = <2>;

>  	#size-cells = <0>;

> -	#io-channel-cells = <1>;

> +	#io-channel-cells = <2>;

>  

> -	vcoin: adc-channel@0 {

> -		reg = <0x00>;

> +	vcoin: adc-channel@00 {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x00>;

>  	};

> -	vbat: adc-channel@1 {

> -		reg = <0x01>;

> +	vbat: adc-channel@01 {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x01>;

>  	};

> -	dcin: adc-channel@2 {

> -		reg = <0x02>;

> +	dcin: adc-channel@02 {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x02>;

>  	};

> -	ichg: adc-channel@3 {

> -		reg = <0x03>;

> +	ichg: adc-channel@30 {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x03>;

>  	};

> -	vph_pwr: adc-channel@4 {

> -		reg = <0x04>;

> +	vph_pwr: adc-channel@04 {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x04>;

>  	};

> -	usb_vbus: adc-channel@a {

> -		reg = <0x0a>;

> +	usb_vbus: adc-channel@0a {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x0a>;

>  	};

> -	die_temp: adc-channel@b {

> -		reg = <0x0b>;

> +	die_temp: adc-channel@0b {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x0b>;

>  	};

> -	ref_625mv: adc-channel@c {

> -		reg = <0x0c>;

> +	ref_625mv: adc-channel@0c {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x0c>;

>  	};

> -	ref_1250mv: adc-channel@d {

> -		reg = <0x0d>;

> +	ref_1250mv: adc-channel@0d {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x0d>;

>  	};

> -	ref_325mv: adc-channel@e {

> -		reg = <0x0e>;

> +	ref_325mv: adc-channel@0e {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x0e>;

>  	};

> -	ref_muxoff: adc-channel@f {

> -		reg = <0x0f>;

> +	ref_muxoff: adc-channel@0f {

> +		reg = <0x00 0x0f>;

>  	};

>  };

>  

> -

>  /* IIO client node */

>  iio-hwmon {

>  	compatible = "iio-hwmon";

> -	io-channels = <&xoadc 0x01>, /* Battery */

> -		    <&xoadc 0x02>, /* DC in (charger) */

> -		    <&xoadc 0x04>, /* VPH the main system voltage */

> -		    <&xoadc 0x0b>, /* Die temperature */

> -		    <&xoadc 0x0c>, /* Reference voltage 1.25V */

> -		    <&xoadc 0x0d>, /* Reference voltage 0.625V */

> -		    <&xoadc 0x0e>; /* Reference voltage 0.325V */

> +	io-channels = <&xoadc 0x00 0x01>, /* Battery */

> +		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x02>, /* DC in (charger) */

> +		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x04>, /* VPH the main system voltage */

> +		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x0b>, /* Die temperature */

> +		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x0c>, /* Reference voltage 1.25V */

> +		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x0d>, /* Reference voltage 0.625V */

> +		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x0e>; /* Reference voltage 0.325V */

>  };

> 


--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Rob Herring March 24, 2017, 3:12 p.m. UTC | #2
On Sat, Mar 18, 2017 at 02:33:58PM +0100, Linus Walleij wrote:
> In order to accommodate in a logical manner for the premuxed channels

> in PM8921 and the similarly addressed channels in later PMICs, we

> need a twocell arrangement with premux and analog mux setting as

> a tuple to uniquely identify a hardware channel.

> 

> These bindings are not yet in use, so it should be find to augment

> them before we actually start using it in drivers and device trees.

> 

> This scheme came out of lengthy discussions and reverse-engineering

> and reading of the few information sources we have.

> 

> Suggested-by: Björn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org>

> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>

> ---

>  .../bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt         | 117 ++++++++++++---------

>  1 file changed, 69 insertions(+), 48 deletions(-)

> 

> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> index 53cd146d8096..680bb7a29dd5 100644

> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> @@ -19,32 +19,42 @@ Required properties:

>    with PMIC variant but is typically something like 2.2 or 1.8V.

>  

>  The following required properties are standard for IO channels, see

> -iio-bindings.txt for more details:

> +iio-bindings.txt for more details, but noitice that this particular

> +ADC has a special adressing scheme that require two cells for

> +identifying each ADC channel:

>  

> -- #address-cells: should be set to <1>

> +- #address-cells: should be set to <2>, the first cell is the

> +  prescaler (on PM8058) or premux (on PM8921) with two valid bits

> +  so legal values are 0x00, 0x01 or 0x02. The second cell

> +  is the main analog mux setting (0x00..0x0f). The combination

> +  of prescaler/premux and analog mux uniquely addresses a hardware

> +  channel on all systems.


64-bits to describe 48 possible combinations... I'd just combine these 
into 1 cell.

>  - #size-cells: should be set to <0>

>  

> -- #io-channel-cells: should be set to <1>

> +- #io-channel-cells: should be set to <2>, again the cells are

> +  precaler or premux followed by the analog muxing line.

>  

>  - interrupts: should refer to the parent PMIC interrupt controller

>    and reference the proper ADC interrupt.

>  

>  Required subnodes:

>  

> -The ADC channels are configured as subnodes of the ADC. Since some of

> -them are used for calibrating the ADC, these nodes are compulsory:

> +The ADC channels are configured as subnodes of the ADC.

>  

> -adc-channel@c {

> -	reg = <0x0c>;

> +Since some of them are used for calibrating the ADC, these nodes are

> +compulsory:

> +

> +adc-channel@0c {

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0c>;

>  };

>  

> -adc-channel@d {

> -	reg = <0x0d>;

> +adc-channel@0d {

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0d>;

>  };

>  

> -adc-channel@f {

> -	reg = <0x0f>;

> +adc-channel@0f {

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0f>;

>  };

>  

>  These three nodes are used for absolute and ratiometric calibration

> @@ -52,13 +62,26 @@ and only need to have these reg values: they are by hardware definition

>  1:1 ratio converters that sample 625, 1250 and 0 milliV and create

>  an interpolation calibration for all other ADCs.

>  

> -Optional subnodes: any channels other than channel 0x0c, 0x0d and

> -0x0f are optional.

> +Optional subnodes: any channels other than channels [0x00 0x0c],

> +[0x00 0x0d] and [0x00 0x0f] are optional.

>  

>  Required channel node properties:

>  

>  - reg: should contain the hardware channel number in the range

> -  0 .. 0x0f (4 bits). The hardware only supports 16 channels.

> +  0 .. 0xff (8 bits).

> +

> +  On PM8058 the hardware only supports 16 channels, but we get the same

> +  channels repeating with its input divided down by 1 or 3. Channels 00,

> +  10, 20, ... f0 are the raw values, 04, 14, 24 .. f4 are "unity" channels

> +  divided by 1, and 08, 18, 28 .. f8 are channels divided by 3. Bits 0

> +  and 1 of the channel index should always be 0.

> +

> +  On PM8921 the hardware supports more than 16 channels through a complex

> +  routing matrix using a premux, so 00, 10, 20 .. f0 are the basic raw

> +  channels while another set of channels appear for 04, 14, 24 .. f4,

> +  and again some of the same channels appear again divided down by 3

> +  in 08, 18, 28 .. f8. Again bits 0 and 1 of the channel index should

> +  always be 0.


Now I'm lost...

Rob
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Linus Walleij March 24, 2017, 3:25 p.m. UTC | #3
On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 4:12 PM, Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org> wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 18, 2017 at 02:33:58PM +0100, Linus Walleij wrote:


>> -- #address-cells: should be set to <1>

>> +- #address-cells: should be set to <2>, the first cell is the

>> +  prescaler (on PM8058) or premux (on PM8921) with two valid bits

>> +  so legal values are 0x00, 0x01 or 0x02. The second cell

>> +  is the main analog mux setting (0x00..0x0f). The combination

>> +  of prescaler/premux and analog mux uniquely addresses a hardware

>> +  channel on all systems.

>

> 64-bits to describe 48 possible combinations... I'd just combine these

> into 1 cell.


That was what I did first but it becomes very unintuitive and
require translation using tables etc from the datasheets. You
have to shuffle and stuff bits to get that one cell value.

The addressing is really done in two steps:

premux -> mux -> channel

Example:

Premux 0x02
Mux 0x08

I guess I could of course put that into one cell using 4+4 bits
and form 0x28.

On the other hand, that is not how the hardware works, because
there premux/prescaler and analog mux are two separate things.

>>  - reg: should contain the hardware channel number in the range

>> -  0 .. 0x0f (4 bits). The hardware only supports 16 channels.

>> +  0 .. 0xff (8 bits).

>> +

>> +  On PM8058 the hardware only supports 16 channels, but we get the same

>> +  channels repeating with its input divided down by 1 or 3. Channels 00,

>> +  10, 20, ... f0 are the raw values, 04, 14, 24 .. f4 are "unity" channels

>> +  divided by 1, and 08, 18, 28 .. f8 are channels divided by 3. Bits 0

>> +  and 1 of the channel index should always be 0.

>> +

>> +  On PM8921 the hardware supports more than 16 channels through a complex

>> +  routing matrix using a premux, so 00, 10, 20 .. f0 are the basic raw

>> +  channels while another set of channels appear for 04, 14, 24 .. f4,

>> +  and again some of the same channels appear again divided down by 3

>> +  in 08, 18, 28 .. f8. Again bits 0 and 1 of the channel index should

>> +  always be 0.

>

> Now I'm lost...


That is actually how it looks with the old scheme, which you are
kind of requesting that I use instead. In a way it's good that I left
the old documentation in there because it illustrates my problem
with what you request above: lots of "holes" in that address
space and very unituitive numbers.

Yours,
Linus Walleij
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Jonathan Cameron March 25, 2017, 3:47 p.m. UTC | #4
On 24/03/17 15:25, Linus Walleij wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 24, 2017 at 4:12 PM, Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org> wrote:

>> On Sat, Mar 18, 2017 at 02:33:58PM +0100, Linus Walleij wrote:

> 

>>> -- #address-cells: should be set to <1>

>>> +- #address-cells: should be set to <2>, the first cell is the

>>> +  prescaler (on PM8058) or premux (on PM8921) with two valid bits

>>> +  so legal values are 0x00, 0x01 or 0x02. The second cell

>>> +  is the main analog mux setting (0x00..0x0f). The combination

>>> +  of prescaler/premux and analog mux uniquely addresses a hardware

>>> +  channel on all systems.

>>

>> 64-bits to describe 48 possible combinations... I'd just combine these

>> into 1 cell.

> 

> That was what I did first but it becomes very unintuitive and

> require translation using tables etc from the datasheets. You

> have to shuffle and stuff bits to get that one cell value.

> 

> The addressing is really done in two steps:

> 

> premux -> mux -> channel

> 

> Example:

> 

> Premux 0x02

> Mux 0x08

> 

> I guess I could of course put that into one cell using 4+4 bits

> and form 0x28.

> 

> On the other hand, that is not how the hardware works, because

> there premux/prescaler and analog mux are two separate things.

> 

>>>  - reg: should contain the hardware channel number in the range

>>> -  0 .. 0x0f (4 bits). The hardware only supports 16 channels.

>>> +  0 .. 0xff (8 bits).

>>> +

>>> +  On PM8058 the hardware only supports 16 channels, but we get the same

>>> +  channels repeating with its input divided down by 1 or 3. Channels 00,

>>> +  10, 20, ... f0 are the raw values, 04, 14, 24 .. f4 are "unity" channels

>>> +  divided by 1, and 08, 18, 28 .. f8 are channels divided by 3. Bits 0

>>> +  and 1 of the channel index should always be 0.

>>> +

>>> +  On PM8921 the hardware supports more than 16 channels through a complex

>>> +  routing matrix using a premux, so 00, 10, 20 .. f0 are the basic raw

>>> +  channels while another set of channels appear for 04, 14, 24 .. f4,

>>> +  and again some of the same channels appear again divided down by 3

>>> +  in 08, 18, 28 .. f8. Again bits 0 and 1 of the channel index should

>>> +  always be 0.

>>

>> Now I'm lost...

> 

> That is actually how it looks with the old scheme, which you are

> kind of requesting that I use instead. In a way it's good that I left

> the old documentation in there because it illustrates my problem

> with what you request above: lots of "holes" in that address

> space and very unituitive numbers.

> 

I definitely agree that clarity is probably better than worrying about the
few extra bytes...

Jonathan
> Yours,

> Linus Walleij

> --

> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-iio" in

> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org

> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

> 


--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Bjorn Andersson March 26, 2017, 4:57 a.m. UTC | #5
On Sat 18 Mar 06:33 PDT 2017, Linus Walleij wrote:

> In order to accommodate in a logical manner for the premuxed channels

> in PM8921 and the similarly addressed channels in later PMICs, we

> need a twocell arrangement with premux and analog mux setting as

> a tuple to uniquely identify a hardware channel.

> 

> These bindings are not yet in use, so it should be find to augment


s/find/fine?

> them before we actually start using it in drivers and device trees.

> 

> This scheme came out of lengthy discussions and reverse-engineering

> and reading of the few information sources we have.

> 


As there's no documentation of how this works I find it  quite important
to make something that is intuitive - so more than you and I can use
this binding. So I like this.

> Suggested-by: Björn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@linaro.org>

> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>

> ---

>  .../bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt         | 117 ++++++++++++---------

>  1 file changed, 69 insertions(+), 48 deletions(-)

> 

> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> index 53cd146d8096..680bb7a29dd5 100644

> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt

> @@ -19,32 +19,42 @@ Required properties:

>    with PMIC variant but is typically something like 2.2 or 1.8V.

>  

>  The following required properties are standard for IO channels, see

> -iio-bindings.txt for more details:

> +iio-bindings.txt for more details, but noitice that this particular

> +ADC has a special adressing scheme that require two cells for

> +identifying each ADC channel:

>  

> -- #address-cells: should be set to <1>

> +- #address-cells: should be set to <2>, the first cell is the

> +  prescaler (on PM8058) or premux (on PM8921) with two valid bits

> +  so legal values are 0x00, 0x01 or 0x02. The second cell

> +  is the main analog mux setting (0x00..0x0f). The combination

> +  of prescaler/premux and analog mux uniquely addresses a hardware

> +  channel on all systems.

>  

>  - #size-cells: should be set to <0>

>  

> -- #io-channel-cells: should be set to <1>

> +- #io-channel-cells: should be set to <2>, again the cells are

> +  precaler or premux followed by the analog muxing line.

>  

>  - interrupts: should refer to the parent PMIC interrupt controller

>    and reference the proper ADC interrupt.

>  

>  Required subnodes:

>  

> -The ADC channels are configured as subnodes of the ADC. Since some of

> -them are used for calibrating the ADC, these nodes are compulsory:

> +The ADC channels are configured as subnodes of the ADC.

>  

> -adc-channel@c {

> -	reg = <0x0c>;

> +Since some of them are used for calibrating the ADC, these nodes are

> +compulsory:

> +

> +adc-channel@0c {


Shouldn't the @ be followed by the value of the first cell in "reg"?
(Which will collide if we name them all "adc-channel").

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0c>;

>  };

>  

> -adc-channel@d {

> -	reg = <0x0d>;

> +adc-channel@0d {

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0d>;

>  };

>  

> -adc-channel@f {

> -	reg = <0x0f>;

> +adc-channel@0f {

> +	reg = <0x00 0x0f>;

>  };

>  

>  These three nodes are used for absolute and ratiometric calibration

> @@ -52,13 +62,26 @@ and only need to have these reg values: they are by hardware definition

>  1:1 ratio converters that sample 625, 1250 and 0 milliV and create

>  an interpolation calibration for all other ADCs.

>  

> -Optional subnodes: any channels other than channel 0x0c, 0x0d and

> -0x0f are optional.

> +Optional subnodes: any channels other than channels [0x00 0x0c],

> +[0x00 0x0d] and [0x00 0x0f] are optional.

>  

>  Required channel node properties:

>  

>  - reg: should contain the hardware channel number in the range

> -  0 .. 0x0f (4 bits). The hardware only supports 16 channels.

> +  0 .. 0xff (8 bits).

> +

> +  On PM8058 the hardware only supports 16 channels, but we get the same

> +  channels repeating with its input divided down by 1 or 3. Channels 00,

> +  10, 20, ... f0 are the raw values, 04, 14, 24 .. f4 are "unity" channels

> +  divided by 1, and 08, 18, 28 .. f8 are channels divided by 3. Bits 0

> +  and 1 of the channel index should always be 0.

> +

> +  On PM8921 the hardware supports more than 16 channels through a complex

> +  routing matrix using a premux, so 00, 10, 20 .. f0 are the basic raw

> +  channels while another set of channels appear for 04, 14, 24 .. f4,

> +  and again some of the same channels appear again divided down by 3

> +  in 08, 18, 28 .. f8. Again bits 0 and 1 of the channel index should

> +  always be 0.


While I believe documenting this is a good thing I do not think it adds
value to this binding document (other than showing Rob the absurdness of
the addressing scheme). Please consider moving it to the driver (haven't
checked how you commented it yet) and drop it from here.

Regards,
Bjorn
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Linus Walleij March 27, 2017, 7:56 a.m. UTC | #6
On Sun, Mar 26, 2017 at 6:57 AM, Bjorn Andersson
<bjorn.andersson@linaro.org> wrote:
> On Sat 18 Mar 06:33 PDT 2017, Linus Walleij wrote:

>


>> +adc-channel@0c {

>

> Shouldn't the @ be followed by the value of the first cell in "reg"?

> (Which will collide if we name them all "adc-channel").


I don't think we have a rule about these other than that they should
be unique. I renamed them so that it is unique using the combined
premux+amux number:

>> +     reg = <0x00 0x0c>;


So this becomes

adc-channel@000c {
    reg = <0x00 0x0c>;
};

>> +  On PM8058 the hardware only supports 16 channels, but we get the same

>> +  channels repeating with its input divided down by 1 or 3. Channels 00,

>> +  10, 20, ... f0 are the raw values, 04, 14, 24 .. f4 are "unity" channels

>> +  divided by 1, and 08, 18, 28 .. f8 are channels divided by 3. Bits 0

>> +  and 1 of the channel index should always be 0.

>> +

>> +  On PM8921 the hardware supports more than 16 channels through a complex

>> +  routing matrix using a premux, so 00, 10, 20 .. f0 are the basic raw

>> +  channels while another set of channels appear for 04, 14, 24 .. f4,

>> +  and again some of the same channels appear again divided down by 3

>> +  in 08, 18, 28 .. f8. Again bits 0 and 1 of the channel index should

>> +  always be 0.

>

> While I believe documenting this is a good thing I do not think it adds

> value to this binding document (other than showing Rob the absurdness of

> the addressing scheme). Please consider moving it to the driver (haven't

> checked how you commented it yet) and drop it from here.


Dropped it.

I'm sending this modified version as v2.

Yours,
Linus Walleij
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt
index 53cd146d8096..680bb7a29dd5 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iio/adc/qcom,pm8xxx-xoadc.txt
@@ -19,32 +19,42 @@  Required properties:
   with PMIC variant but is typically something like 2.2 or 1.8V.
 
 The following required properties are standard for IO channels, see
-iio-bindings.txt for more details:
+iio-bindings.txt for more details, but noitice that this particular
+ADC has a special adressing scheme that require two cells for
+identifying each ADC channel:
 
-- #address-cells: should be set to <1>
+- #address-cells: should be set to <2>, the first cell is the
+  prescaler (on PM8058) or premux (on PM8921) with two valid bits
+  so legal values are 0x00, 0x01 or 0x02. The second cell
+  is the main analog mux setting (0x00..0x0f). The combination
+  of prescaler/premux and analog mux uniquely addresses a hardware
+  channel on all systems.
 
 - #size-cells: should be set to <0>
 
-- #io-channel-cells: should be set to <1>
+- #io-channel-cells: should be set to <2>, again the cells are
+  precaler or premux followed by the analog muxing line.
 
 - interrupts: should refer to the parent PMIC interrupt controller
   and reference the proper ADC interrupt.
 
 Required subnodes:
 
-The ADC channels are configured as subnodes of the ADC. Since some of
-them are used for calibrating the ADC, these nodes are compulsory:
+The ADC channels are configured as subnodes of the ADC.
 
-adc-channel@c {
-	reg = <0x0c>;
+Since some of them are used for calibrating the ADC, these nodes are
+compulsory:
+
+adc-channel@0c {
+	reg = <0x00 0x0c>;
 };
 
-adc-channel@d {
-	reg = <0x0d>;
+adc-channel@0d {
+	reg = <0x00 0x0d>;
 };
 
-adc-channel@f {
-	reg = <0x0f>;
+adc-channel@0f {
+	reg = <0x00 0x0f>;
 };
 
 These three nodes are used for absolute and ratiometric calibration
@@ -52,13 +62,26 @@  and only need to have these reg values: they are by hardware definition
 1:1 ratio converters that sample 625, 1250 and 0 milliV and create
 an interpolation calibration for all other ADCs.
 
-Optional subnodes: any channels other than channel 0x0c, 0x0d and
-0x0f are optional.
+Optional subnodes: any channels other than channels [0x00 0x0c],
+[0x00 0x0d] and [0x00 0x0f] are optional.
 
 Required channel node properties:
 
 - reg: should contain the hardware channel number in the range
-  0 .. 0x0f (4 bits). The hardware only supports 16 channels.
+  0 .. 0xff (8 bits).
+
+  On PM8058 the hardware only supports 16 channels, but we get the same
+  channels repeating with its input divided down by 1 or 3. Channels 00,
+  10, 20, ... f0 are the raw values, 04, 14, 24 .. f4 are "unity" channels
+  divided by 1, and 08, 18, 28 .. f8 are channels divided by 3. Bits 0
+  and 1 of the channel index should always be 0.
+
+  On PM8921 the hardware supports more than 16 channels through a complex
+  routing matrix using a premux, so 00, 10, 20 .. f0 are the basic raw
+  channels while another set of channels appear for 04, 14, 24 .. f4,
+  and again some of the same channels appear again divided down by 3
+  in 08, 18, 28 .. f8. Again bits 0 and 1 of the channel index should
+  always be 0.
 
 Optional channel node properties:
 
@@ -94,56 +117,54 @@  Example:
 xoadc: xoadc@197 {
 	compatible = "qcom,pm8058-adc";
 	reg = <0x197>;
-	interrupt-parent = <&pm8058>;
-	interrupts = <76 1>;
-	#address-cells = <1>;
+	interrupts-extended = <&pm8058 76 IRQ_TYPE_EDGE_RISING>;
+	#address-cells = <2>;
 	#size-cells = <0>;
-	#io-channel-cells = <1>;
+	#io-channel-cells = <2>;
 
-	vcoin: adc-channel@0 {
-		reg = <0x00>;
+	vcoin: adc-channel@00 {
+		reg = <0x00 0x00>;
 	};
-	vbat: adc-channel@1 {
-		reg = <0x01>;
+	vbat: adc-channel@01 {
+		reg = <0x00 0x01>;
 	};
-	dcin: adc-channel@2 {
-		reg = <0x02>;
+	dcin: adc-channel@02 {
+		reg = <0x00 0x02>;
 	};
-	ichg: adc-channel@3 {
-		reg = <0x03>;
+	ichg: adc-channel@30 {
+		reg = <0x00 0x03>;
 	};
-	vph_pwr: adc-channel@4 {
-		reg = <0x04>;
+	vph_pwr: adc-channel@04 {
+		reg = <0x00 0x04>;
 	};
-	usb_vbus: adc-channel@a {
-		reg = <0x0a>;
+	usb_vbus: adc-channel@0a {
+		reg = <0x00 0x0a>;
 	};
-	die_temp: adc-channel@b {
-		reg = <0x0b>;
+	die_temp: adc-channel@0b {
+		reg = <0x00 0x0b>;
 	};
-	ref_625mv: adc-channel@c {
-		reg = <0x0c>;
+	ref_625mv: adc-channel@0c {
+		reg = <0x00 0x0c>;
 	};
-	ref_1250mv: adc-channel@d {
-		reg = <0x0d>;
+	ref_1250mv: adc-channel@0d {
+		reg = <0x00 0x0d>;
 	};
-	ref_325mv: adc-channel@e {
-		reg = <0x0e>;
+	ref_325mv: adc-channel@0e {
+		reg = <0x00 0x0e>;
 	};
-	ref_muxoff: adc-channel@f {
-		reg = <0x0f>;
+	ref_muxoff: adc-channel@0f {
+		reg = <0x00 0x0f>;
 	};
 };
 
-
 /* IIO client node */
 iio-hwmon {
 	compatible = "iio-hwmon";
-	io-channels = <&xoadc 0x01>, /* Battery */
-		    <&xoadc 0x02>, /* DC in (charger) */
-		    <&xoadc 0x04>, /* VPH the main system voltage */
-		    <&xoadc 0x0b>, /* Die temperature */
-		    <&xoadc 0x0c>, /* Reference voltage 1.25V */
-		    <&xoadc 0x0d>, /* Reference voltage 0.625V */
-		    <&xoadc 0x0e>; /* Reference voltage 0.325V */
+	io-channels = <&xoadc 0x00 0x01>, /* Battery */
+		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x02>, /* DC in (charger) */
+		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x04>, /* VPH the main system voltage */
+		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x0b>, /* Die temperature */
+		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x0c>, /* Reference voltage 1.25V */
+		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x0d>, /* Reference voltage 0.625V */
+		    <&xoadc 0x00 0x0e>; /* Reference voltage 0.325V */
 };