@@ -18,15 +18,7 @@ struct device_node;
/* consumer cookie */
struct nvmem_cell;
struct nvmem_device;
-
-struct nvmem_cell_info {
- const char *name;
- unsigned int offset;
- unsigned int bytes;
- unsigned int bit_offset;
- unsigned int nbits;
- struct device_node *np;
-};
+struct nvmem_cell_info;
/**
* struct nvmem_cell_lookup - cell lookup entry
@@ -14,7 +14,6 @@
#include <linux/gpio/consumer.h>
struct nvmem_device;
-struct nvmem_cell_info;
typedef int (*nvmem_reg_read_t)(void *priv, unsigned int offset,
void *val, size_t bytes);
typedef int (*nvmem_reg_write_t)(void *priv, unsigned int offset,
@@ -47,6 +46,24 @@ struct nvmem_keepout {
unsigned char value;
};
+/**
+ * struct nvmem_cell_info - NVMEM cell description
+ * @name: Name.
+ * @offset: Offset within the NVMEM device.
+ * @bytes: Length of the cell.
+ * @bit_offset: Bit offset if cell is smaller than a byte.
+ * @nbits: Number of bits.
+ * @np: Optional device_node pointer.
+ */
+struct nvmem_cell_info {
+ const char *name;
+ unsigned int offset;
+ unsigned int bytes;
+ unsigned int bit_offset;
+ unsigned int nbits;
+ struct device_node *np;
+};
+
/**
* struct nvmem_config - NVMEM device configuration
*
struct nvmem_cell_info is used to describe a cell. Thus this should really be in the nvmem-provider's header. There are two (unused) nvmem access methods which use the nvmem_cell_info to describe the cell to be accesses. One can argue, that they will create a cell before accessing, thus they are both a provider and a consumer. struct nvmem_cell_info will get used more and more by nvmem-providers, don't force them to also include the consumer header, although they are not. Signed-off-by: Michael Walle <michael@walle.cc> --- changes since v2: - none changes since v1: - new patch include/linux/nvmem-consumer.h | 10 +--------- include/linux/nvmem-provider.h | 19 ++++++++++++++++++- 2 files changed, 19 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)