|  | 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>; | 
|  | }; |