xref: /openbmc/linux/Documentation/firmware-guide/acpi/gpio-properties.rst (revision 8b31e972f9872e5a6a3348506b5b84353fecef58)
1b6dff0e1SChangbin Du.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
3b6dff0e1SChangbin Du======================================
4b6dff0e1SChangbin Du_DSD Device Properties Related to GPIO
5b6dff0e1SChangbin Du======================================
6b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
7b6dff0e1SChangbin DuWith the release of ACPI 5.1, the _DSD configuration object finally
8b6dff0e1SChangbin Duallows names to be given to GPIOs (and other things as well) returned
9b6dff0e1SChangbin Duby _CRS.  Previously, we were only able to use an integer index to find
10b6dff0e1SChangbin Duthe corresponding GPIO, which is pretty error prone (it depends on
11b6dff0e1SChangbin Duthe _CRS output ordering, for example).
12b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
13b6dff0e1SChangbin DuWith _DSD we can now query GPIOs using a name instead of an integer
14b6dff0e1SChangbin Duindex, like the ASL example below shows::
15b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
16b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  // Bluetooth device with reset and shutdown GPIOs
17b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Device (BTH)
18b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  {
19b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Name (_HID, ...)
20b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
21b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Name (_CRS, ResourceTemplate ()
22b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      {
231bd33879SAndy Shevchenko          GpioIo (Exclusive, PullUp, 0, 0, IoRestrictionOutputOnly,
24b6dff0e1SChangbin Du                  "\\_SB.GPO0", 0, ResourceConsumer) {15}
251bd33879SAndy Shevchenko          GpioIo (Exclusive, PullUp, 0, 0, IoRestrictionOutputOnly,
26b6dff0e1SChangbin Du                  "\\_SB.GPO0", 0, ResourceConsumer) {27, 31}
27b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      })
28b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
29b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Name (_DSD, Package ()
30b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      {
31b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          ToUUID("daffd814-6eba-4d8c-8a91-bc9bbf4aa301"),
32b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          Package ()
33b6dff0e1SChangbin Du	  {
34b6dff0e1SChangbin Du              Package () {"reset-gpios", Package() {^BTH, 1, 1, 0 }},
35b6dff0e1SChangbin Du              Package () {"shutdown-gpios", Package() {^BTH, 0, 0, 0 }},
36b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          }
37b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      })
38b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  }
39b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
40b6dff0e1SChangbin DuThe format of the supported GPIO property is::
41b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
42b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Package () { "name", Package () { ref, index, pin, active_low }}
43b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
44b6dff0e1SChangbin Duref
45b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  The device that has _CRS containing GpioIo()/GpioInt() resources,
46b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  typically this is the device itself (BTH in our case).
47b6dff0e1SChangbin Duindex
48b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Index of the GpioIo()/GpioInt() resource in _CRS starting from zero.
49b6dff0e1SChangbin Dupin
50b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Pin in the GpioIo()/GpioInt() resource. Typically this is zero.
51b6dff0e1SChangbin Duactive_low
521bd33879SAndy Shevchenko  If 1, the GPIO is marked as active_low.
53b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
54b6dff0e1SChangbin DuSince ACPI GpioIo() resource does not have a field saying whether it is
55b6dff0e1SChangbin Duactive low or high, the "active_low" argument can be used here.  Setting
56b6dff0e1SChangbin Duit to 1 marks the GPIO as active low.
57b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
580d6c41cfSAndy ShevchenkoNote, active_low in _DSD does not make sense for GpioInt() resource and
590d6c41cfSAndy Shevchenkomust be 0. GpioInt() resource has its own means of defining it.
600d6c41cfSAndy Shevchenko
61b6dff0e1SChangbin DuIn our Bluetooth example the "reset-gpios" refers to the second GpioIo()
62b6dff0e1SChangbin Duresource, second pin in that resource with the GPIO number of 31.
63b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
64*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoThe GpioIo() resource unfortunately doesn't explicitly provide an initial
65*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenkostate of the output pin which driver should use during its initialization.
66*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenko
67*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoLinux tries to use common sense here and derives the state from the bias
68*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenkoand polarity settings. The table below shows the expectations:
69*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenko
70*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenko=========  =============  ==============
71*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoPull Bias     Polarity     Requested...
72*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenko=========  =============  ==============
73*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoImplicit     x            AS IS (assumed firmware configured for us)
74*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoExplicit     x (no _DSD)  as Pull Bias (Up == High, Down == Low),
75*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenko                          assuming non-active (Polarity = !Pull Bias)
76*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoDown         Low          as low, assuming active
77*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoDown         High         as low, assuming non-active
78*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoUp           Low          as high, assuming non-active
79*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoUp           High         as high, assuming active
80*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenko=========  =============  ==============
81*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenko
82*8b31e972SAndy ShevchenkoThat said, for our above example the both GPIOs, since the bias setting
83*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenkois explicit and _DSD is present, will be treated as active with a high
84*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenkopolarity and Linux will configure the pins in this state until a driver
85*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenkoreprograms them differently.
86*8b31e972SAndy Shevchenko
87b6dff0e1SChangbin DuIt is possible to leave holes in the array of GPIOs. This is useful in
88b6dff0e1SChangbin Ducases like with SPI host controllers where some chip selects may be
89b6dff0e1SChangbin Duimplemented as GPIOs and some as native signals. For example a SPI host
90b6dff0e1SChangbin Ducontroller can have chip selects 0 and 2 implemented as GPIOs and 1 as
91b6dff0e1SChangbin Dunative::
92b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
93b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Package () {
94b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      "cs-gpios",
95b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Package () {
96b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          ^GPIO, 19, 0, 0, // chip select 0: GPIO
97b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          0,               // chip select 1: native signal
98b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          ^GPIO, 20, 0, 0, // chip select 2: GPIO
99b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      }
100b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  }
101b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
102b6dff0e1SChangbin DuOther supported properties
103b6dff0e1SChangbin Du==========================
104b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
105b6dff0e1SChangbin DuFollowing Device Tree compatible device properties are also supported by
106b6dff0e1SChangbin Du_DSD device properties for GPIO controllers:
107b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
108b6dff0e1SChangbin Du- gpio-hog
109b6dff0e1SChangbin Du- output-high
110b6dff0e1SChangbin Du- output-low
111b6dff0e1SChangbin Du- input
112b6dff0e1SChangbin Du- line-name
113b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
114b6dff0e1SChangbin DuExample::
115b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
116b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Name (_DSD, Package () {
117b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      // _DSD Hierarchical Properties Extension UUID
118b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      ToUUID("dbb8e3e6-5886-4ba6-8795-1319f52a966b"),
119b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Package () {
120b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          Package () {"hog-gpio8", "G8PU"}
121b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      }
122b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  })
123b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
124b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Name (G8PU, Package () {
125b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      ToUUID("daffd814-6eba-4d8c-8a91-bc9bbf4aa301"),
126b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Package () {
127b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          Package () {"gpio-hog", 1},
128b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          Package () {"gpios", Package () {8, 0}},
129b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          Package () {"output-high", 1},
130b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          Package () {"line-name", "gpio8-pullup"},
131b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      }
132b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  })
133b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
134b6dff0e1SChangbin Du- gpio-line-names
135b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
136b6dff0e1SChangbin DuExample::
137b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
138b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Package () {
139b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      "gpio-line-names",
140b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Package () {
1411bd33879SAndy Shevchenko          "SPI0_CS_N", "EXP2_INT", "MUX6_IO", "UART0_RXD",
1421bd33879SAndy Shevchenko          "MUX7_IO", "LVL_C_A1", "MUX0_IO", "SPI1_MISO",
143b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      }
144b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  }
145b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
146b6dff0e1SChangbin DuSee Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/gpio.txt for more information
147b6dff0e1SChangbin Duabout these properties.
148b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
149b6dff0e1SChangbin DuACPI GPIO Mappings Provided by Drivers
150b6dff0e1SChangbin Du======================================
151b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
152b6dff0e1SChangbin DuThere are systems in which the ACPI tables do not contain _DSD but provide _CRS
153b6dff0e1SChangbin Duwith GpioIo()/GpioInt() resources and device drivers still need to work with
154b6dff0e1SChangbin Duthem.
155b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
156b6dff0e1SChangbin DuIn those cases ACPI device identification objects, _HID, _CID, _CLS, _SUB, _HRV,
157b6dff0e1SChangbin Duavailable to the driver can be used to identify the device and that is supposed
158b6dff0e1SChangbin Duto be sufficient to determine the meaning and purpose of all of the GPIO lines
159b6dff0e1SChangbin Dulisted by the GpioIo()/GpioInt() resources returned by _CRS.  In other words,
160b6dff0e1SChangbin Duthe driver is supposed to know what to use the GpioIo()/GpioInt() resources for
161b6dff0e1SChangbin Duonce it has identified the device.  Having done that, it can simply assign names
162b6dff0e1SChangbin Duto the GPIO lines it is going to use and provide the GPIO subsystem with a
163b6dff0e1SChangbin Dumapping between those names and the ACPI GPIO resources corresponding to them.
164b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
165b6dff0e1SChangbin DuTo do that, the driver needs to define a mapping table as a NULL-terminated
1661bd33879SAndy Shevchenkoarray of struct acpi_gpio_mapping objects that each contains a name, a pointer
167b6dff0e1SChangbin Duto an array of line data (struct acpi_gpio_params) objects and the size of that
168b6dff0e1SChangbin Duarray.  Each struct acpi_gpio_params object consists of three fields,
169b6dff0e1SChangbin Ducrs_entry_index, line_index, active_low, representing the index of the target
170b6dff0e1SChangbin DuGpioIo()/GpioInt() resource in _CRS starting from zero, the index of the target
171b6dff0e1SChangbin Duline in that resource starting from zero, and the active-low flag for that line,
172b6dff0e1SChangbin Durespectively, in analogy with the _DSD GPIO property format specified above.
173b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
174b6dff0e1SChangbin DuFor the example Bluetooth device discussed previously the data structures in
175b6dff0e1SChangbin Duquestion would look like this::
176b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
177b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  static const struct acpi_gpio_params reset_gpio = { 1, 1, false };
178b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  static const struct acpi_gpio_params shutdown_gpio = { 0, 0, false };
179b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
180b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  static const struct acpi_gpio_mapping bluetooth_acpi_gpios[] = {
181b6dff0e1SChangbin Du    { "reset-gpios", &reset_gpio, 1 },
182b6dff0e1SChangbin Du    { "shutdown-gpios", &shutdown_gpio, 1 },
1831bd33879SAndy Shevchenko    { }
184b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  };
185b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
186b6dff0e1SChangbin DuNext, the mapping table needs to be passed as the second argument to
1871bd33879SAndy Shevchenkoacpi_dev_add_driver_gpios() or its managed analogue that will
1881bd33879SAndy Shevchenkoregister it with the ACPI device object pointed to by its first
1891bd33879SAndy Shevchenkoargument. That should be done in the driver's .probe() routine.
1901bd33879SAndy ShevchenkoOn removal, the driver should unregister its GPIO mapping table by
191b6dff0e1SChangbin Ducalling acpi_dev_remove_driver_gpios() on the ACPI device object where that
192b6dff0e1SChangbin Dutable was previously registered.
193b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
194b6dff0e1SChangbin DuUsing the _CRS fallback
195b6dff0e1SChangbin Du=======================
196b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
197b6dff0e1SChangbin DuIf a device does not have _DSD or the driver does not create ACPI GPIO
198b6dff0e1SChangbin Dumapping, the Linux GPIO framework refuses to return any GPIOs. This is
199b6dff0e1SChangbin Dubecause the driver does not know what it actually gets. For example if we
200b6dff0e1SChangbin Duhave a device like below::
201b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
202b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  Device (BTH)
203b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  {
204b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Name (_HID, ...)
205b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
206b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      Name (_CRS, ResourceTemplate () {
207b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          GpioIo (Exclusive, PullNone, 0, 0, IoRestrictionNone,
208b6dff0e1SChangbin Du                  "\\_SB.GPO0", 0, ResourceConsumer) {15}
209b6dff0e1SChangbin Du          GpioIo (Exclusive, PullNone, 0, 0, IoRestrictionNone,
210b6dff0e1SChangbin Du                  "\\_SB.GPO0", 0, ResourceConsumer) {27}
211b6dff0e1SChangbin Du      })
212b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  }
213b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
214b6dff0e1SChangbin DuThe driver might expect to get the right GPIO when it does::
215b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
216b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  desc = gpiod_get(dev, "reset", GPIOD_OUT_LOW);
217b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
218b6dff0e1SChangbin Dubut since there is no way to know the mapping between "reset" and
219b6dff0e1SChangbin Duthe GpioIo() in _CRS desc will hold ERR_PTR(-ENOENT).
220b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
2211bd33879SAndy ShevchenkoThe driver author can solve this by passing the mapping explicitly
2221bd33879SAndy Shevchenko(this is the recommended way and it's documented in the above chapter).
223b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
224b6dff0e1SChangbin DuThe ACPI GPIO mapping tables should not contaminate drivers that are not
225b6dff0e1SChangbin Duknowing about which exact device they are servicing on. It implies that
2261bd33879SAndy Shevchenkothe ACPI GPIO mapping tables are hardly linked to an ACPI ID and certain
227b6dff0e1SChangbin Duobjects, as listed in the above chapter, of the device in question.
228b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
229b6dff0e1SChangbin DuGetting GPIO descriptor
230b6dff0e1SChangbin Du=======================
231b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
232b6dff0e1SChangbin DuThere are two main approaches to get GPIO resource from ACPI::
233b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
234b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  desc = gpiod_get(dev, connection_id, flags);
235b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  desc = gpiod_get_index(dev, connection_id, index, flags);
236b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
237b6dff0e1SChangbin DuWe may consider two different cases here, i.e. when connection ID is
238b6dff0e1SChangbin Duprovided and otherwise.
239b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
240b6dff0e1SChangbin DuCase 1::
241b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
242b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  desc = gpiod_get(dev, "non-null-connection-id", flags);
243b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  desc = gpiod_get_index(dev, "non-null-connection-id", index, flags);
244b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
245b6dff0e1SChangbin DuCase 2::
246b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
247b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  desc = gpiod_get(dev, NULL, flags);
248b6dff0e1SChangbin Du  desc = gpiod_get_index(dev, NULL, index, flags);
249b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
250b6dff0e1SChangbin DuCase 1 assumes that corresponding ACPI device description must have
251b6dff0e1SChangbin Dudefined device properties and will prevent to getting any GPIO resources
252b6dff0e1SChangbin Duotherwise.
253b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
254b6dff0e1SChangbin DuCase 2 explicitly tells GPIO core to look for resources in _CRS.
255b6dff0e1SChangbin Du
256b6dff0e1SChangbin DuBe aware that gpiod_get_index() in cases 1 and 2, assuming that there
257b6dff0e1SChangbin Duare two versions of ACPI device description provided and no mapping is
258b6dff0e1SChangbin Dupresent in the driver, will return different resources. That's why a
2591bd33879SAndy Shevchenkocertain driver has to handle them carefully as explained in the previous
260b6dff0e1SChangbin Duchapter.
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