[alsa-devel] [PATCH 5/6] mtd: rawnand: ams-delta: use GPIO lookup table
Andy Shevchenko
andy.shevchenko at gmail.com
Sun May 20 16:44:31 CEST 2018
On Sun, May 20, 2018 at 12:55 AM, Janusz Krzysztofik
<jmkrzyszt at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Saturday, May 19, 2018 8:00:38 PM CEST Andy Shevchenko wrote:
>> On Sat, May 19, 2018 at 2:15 AM, Janusz Krzysztofik <jmkrzyszt at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>> NULL check in practice discards the _optional part of gpiod_get(). So,
>> either you use non-optional variant and decide how to handle an
>> errors, or user _optional w/o NULL check.
>
> OK, I'm going to use something like the below while submitting v2:
>
> - gpiod_rdy = devm_gpiod_get_optional(&pdev->dev, "rdy", GPIOD_IN);
> - if (!IS_ERR_OR_NULL(gpiod_rdy)) {
> - this->dev_ready = ams_delta_nand_ready;
> - } else {
> - this->dev_ready = NULL;
> - pr_notice("Couldn't request gpio for Delta NAND ready.\n");
> + priv->gpiod_rdy = devm_gpiod_get_optional(&pdev->dev, "rdy",
> + GPIOD_IN);
> + if (IS_ERR(priv->gpiod_rdy)) {
> + err = PTR_ERR(priv->gpiod_nwp);
> + dev_warn(&pdev->dev, "RDY GPIO request failed (%d)\n", err);
> + goto err_gpiod;
> }
>
> + if (priv->gpiod_rdy)
> + this->dev_ready = ams_delta_nand_ready;
This makes sense.
Though, I completely dislike "rdy" name of GPIO. Where is it documented?
>> >> > +err_gpiod:
>> >> > + if (err == -ENODEV || err == -ENOENT)
>> >> > + err = -EPROBE_DEFER;
>> >>
>> >> Hmm...
>> >
>> > Amstrad Delta uses gpio-mmio driver. Unfortunatelty that driver is not
>> > availble before device init phase, unlike other crucial GPIO drivers which
>> > are initialized earlier, e.g. during the postcore or at latetst the
>> > subsys phase. Hence, devices which depend on GPIO pins provided by
>> > gpio-mmio must either be declared late or fail softly so they get another
>> > chance of being probed succesfully.
>> >
>> > I thought of replacing the gpio-mmio platform driver with bgpio functions
>> > it exports but for now I haven't implemented it, not even shared the
>> > idea.
>> >
>> > Does it really hurt to return -EPROBE_DEFER if a GPIO pin can't be
>> > obtained?
>> I'm only concerned if it would be an infinite defer in the case when
>> driver will never appear.
>> But I don't remember the details.
>
> Deferred probes are handled effectively during late_initcall, no risk of
> infinite defer, see drivers/base/dd.c for details.
Yes, but the code you provided in patch looks somehow suspicious. OK,
I let Linus decide whtat to do with that.
--
With Best Regards,
Andy Shevchenko
More information about the Alsa-devel
mailing list