alistair23-linux/drivers/iio/imu/inv_mpu6050/inv_mpu_acpi.c

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iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
/*
* inv_mpu_acpi: ACPI processing for creating client devices
* Copyright (c) 2015, Intel Corporation.
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* under the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License,
* version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for
* more details.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_ACPI
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/i2c.h>
#include <linux/dmi.h>
#include <linux/acpi.h>
#include "inv_mpu_iio.h"
enum inv_mpu_product_name {
INV_MPU_NOT_MATCHED,
INV_MPU_ASUS_T100TA,
};
static enum inv_mpu_product_name matched_product_name;
static int __init asus_t100_matched(const struct dmi_system_id *d)
{
matched_product_name = INV_MPU_ASUS_T100TA;
return 0;
}
static const struct dmi_system_id inv_mpu_dev_list[] = {
{
.callback = asus_t100_matched,
.ident = "Asus Transformer Book T100",
.matches = {
DMI_MATCH(DMI_SYS_VENDOR, "ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC"),
DMI_MATCH(DMI_PRODUCT_NAME, "T100TA"),
DMI_MATCH(DMI_PRODUCT_VERSION, "1.0"),
},
},
/* Add more matching tables here..*/
{}
};
static int asus_acpi_get_sensor_info(struct acpi_device *adev,
struct i2c_client *client,
struct i2c_board_info *info)
{
struct acpi_buffer buffer = {ACPI_ALLOCATE_BUFFER, NULL};
int i;
acpi_status status;
union acpi_object *cpm;
status = acpi_evaluate_object(adev->handle, "CNF0", NULL, &buffer);
if (ACPI_FAILURE(status))
return -ENODEV;
cpm = buffer.pointer;
for (i = 0; i < cpm->package.count; ++i) {
union acpi_object *elem;
int j;
elem = &cpm->package.elements[i];
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
for (j = 0; j < elem->package.count; ++j) {
union acpi_object *sub_elem;
sub_elem = &elem->package.elements[j];
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
if (sub_elem->type == ACPI_TYPE_STRING)
strlcpy(info->type, sub_elem->string.pointer,
sizeof(info->type));
else if (sub_elem->type == ACPI_TYPE_INTEGER) {
if (sub_elem->integer.value != client->addr) {
info->addr = sub_elem->integer.value;
break; /* Not a MPU6500 primary */
}
}
}
}
kfree(buffer.pointer);
return cpm->package.count;
}
static int acpi_i2c_check_resource(struct acpi_resource *ares, void *data)
{
u32 *addr = data;
if (ares->type == ACPI_RESOURCE_TYPE_SERIAL_BUS) {
struct acpi_resource_i2c_serialbus *sb;
sb = &ares->data.i2c_serial_bus;
if (sb->type == ACPI_RESOURCE_SERIAL_TYPE_I2C) {
if (*addr)
*addr |= (sb->slave_address << 16);
else
*addr = sb->slave_address;
}
}
/* Tell the ACPI core that we already copied this address */
return 1;
}
static int inv_mpu_process_acpi_config(struct i2c_client *client,
unsigned short *primary_addr,
unsigned short *secondary_addr)
{
const struct acpi_device_id *id;
struct acpi_device *adev;
u32 i2c_addr = 0;
LIST_HEAD(resources);
int ret;
id = acpi_match_device(client->dev.driver->acpi_match_table,
&client->dev);
if (!id)
return -ENODEV;
adev = ACPI_COMPANION(&client->dev);
if (!adev)
return -ENODEV;
ret = acpi_dev_get_resources(adev, &resources,
acpi_i2c_check_resource, &i2c_addr);
if (ret < 0)
return ret;
acpi_dev_free_resource_list(&resources);
*primary_addr = i2c_addr & 0x0000ffff;
*secondary_addr = (i2c_addr & 0xffff0000) >> 16;
return 0;
}
int inv_mpu_acpi_create_mux_client(struct i2c_client *client)
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
{
struct inv_mpu6050_state *st = iio_priv(dev_get_drvdata(&client->dev));
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
st->mux_client = NULL;
if (ACPI_HANDLE(&client->dev)) {
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
struct i2c_board_info info;
struct acpi_device *adev;
int ret = -1;
adev = ACPI_COMPANION(&client->dev);
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
memset(&info, 0, sizeof(info));
dmi_check_system(inv_mpu_dev_list);
switch (matched_product_name) {
case INV_MPU_ASUS_T100TA:
ret = asus_acpi_get_sensor_info(adev, client,
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
&info);
break;
/* Add more matched product processing here */
default:
break;
}
if (ret < 0) {
/* No matching DMI, so create device on INV6XX type */
unsigned short primary, secondary;
ret = inv_mpu_process_acpi_config(client, &primary,
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
&secondary);
if (!ret && secondary) {
char *name;
info.addr = secondary;
strlcpy(info.type, dev_name(&adev->dev),
sizeof(info.type));
name = strchr(info.type, ':');
if (name)
*name = '\0';
strlcat(info.type, "-client",
sizeof(info.type));
} else
return 0; /* no secondary addr, which is OK */
}
st->mux_client = i2c_new_device(st->muxc->adapter[0], &info);
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
if (!st->mux_client)
return -ENODEV;
}
return 0;
}
void inv_mpu_acpi_delete_mux_client(struct i2c_client *client)
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
{
struct inv_mpu6050_state *st = iio_priv(dev_get_drvdata(&client->dev));
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
if (st->mux_client)
i2c_unregister_device(st->mux_client);
}
#else
#include "inv_mpu_iio.h"
int inv_mpu_acpi_create_mux_client(struct i2c_client *client)
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
{
return 0;
}
void inv_mpu_acpi_delete_mux_client(struct i2c_client *client)
iio: imu: inv_mpu6050: Create mux clients for ACPI This is a follow up patches after adding i2c mux adapter for bypass mode. Potentially many different types of sensor can be attached to INVMPU6XXX device, which can be connected to main cpu i2c bus in bypass mode. Why do we need this? The system ACPI table entry will consist of only one device for INV6XXX, assuming that this driver will handle all connected sensors. That is not true for the Linux driver. There are bunch of IIO drivers for each sensors, hence we created a mux on this device. So to load these additional drivers, we need to create i2c devices for them in this driver using this mux adapter. There are multiple options: 1. Use the auto detect feature, this needs a new i2c class for the adapter as the existing HWMON class is not acceptable. Also the autodetect has overhead of executing detect method for each matching class of adapters. This is a simple implementation. This option was previously submitted with not a happy feedback. 2. Option is use ACPI magic and parse the configuration data. What we need to create a i2c device at a minimum is address and a name. Address can be obtained for secondary device in more or less in a standard way from using _CRS element. But there is no name. To get name we need to process proprietary vendor data. Not having name is not fun, as you have to create device using the device name of INVN6XXXX, respecting driver duplicate name space restriction. Also each client driver needs to have this name in the id table. Since multiple driver can be loaded, the driver should be able to detect its presence and gracefully exit for the other client driver to take it over. So we use two step process: - Use DMI to id platform and parse propritery data. This is not uncommon for many x86 platform specific driver. We will get both name and address. The change created necessary infrastructure to add more properitery vendor data parsing. - If DMI match fails, then create device on INV6XXX-client (we can't create with same name as INV6XXX as it will cause duplicate name and driver model will reject.) With this each client sensor driver which needs to get attached via INV6XXXX, need this name in the id table and detect the physical presence of sensor in probe and exit if not found. Signed-off-by: Srinivas Pandruvada <srinivas.pandruvada@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <jic23@kernel.org>
2015-01-30 15:25:45 -07:00
{
}
#endif