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[1/6] dt-bindings: irqchip: Add PRUSS interrupt controller bindings

Message ID 20190708035243.12170-2-s-anna@ti.com (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show
Series Add TI PRUSS Local Interrupt Controller IRQChip driver | expand

Commit Message

Suman Anna July 8, 2019, 3:52 a.m. UTC
The Programmable Real-Time Unit Subsystem (PRUSS) contains an interrupt
controller (INTC) that can handle various system input events and post
interrupts back to the device-level initiators. The INTC can support
upto 64 input events on most SoCs with individual control configuration
and hardware prioritization. These events are mapped onto 10 interrupt
lines through two levels of many-to-one mapping support. Different
interrupt lines are routed to the individual PRU cores or to the
host CPU or to other PRUSS instances.

The K3 AM65x and J721E SoCs have the next generation of the PRU-ICSS IP,
commonly called ICSSG. The ICSSG interrupt controller on K3 SoCs provide
a higher number of host interrupts (20 vs 10) and can handle an increased
number of input events (160 vs 64) from various SoC interrupt sources.

Add the bindings document for these interrupt controllers on all the
applicable SoCs. It covers the OMAP architecture SoCs - AM33xx, AM437x
and AM57xx; the Keystone 2 architecture based 66AK2G SoC; the Davinci
architecture based OMAPL138 SoCs, and the K3 architecture based AM65x
and J721E SoCs.

Signed-off-by: Suman Anna <s-anna@ti.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew F. Davis <afd@ti.com>
Signed-off-by: Roger Quadros <rogerq@ti.com>
---
Prior version: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10795771/

 .../interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt    | 92 +++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 92 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt

Comments

Andrew Davis July 8, 2019, 2:34 p.m. UTC | #1
On 7/7/19 11:52 PM, Suman Anna wrote:
> The Programmable Real-Time Unit Subsystem (PRUSS) contains an interrupt
> controller (INTC) that can handle various system input events and post
> interrupts back to the device-level initiators. The INTC can support
> upto 64 input events on most SoCs with individual control configuration
> and hardware prioritization. These events are mapped onto 10 interrupt
> lines through two levels of many-to-one mapping support. Different
> interrupt lines are routed to the individual PRU cores or to the
> host CPU or to other PRUSS instances.
> 
> The K3 AM65x and J721E SoCs have the next generation of the PRU-ICSS IP,
> commonly called ICSSG. The ICSSG interrupt controller on K3 SoCs provide
> a higher number of host interrupts (20 vs 10) and can handle an increased
> number of input events (160 vs 64) from various SoC interrupt sources.
> 
> Add the bindings document for these interrupt controllers on all the
> applicable SoCs. It covers the OMAP architecture SoCs - AM33xx, AM437x
> and AM57xx; the Keystone 2 architecture based 66AK2G SoC; the Davinci
> architecture based OMAPL138 SoCs, and the K3 architecture based AM65x
> and J721E SoCs.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Suman Anna <s-anna@ti.com>
> Signed-off-by: Andrew F. Davis <afd@ti.com>
> Signed-off-by: Roger Quadros <rogerq@ti.com>
> ---
> Prior version: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10795771/
> 
>  .../interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt    | 92 +++++++++++++++++++
>  1 file changed, 92 insertions(+)
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
> new file mode 100644
> index 000000000000..020073c07a92
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
> @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@
> +PRU ICSS INTC on TI SoCs
> +========================
> +
> +Each PRUSS has a single interrupt controller instance that is common to both
> +the PRU cores. Most interrupt controllers can route 64 input events which are
> +then mapped to 10 possible output interrupts through two levels of mapping.
> +The input events can be triggered by either the PRUs and/or various other
> +PRUSS internal and external peripherals. The first 2 output interrupts are
> +fed exclusively to the internal PRU cores, with the remaining 8 (2 through 9)
> +connected to external interrupt controllers including the MPU and/or other
> +PRUSS instances, DSPs or devices.
> +
> +The K3 family of SoCs can handle 160 input events that can be mapped to 20
> +different possible output interrupts. The additional output interrupts (10
> +through 19) are connected to new sub-modules within the ICSSG instances.
> +
> +This interrupt-controller node should be defined as a child node of the
> +corresponding PRUSS node. The node should be named "interrupt-controller".
> +Please see the overall PRUSS bindings document for additional details
> +including a complete example,
> +    Documentation/devicetree/bindings/soc/ti/ti,pruss.txt
> +
> +Required Properties:
> +--------------------
> +- compatible           : should be one of the following,
> +                             "ti,pruss-intc" for OMAP-L13x/AM18x/DA850 SoCs,
> +                                                 AM335x family of SoCs,
> +                                                 AM437x family of SoCs,
> +                                                 AM57xx family of SoCs
> +                                                 66AK2G family of SoCs
> +                             "ti,icssg-intc" for K3 AM65x & J721E family of SoCs
> +- reg                  : base address and size for the PRUSS INTC sub-module
> +- interrupts           : all the interrupts generated towards the main host
> +                         processor in the SoC. The format depends on the
> +                         interrupt specifier for the particular SoC's ARM GIC
> +                         parent interrupt controller. A shared interrupt can
> +                         be skipped if the desired destination and usage is by
> +                         a different processor/device.
> +- interrupt-names      : should use one of the following names for each valid
> +                         interrupt connected to ARM GIC, the name should match
> +                         the corresponding host interrupt number,
> +                             "host0", "host1", "host2", "host3", "host4",
> +                             "host5", "host6" or "host7"
> +- interrupt-controller : mark this node as an interrupt controller
> +- #interrupt-cells     : should be 1. Client users shall use the PRU System
> +                         event number (the interrupt source that the client
> +                         is interested in) as the value of the interrupts
> +                         property in their node
> +
> +Optional Properties:
> +--------------------
> +The following properties are _required_ only for some SoCs. If none of the below
> +properties are defined, it implies that all the host interrupts 2 through 9 are
> +connected exclusively to the ARM GIC.
> +
> +- ti,irqs-reserved     : an array of 8-bit elements of host interrupts between
> +                         0 and 7 (corresponding to PRUSS INTC output interrupts
> +                         2 through 9) that are not connected to the ARM GIC.

The reason for 0-7 mapping to 2-9 is not instantly clear to someone
reading this. If you respin this could you note that reason is
interrupts 0 and 1 are always routed back into the PRUSS. Thinking more
on that, the same is true for interrupt 7 ("host5") on AM437x/66AK2G yet
we don't skip that in the naming.. now that we have the reserved IRQ
mechanism above, why not leave the one-to-one interrupt to name mapping,
but always have at least the first two marked as reserved for all the
current devices:

ti,irqs-reserved = /bits/ 8 <0 1>;

Then any "hostx" listed as reserved need not be present in the host
interrupts property array. To me that would solve the "managing
interrupts not targeting the Linux running core" problem and keep the
names consistent, e.g.:

/* AM437x PRU-ICSS */
pruss_intc: interrupt-controller@20000 {
	compatible = "ti,pruss-intc";
	reg = <0x20000 0x2000>;
	interrupts = <                       20       21       22
	                   23       24                25       26>;
	interrupt-names =                   "host2", "host3", "host4",
	                  "host5", "host6",          "host8", "host9";
	interrupt-controller;
	#interrupt-cells = <1>;
	ti,irqs-reserved = /bits/ 8 <0 1 7>;
};

Instantly clear which are missing and which "hostx" maps to which host
interrupt number.

Andrew

> +                           Eg: AM437x and 66AK2G SoCs do not have "host5"
> +                               interrupt connected to MPU
> +- ti,irqs-shared       : an array of 8-bit elements of host interrupts between
> +                         0 and 7 (corresponding to PRUSS INTC output interrupts
> +                         2 through 9) that are also connected to other devices
> +                         or processors in the SoC.
> +                           Eg: AM65x and J721E SoCs have "host5", "host6" and
> +                               "host7" interrupts connected to MPU, and other
> +                               ICSSG instances
> +
> +
> +Example:
> +--------
> +
> +1.	/* AM33xx PRU-ICSS */
> +	pruss: pruss@0 {
> +		compatible = "ti,am3356-pruss";
> +		reg = <0x0 0x80000>;
> +		#address-cells = <1>;
> +		#size-cells = <1>;
> +		...
> +
> +		pruss_intc: interrupt-controller@20000 {
> +			compatible = "ti,pruss-intc";
> +			reg = <0x20000 0x2000>;
> +			interrupts = <20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27>;
> +			interrupt-names = "host0", "host1", "host2",
> +					  "host3", "host4", "host5",
> +					  "host6", "host7";
> +			interrupt-controller;
> +			#interrupt-cells = <1>;
> +			ti,irqs-shared = /bits/ 8 <0 6 7>;
> +		};
> +	};
>
Suman Anna July 8, 2019, 3:59 p.m. UTC | #2
Hi Andrew,

On 7/8/19 9:34 AM, Andrew F. Davis wrote:
> On 7/7/19 11:52 PM, Suman Anna wrote:
>> The Programmable Real-Time Unit Subsystem (PRUSS) contains an interrupt
>> controller (INTC) that can handle various system input events and post
>> interrupts back to the device-level initiators. The INTC can support
>> upto 64 input events on most SoCs with individual control configuration
>> and hardware prioritization. These events are mapped onto 10 interrupt
>> lines through two levels of many-to-one mapping support. Different
>> interrupt lines are routed to the individual PRU cores or to the
>> host CPU or to other PRUSS instances.
>>
>> The K3 AM65x and J721E SoCs have the next generation of the PRU-ICSS IP,
>> commonly called ICSSG. The ICSSG interrupt controller on K3 SoCs provide
>> a higher number of host interrupts (20 vs 10) and can handle an increased
>> number of input events (160 vs 64) from various SoC interrupt sources.
>>
>> Add the bindings document for these interrupt controllers on all the
>> applicable SoCs. It covers the OMAP architecture SoCs - AM33xx, AM437x
>> and AM57xx; the Keystone 2 architecture based 66AK2G SoC; the Davinci
>> architecture based OMAPL138 SoCs, and the K3 architecture based AM65x
>> and J721E SoCs.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Suman Anna <s-anna@ti.com>
>> Signed-off-by: Andrew F. Davis <afd@ti.com>
>> Signed-off-by: Roger Quadros <rogerq@ti.com>
>> ---
>> Prior version: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10795771/
>>
>>  .../interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt    | 92 +++++++++++++++++++
>>  1 file changed, 92 insertions(+)
>>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
>>
>> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
>> new file mode 100644
>> index 000000000000..020073c07a92
>> --- /dev/null
>> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
>> @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@
>> +PRU ICSS INTC on TI SoCs
>> +========================
>> +
>> +Each PRUSS has a single interrupt controller instance that is common to both
>> +the PRU cores. Most interrupt controllers can route 64 input events which are
>> +then mapped to 10 possible output interrupts through two levels of mapping.
>> +The input events can be triggered by either the PRUs and/or various other
>> +PRUSS internal and external peripherals. The first 2 output interrupts are
>> +fed exclusively to the internal PRU cores, with the remaining 8 (2 through 9)
>> +connected to external interrupt controllers including the MPU and/or other
>> +PRUSS instances, DSPs or devices.
>> +
>> +The K3 family of SoCs can handle 160 input events that can be mapped to 20
>> +different possible output interrupts. The additional output interrupts (10
>> +through 19) are connected to new sub-modules within the ICSSG instances.
>> +
>> +This interrupt-controller node should be defined as a child node of the
>> +corresponding PRUSS node. The node should be named "interrupt-controller".
>> +Please see the overall PRUSS bindings document for additional details
>> +including a complete example,
>> +    Documentation/devicetree/bindings/soc/ti/ti,pruss.txt
>> +
>> +Required Properties:
>> +--------------------
>> +- compatible           : should be one of the following,
>> +                             "ti,pruss-intc" for OMAP-L13x/AM18x/DA850 SoCs,
>> +                                                 AM335x family of SoCs,
>> +                                                 AM437x family of SoCs,
>> +                                                 AM57xx family of SoCs
>> +                                                 66AK2G family of SoCs
>> +                             "ti,icssg-intc" for K3 AM65x & J721E family of SoCs
>> +- reg                  : base address and size for the PRUSS INTC sub-module
>> +- interrupts           : all the interrupts generated towards the main host
>> +                         processor in the SoC. The format depends on the
>> +                         interrupt specifier for the particular SoC's ARM GIC
>> +                         parent interrupt controller. A shared interrupt can
>> +                         be skipped if the desired destination and usage is by
>> +                         a different processor/device.
>> +- interrupt-names      : should use one of the following names for each valid
>> +                         interrupt connected to ARM GIC, the name should match
>> +                         the corresponding host interrupt number,
>> +                             "host0", "host1", "host2", "host3", "host4",
>> +                             "host5", "host6" or "host7"
>> +- interrupt-controller : mark this node as an interrupt controller
>> +- #interrupt-cells     : should be 1. Client users shall use the PRU System
>> +                         event number (the interrupt source that the client
>> +                         is interested in) as the value of the interrupts
>> +                         property in their node
>> +
>> +Optional Properties:
>> +--------------------
>> +The following properties are _required_ only for some SoCs. If none of the below
>> +properties are defined, it implies that all the host interrupts 2 through 9 are
>> +connected exclusively to the ARM GIC.
>> +
>> +- ti,irqs-reserved     : an array of 8-bit elements of host interrupts between
>> +                         0 and 7 (corresponding to PRUSS INTC output interrupts
>> +                         2 through 9) that are not connected to the ARM GIC.
> 
> The reason for 0-7 mapping to 2-9 is not instantly clear to someone
> reading this. If you respin this could you note that reason is
> interrupts 0 and 1 are always routed back into the PRUSS. 

Yeah, this is always going to be somewhat confusing since the driver has
to deal with all hosts from channel-mapping perspective, but only the 8
interrupts at most that reach MPU for handling interrupts. TRM has

Anyway, I have already mentioned the first 2 interrupt routing in the
first paragraph above.

Thinking more
> on that, the same is true for interrupt 7 ("host5") on AM437x/66AK2G yet
> we don't skip that in the naming.. now that we have the reserved IRQ
> mechanism above, why not leave the one-to-one interrupt to name mapping,
> but always have at least the first two marked as reserved for all the
> current devices:
> 
> ti,irqs-reserved = /bits/ 8 <0 1>;
> 
> Then any "hostx" listed as reserved need not be present in the host
> interrupts property array. To me that would solve the "managing
> interrupts not targeting the Linux running core" problem and keep the
> names consistent, e.g.:

I had actually used the interrupt-names always starting from "host2"
through "host9" (names from PRU perspective) previously, and I have
changed this to start indexing from 0 in this series to address an
internal review comment from Grygorii and to align with TRM. All the
TRMs (except for AM572x) actually use the names/signals "host_intr0",
"host_intr1".."host_intr7" etc for the interrupts going towards MPU.
Maybe I should actually rename the interrupt-names to be host_intrX
instead of hostX to avoid confusion and be exactly aligned with the TRM
names. I will file a bug against AM57xx TRM to align the names with all
other SoC TRMs.

I am using "output interrupt lines" to imply names w.r.t PRU vs "host
interrupt" to imply ARM GIC names.

regards
Suman

> 
> /* AM437x PRU-ICSS */
> pruss_intc: interrupt-controller@20000 {
> 	compatible = "ti,pruss-intc";
> 	reg = <0x20000 0x2000>;
> 	interrupts = <                       20       21       22
> 	                   23       24                25       26>;
> 	interrupt-names =                   "host2", "host3", "host4",
> 	                  "host5", "host6",          "host8", "host9";
> 	interrupt-controller;
> 	#interrupt-cells = <1>;
> 	ti,irqs-reserved = /bits/ 8 <0 1 7>;
> };
> 
> Instantly clear which are missing and which "hostx" maps to which host
> interrupt number.
> 
> Andrew
> 
>> +                           Eg: AM437x and 66AK2G SoCs do not have "host5"
>> +                               interrupt connected to MPU
>> +- ti,irqs-shared       : an array of 8-bit elements of host interrupts between
>> +                         0 and 7 (corresponding to PRUSS INTC output interrupts
>> +                         2 through 9) that are also connected to other devices
>> +                         or processors in the SoC.
>> +                           Eg: AM65x and J721E SoCs have "host5", "host6" and
>> +                               "host7" interrupts connected to MPU, and other
>> +                               ICSSG instances
>> +
>> +
>> +Example:
>> +--------
>> +
>> +1.	/* AM33xx PRU-ICSS */
>> +	pruss: pruss@0 {
>> +		compatible = "ti,am3356-pruss";
>> +		reg = <0x0 0x80000>;
>> +		#address-cells = <1>;
>> +		#size-cells = <1>;
>> +		...
>> +
>> +		pruss_intc: interrupt-controller@20000 {
>> +			compatible = "ti,pruss-intc";
>> +			reg = <0x20000 0x2000>;
>> +			interrupts = <20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27>;
>> +			interrupt-names = "host0", "host1", "host2",
>> +					  "host3", "host4", "host5",
>> +					  "host6", "host7";
>> +			interrupt-controller;
>> +			#interrupt-cells = <1>;
>> +			ti,irqs-shared = /bits/ 8 <0 6 7>;
>> +		};
>> +	};
>>
David Lechner July 10, 2019, 5:08 p.m. UTC | #3
>>> +- interrupts           : all the interrupts generated towards the main host
>>> +                         processor in the SoC. The format depends on the
>>> +                         interrupt specifier for the particular SoC's ARM GIC
>>> +                         parent interrupt controller. A shared interrupt can
>>> +                         be skipped if the desired destination and usage is by
>>> +                         a different processor/device.
>>> +- interrupt-names      : should use one of the following names for each valid
>>> +                         interrupt connected to ARM GIC, the name should match
>>> +                         the corresponding host interrupt number,
>>> +                             "host0", "host1", "host2", "host3", "host4",
>>> +                             "host5", "host6" or "host7"
>>> +- interrupt-controller : mark this node as an interrupt controller
>>> +- #interrupt-cells     : should be 1. Client users shall use the PRU System
>>> +                         event number (the interrupt source that the client
>>> +                         is interested in) as the value of the interrupts
>>> +                         property in their node
>>> +
>>> +Optional Properties:
>>> +--------------------
>>> +The following properties are _required_ only for some SoCs. If none of the below
>>> +properties are defined, it implies that all the host interrupts 2 through 9 are
>>> +connected exclusively to the ARM GIC.
>>> +
>>> +- ti,irqs-reserved     : an array of 8-bit elements of host interrupts between
>>> +                         0 and 7 (corresponding to PRUSS INTC output interrupts
>>> +                         2 through 9) that are not connected to the ARM GIC.
>>
>> The reason for 0-7 mapping to 2-9 is not instantly clear to someone
>> reading this. If you respin this could you note that reason is
>> interrupts 0 and 1 are always routed back into the PRUSS.
> 
> Yeah, this is always going to be somewhat confusing since the driver has
> to deal with all hosts from channel-mapping perspective, but only the 8
> interrupts at most that reach MPU for handling interrupts. TRM has
> 
> Anyway, I have already mentioned the first 2 interrupt routing in the
> first paragraph above.
> 
> Thinking more
>> on that, the same is true for interrupt 7 ("host5") on AM437x/66AK2G yet
>> we don't skip that in the naming.. now that we have the reserved IRQ
>> mechanism above, why not leave the one-to-one interrupt to name mapping,
>> but always have at least the first two marked as reserved for all the
>> current devices:
>>
>> ti,irqs-reserved = /bits/ 8 <0 1>;
>>
>> Then any "hostx" listed as reserved need not be present in the host
>> interrupts property array. To me that would solve the "managing
>> interrupts not targeting the Linux running core" problem and keep the
>> names consistent, e.g.:
> 
> I had actually used the interrupt-names always starting from "host2"
> through "host9" (names from PRU perspective) previously, and I have
> changed this to start indexing from 0 in this series to address an
> internal review comment from Grygorii and to align with TRM. All the
> TRMs (except for AM572x) actually use the names/signals "host_intr0",
> "host_intr1".."host_intr7" etc for the interrupts going towards MPU.
> Maybe I should actually rename the interrupt-names to be host_intrX
> instead of hostX to avoid confusion and be exactly aligned with the TRM
> names. I will file a bug against AM57xx TRM to align the names with all
> other SoC TRMs.
> 
> I am using "output interrupt lines" to imply names w.r.t PRU vs "host
> interrupt" to imply ARM GIC names.
> 
> regards
> Suman
> 

FWIW, the AM1808 TRM only uses PRU_EVTOUT0 to PRU_EVTOUT7 and does not
mention "host" in relation to these interrupts. The AM3xxx and AM4xxx
also use similar names (PRU_ICSS_EVTOUT0, PRU_ICSS1_EVTOUT0) although
they do mention that the source is "pr1_host[0] output/events exported
from PRU_ICSS1". (Also, the older processors have AINTC instead of GIC).

Maybe to help clarify here we could mention "event" in the docs:


+- interrupt-names      : should use one of the following names for each valid
+                         host event interrupt connected to ARM interrupt
+                         controller,the name should match the corresponding
+                         host event interrupt number,
+                             "host0", "host1", "host2", "host3", "host4",
+                             "host5", "host6" or "host7"



...

>>> +
>>> +Example:
>>> +--------
>>> +
>>> +1.	/* AM33xx PRU-ICSS */
>>> +	pruss: pruss@0 {

I don't suppose there is a generic name that could be used here
instead of pruss? It seems like there should be one for remote
processors that aren't DSPs or other specialized processors.
Suman Anna July 16, 2019, 5:07 p.m. UTC | #4
Hi David,

On 7/10/19 12:08 PM, David Lechner wrote:
> 
>>>> +- interrupts           : all the interrupts generated towards the
>>>> main host
>>>> +                         processor in the SoC. The format depends
>>>> on the
>>>> +                         interrupt specifier for the particular
>>>> SoC's ARM GIC
>>>> +                         parent interrupt controller. A shared
>>>> interrupt can
>>>> +                         be skipped if the desired destination and
>>>> usage is by
>>>> +                         a different processor/device.
>>>> +- interrupt-names      : should use one of the following names for
>>>> each valid
>>>> +                         interrupt connected to ARM GIC, the name
>>>> should match
>>>> +                         the corresponding host interrupt number,
>>>> +                             "host0", "host1", "host2", "host3",
>>>> "host4",
>>>> +                             "host5", "host6" or "host7"
>>>> +- interrupt-controller : mark this node as an interrupt controller
>>>> +- #interrupt-cells     : should be 1. Client users shall use the
>>>> PRU System
>>>> +                         event number (the interrupt source that
>>>> the client
>>>> +                         is interested in) as the value of the
>>>> interrupts
>>>> +                         property in their node
>>>> +
>>>> +Optional Properties:
>>>> +--------------------
>>>> +The following properties are _required_ only for some SoCs. If none
>>>> of the below
>>>> +properties are defined, it implies that all the host interrupts 2
>>>> through 9 are
>>>> +connected exclusively to the ARM GIC.
>>>> +
>>>> +- ti,irqs-reserved     : an array of 8-bit elements of host
>>>> interrupts between
>>>> +                         0 and 7 (corresponding to PRUSS INTC
>>>> output interrupts
>>>> +                         2 through 9) that are not connected to the
>>>> ARM GIC.
>>>
>>> The reason for 0-7 mapping to 2-9 is not instantly clear to someone
>>> reading this. If you respin this could you note that reason is
>>> interrupts 0 and 1 are always routed back into the PRUSS.
>>
>> Yeah, this is always going to be somewhat confusing since the driver has
>> to deal with all hosts from channel-mapping perspective, but only the 8
>> interrupts at most that reach MPU for handling interrupts. TRM has
>>
>> Anyway, I have already mentioned the first 2 interrupt routing in the
>> first paragraph above.
>>
>> Thinking more
>>> on that, the same is true for interrupt 7 ("host5") on AM437x/66AK2G yet
>>> we don't skip that in the naming.. now that we have the reserved IRQ
>>> mechanism above, why not leave the one-to-one interrupt to name mapping,
>>> but always have at least the first two marked as reserved for all the
>>> current devices:
>>>
>>> ti,irqs-reserved = /bits/ 8 <0 1>;
>>>
>>> Then any "hostx" listed as reserved need not be present in the host
>>> interrupts property array. To me that would solve the "managing
>>> interrupts not targeting the Linux running core" problem and keep the
>>> names consistent, e.g.:
>>
>> I had actually used the interrupt-names always starting from "host2"
>> through "host9" (names from PRU perspective) previously, and I have
>> changed this to start indexing from 0 in this series to address an
>> internal review comment from Grygorii and to align with TRM. All the
>> TRMs (except for AM572x) actually use the names/signals "host_intr0",
>> "host_intr1".."host_intr7" etc for the interrupts going towards MPU.
>> Maybe I should actually rename the interrupt-names to be host_intrX
>> instead of hostX to avoid confusion and be exactly aligned with the TRM
>> names. I will file a bug against AM57xx TRM to align the names with all
>> other SoC TRMs.
>>
>> I am using "output interrupt lines" to imply names w.r.t PRU vs "host
>> interrupt" to imply ARM GIC names.
>>
>> regards
>> Suman
>>
> 
> FWIW, the AM1808 TRM only uses PRU_EVTOUT0 to PRU_EVTOUT7 and does not
> mention "host" in relation to these interrupts. The AM3xxx and AM4xxx
> also use similar names (PRU_ICSS_EVTOUT0, PRU_ICSS1_EVTOUT0) although
> they do mention that the source is "pr1_host[0] output/events exported
> from PRU_ICSS1". (Also, the older processors have AINTC instead of GIC).

Indeed, EVTOUT was only used in the Interrupts chapter on AM1808, AM335x
and AM437x. These TRMs are only getting very infrequent updates, so I
doubt we will have these names synchronized to the other SoCs.

The descriptions in PRUSS INTC sections themselves always use the term
host interrupts for all host events, but the output signals get
re-indexed to 0, which tends to be confusing.

> 
> Maybe to help clarify here we could mention "event" in the docs:
> 
> 
> +- interrupt-names      : should use one of the following names for each
> valid
> +                         host event interrupt connected to ARM interrupt
> +                         controller,the name should match the
> corresponding
> +                         host event interrupt number,

Yeah, I like your rewording. Will update for the next version.

> +                             "host0", "host1", "host2", "host3", "host4",
> +                             "host5", "host6" or "host7"

I will be updating these names as well to add either a int or intr suffix.

> 
> 
> 
> ...
> 
>>>> +
>>>> +Example:
>>>> +--------
>>>> +
>>>> +1.    /* AM33xx PRU-ICSS */
>>>> +    pruss: pruss@0 {
> 
> I don't suppose there is a generic name that could be used here
> instead of pruss? It seems like there should be one for remote
> processors that aren't DSPs or other specialized processors.
> 

Yeah, there is none. It is the overall PRU subsystem, the individual
cores are called PRU. The subsystems are usually referred to as PRUSS,
PRU-ICSS and ICSSG (on the newer K3 SoCs), so I simply chose the shorter
pruss.

regards
Suman
Rob Herring (Arm) July 24, 2019, 4:34 p.m. UTC | #5
On Sun, 7 Jul 2019 22:52:38 -0500, Suman Anna wrote:
> The Programmable Real-Time Unit Subsystem (PRUSS) contains an interrupt
> controller (INTC) that can handle various system input events and post
> interrupts back to the device-level initiators. The INTC can support
> upto 64 input events on most SoCs with individual control configuration
> and hardware prioritization. These events are mapped onto 10 interrupt
> lines through two levels of many-to-one mapping support. Different
> interrupt lines are routed to the individual PRU cores or to the
> host CPU or to other PRUSS instances.
> 
> The K3 AM65x and J721E SoCs have the next generation of the PRU-ICSS IP,
> commonly called ICSSG. The ICSSG interrupt controller on K3 SoCs provide
> a higher number of host interrupts (20 vs 10) and can handle an increased
> number of input events (160 vs 64) from various SoC interrupt sources.
> 
> Add the bindings document for these interrupt controllers on all the
> applicable SoCs. It covers the OMAP architecture SoCs - AM33xx, AM437x
> and AM57xx; the Keystone 2 architecture based 66AK2G SoC; the Davinci
> architecture based OMAPL138 SoCs, and the K3 architecture based AM65x
> and J721E SoCs.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Suman Anna <s-anna@ti.com>
> Signed-off-by: Andrew F. Davis <afd@ti.com>
> Signed-off-by: Roger Quadros <rogerq@ti.com>
> ---
> Prior version: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10795771/
> 
>  .../interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt    | 92 +++++++++++++++++++
>  1 file changed, 92 insertions(+)
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
> 

Reviewed-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
Suman Anna July 24, 2019, 7:42 p.m. UTC | #6
On 7/24/19 11:34 AM, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Sun, 7 Jul 2019 22:52:38 -0500, Suman Anna wrote:
>> The Programmable Real-Time Unit Subsystem (PRUSS) contains an interrupt
>> controller (INTC) that can handle various system input events and post
>> interrupts back to the device-level initiators. The INTC can support
>> upto 64 input events on most SoCs with individual control configuration
>> and hardware prioritization. These events are mapped onto 10 interrupt
>> lines through two levels of many-to-one mapping support. Different
>> interrupt lines are routed to the individual PRU cores or to the
>> host CPU or to other PRUSS instances.
>>
>> The K3 AM65x and J721E SoCs have the next generation of the PRU-ICSS IP,
>> commonly called ICSSG. The ICSSG interrupt controller on K3 SoCs provide
>> a higher number of host interrupts (20 vs 10) and can handle an increased
>> number of input events (160 vs 64) from various SoC interrupt sources.
>>
>> Add the bindings document for these interrupt controllers on all the
>> applicable SoCs. It covers the OMAP architecture SoCs - AM33xx, AM437x
>> and AM57xx; the Keystone 2 architecture based 66AK2G SoC; the Davinci
>> architecture based OMAPL138 SoCs, and the K3 architecture based AM65x
>> and J721E SoCs.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Suman Anna <s-anna@ti.com>
>> Signed-off-by: Andrew F. Davis <afd@ti.com>
>> Signed-off-by: Roger Quadros <rogerq@ti.com>
>> ---
>> Prior version: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10795771/
>>
>>  .../interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt    | 92 +++++++++++++++++++
>>  1 file changed, 92 insertions(+)
>>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
>>
> 
> Reviewed-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
> 

Thanks Rob. I am going to submit a v2 with some minor reword changes
based on couple of comments, but no addition or removal of properties.
Should I be retaining your Reviewed-by for v2?

regards
Suman
Rob Herring (Arm) July 25, 2019, 10:27 p.m. UTC | #7
On Wed, Jul 24, 2019 at 1:42 PM Suman Anna <s-anna@ti.com> wrote:
>
> On 7/24/19 11:34 AM, Rob Herring wrote:
> > On Sun, 7 Jul 2019 22:52:38 -0500, Suman Anna wrote:
> >> The Programmable Real-Time Unit Subsystem (PRUSS) contains an interrupt
> >> controller (INTC) that can handle various system input events and post
> >> interrupts back to the device-level initiators. The INTC can support
> >> upto 64 input events on most SoCs with individual control configuration
> >> and hardware prioritization. These events are mapped onto 10 interrupt
> >> lines through two levels of many-to-one mapping support. Different
> >> interrupt lines are routed to the individual PRU cores or to the
> >> host CPU or to other PRUSS instances.
> >>
> >> The K3 AM65x and J721E SoCs have the next generation of the PRU-ICSS IP,
> >> commonly called ICSSG. The ICSSG interrupt controller on K3 SoCs provide
> >> a higher number of host interrupts (20 vs 10) and can handle an increased
> >> number of input events (160 vs 64) from various SoC interrupt sources.
> >>
> >> Add the bindings document for these interrupt controllers on all the
> >> applicable SoCs. It covers the OMAP architecture SoCs - AM33xx, AM437x
> >> and AM57xx; the Keystone 2 architecture based 66AK2G SoC; the Davinci
> >> architecture based OMAPL138 SoCs, and the K3 architecture based AM65x
> >> and J721E SoCs.
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Suman Anna <s-anna@ti.com>
> >> Signed-off-by: Andrew F. Davis <afd@ti.com>
> >> Signed-off-by: Roger Quadros <rogerq@ti.com>
> >> ---
> >> Prior version: https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10795771/
> >>
> >>  .../interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt    | 92 +++++++++++++++++++
> >>  1 file changed, 92 insertions(+)
> >>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
> >>
> >
> > Reviewed-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
> >
>
> Thanks Rob. I am going to submit a v2 with some minor reword changes
> based on couple of comments, but no addition or removal of properties.
> Should I be retaining your Reviewed-by for v2?

Yes.
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..020073c07a92
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ti,pruss-intc.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,92 @@ 
+PRU ICSS INTC on TI SoCs
+========================
+
+Each PRUSS has a single interrupt controller instance that is common to both
+the PRU cores. Most interrupt controllers can route 64 input events which are
+then mapped to 10 possible output interrupts through two levels of mapping.
+The input events can be triggered by either the PRUs and/or various other
+PRUSS internal and external peripherals. The first 2 output interrupts are
+fed exclusively to the internal PRU cores, with the remaining 8 (2 through 9)
+connected to external interrupt controllers including the MPU and/or other
+PRUSS instances, DSPs or devices.
+
+The K3 family of SoCs can handle 160 input events that can be mapped to 20
+different possible output interrupts. The additional output interrupts (10
+through 19) are connected to new sub-modules within the ICSSG instances.
+
+This interrupt-controller node should be defined as a child node of the
+corresponding PRUSS node. The node should be named "interrupt-controller".
+Please see the overall PRUSS bindings document for additional details
+including a complete example,
+    Documentation/devicetree/bindings/soc/ti/ti,pruss.txt
+
+Required Properties:
+--------------------
+- compatible           : should be one of the following,
+                             "ti,pruss-intc" for OMAP-L13x/AM18x/DA850 SoCs,
+                                                 AM335x family of SoCs,
+                                                 AM437x family of SoCs,
+                                                 AM57xx family of SoCs
+                                                 66AK2G family of SoCs
+                             "ti,icssg-intc" for K3 AM65x & J721E family of SoCs
+- reg                  : base address and size for the PRUSS INTC sub-module
+- interrupts           : all the interrupts generated towards the main host
+                         processor in the SoC. The format depends on the
+                         interrupt specifier for the particular SoC's ARM GIC
+                         parent interrupt controller. A shared interrupt can
+                         be skipped if the desired destination and usage is by
+                         a different processor/device.
+- interrupt-names      : should use one of the following names for each valid
+                         interrupt connected to ARM GIC, the name should match
+                         the corresponding host interrupt number,
+                             "host0", "host1", "host2", "host3", "host4",
+                             "host5", "host6" or "host7"
+- interrupt-controller : mark this node as an interrupt controller
+- #interrupt-cells     : should be 1. Client users shall use the PRU System
+                         event number (the interrupt source that the client
+                         is interested in) as the value of the interrupts
+                         property in their node
+
+Optional Properties:
+--------------------
+The following properties are _required_ only for some SoCs. If none of the below
+properties are defined, it implies that all the host interrupts 2 through 9 are
+connected exclusively to the ARM GIC.
+
+- ti,irqs-reserved     : an array of 8-bit elements of host interrupts between
+                         0 and 7 (corresponding to PRUSS INTC output interrupts
+                         2 through 9) that are not connected to the ARM GIC.
+                           Eg: AM437x and 66AK2G SoCs do not have "host5"
+                               interrupt connected to MPU
+- ti,irqs-shared       : an array of 8-bit elements of host interrupts between
+                         0 and 7 (corresponding to PRUSS INTC output interrupts
+                         2 through 9) that are also connected to other devices
+                         or processors in the SoC.
+                           Eg: AM65x and J721E SoCs have "host5", "host6" and
+                               "host7" interrupts connected to MPU, and other
+                               ICSSG instances
+
+
+Example:
+--------
+
+1.	/* AM33xx PRU-ICSS */
+	pruss: pruss@0 {
+		compatible = "ti,am3356-pruss";
+		reg = <0x0 0x80000>;
+		#address-cells = <1>;
+		#size-cells = <1>;
+		...
+
+		pruss_intc: interrupt-controller@20000 {
+			compatible = "ti,pruss-intc";
+			reg = <0x20000 0x2000>;
+			interrupts = <20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27>;
+			interrupt-names = "host0", "host1", "host2",
+					  "host3", "host4", "host5",
+					  "host6", "host7";
+			interrupt-controller;
+			#interrupt-cells = <1>;
+			ti,irqs-shared = /bits/ 8 <0 6 7>;
+		};
+	};