From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Jacek Anaszewski Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/2] leds: Add driver for Qualcomm LPG Date: Sun, 2 Apr 2017 14:54:57 +0200 Message-ID: <1192806d-13bf-3b5c-4179-b7795737ed40@gmail.com> References: <20170323055435.29197-1-bjorn.andersson@linaro.org> <20170323203749.GB8563@amd> <20170329021734.afhqmfpmbcjyv7bu@rob-hp-laptop> <20170329190725.GN20094@minitux> <20170329222301.GB7977@amd> <20170330000955.GP20094@minitux> <20170330074309.GA28533@amd> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Return-path: In-Reply-To: Sender: linux-arm-msm-owner@vger.kernel.org To: Pavel Machek , Bjorn Andersson Cc: Rob Herring , Richard Purdie , linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-leds@vger.kernel.org, linux-arm-msm@vger.kernel.org, Mark Rutland , devicetree@vger.kernel.org List-Id: linux-leds@vger.kernel.org On 03/31/2017 11:28 AM, Jacek Anaszewski wrote: > Hi Bjorn and Pavel, > > On 03/30/2017 09:43 AM, Pavel Machek wrote: >> Hi! >> >>>>> There is a binding for ti,lp55xx, but there's nothing I can reuse from >>>>> that binding...because it's completely different hardware. >>>> >>>> Agreed, if you drop the pattern stuff from the binding, at least for now. >>> >>> I do not have a strong preference to expose these knobs in devicetree >>> and I do fear that finding some common "pattern" bindings that suits >>> everyone will be very difficult. >>> >>> So I'll drop them from the binding for now. >> >> Ok. >> >>>> If you want driver merged quickly, I believe the best way would be to >>>> leave out pattern support for now. We can merge the basic driver >>>> easily to 4.12. >>>> >>> >>> I'm not that much in a hurry and would rather see that we resolve any >>> outstanding issues with the implementation of the pattern handling. >> >> Ok, good. >> >>> But regardless of this we still have the problem that the typical >>> Qualcomm PMIC has 8 LPG-blocks and any triple could be driving a >>> RGB-LED. So we would have to create some sort of in-driver-wrapper >>> around any three instances exposing them as a single LED to the user. >> >> Yes, I believe we should do the wrapping. In N900 case, >> >>> I rather expose the individual channels and make sure that when we >>> trigger a blink operation or enable a pattern (i.e. the two operations >>> that do require synchronization) we will perform that synchronization >>> under the hood. >> >> First, we need a way to tell userspace which LEDs are synchronized, >> because otherwise it will be confusing. > > There is one year old discussion [0] about the possible approaches > to RGB sub-LEDs synchronization problem and patterns in general. > My last message with API design proposal has been left unanswered. > > Probably we continue that discussion here. > > Generally Bjorn's drivers touch two yet to be addressed issues: > - RGB LED support > - Generic support for patterns > > It is likely that both issues can be solved by utilizing trigger > mechanism. The possible solution to the problem Bjorn tried to > address with /sys/class/leds//pattern comma separated list > could be a trigger with adjustable number of pattern intervals. > > The trigger once activated would create a directory with the > number of files corresponding to the number of requested intervals, > and then user could write an interval value by writing it to the > corresponding file. Somehow related approach has been implemented > for USB port LED trigger: > > 0f247626cbbf ('usb: core: Introduce a USB port LED trigger") > > In both RGB and pattern approaches we should assess > if it is acceptable to provide a pattern for trigger name, > e.g. blink-pattern-{num_intervals}. Actually we could achieve the goal by listing all available pattern configurations for given LED class device, so in case of Qualcomm LPG driver we could have transition-pattern-1 to transition-pattern-15 listed after executing "cat trigger". In case of RGB trigger we would have qcom-rgb among other triggers listed in a result of executing "cat trigger". Then qcom-rgb-1 LED class device could appear in /sys/class/leds, which would expose files red-led-name, green-led-name and blue-led-name. Once all files are initialized with appropriate LED class device names the RGB brightness could be updated synchronously in all involved LEDs by executing e.g. "echo 1 > update_color". Of course all LEDs that set qcom-rgb trigger would have to avoid changing device state on write to their brightness file. I wonder if I'm not missing some vital constraints here that could make this design unfeasible. Best regards, Jacek Anaszewski > If so, then "echo transition-pattern-15" would create a directory > e.g. transition_intervals with files interval_0 to interval_14, > that could be adjusted by userspace. > >> Second, there are more issues than just patterns with the RGB >> LED. Most important is ability to set particular colors. You want to >> set the RGB LED to "white", but that does not mean you can set >> red=green=blue=1.0. You want color to look the same on LCD and on the >> LED, which means coefficients for white and some kind of function for >> brightness-to-PWM conversion. > > Shouldn't we leave that entirely to the userspace? Can we come up > with coefficients that will guarantee the same result on all existing > LCD devices? > >>>> Incremental patches sound like a good idea, yes. >>>> >>>> I'd say that testing with actual RGB LED is not a requirement... as >>>> long as we design reasonable interface where the synchronizaction will >>>> be easy. >>>> >>> >>> As this relates to the board layout (which LPG-channels are hooked to a >>> RGB) I think it makes sense to expose a mechanism in devicetree to >>> indicate which channels should have their pattern/blink synchronized. >>> >>> We should be able to extend the LUT (the hardware that actually >>> implements the pattern-walker logic) with a DT-property like: >>> >>> qcom,synchronize-group-0 = <1, 2, 3>; >>> qcom,synchronize-group-1 = <5, 6, 7>; >>> >>> And whenever we configure a pattern involving one of the affected LEDs >>> from a group we start all of them. >> >> Yes we need some kind of grouping. >> >> Additional complexity in the N900 case... groups can actually be >> configured at run time. Original Maemo used that ability to group 6 >> keyboard backlight leds, and then run pattern on them. OTOH... I don't >> think we _need_ to support that functionality. >> >> Best regards, >> Pavel >> > > [0] https://lkml.org/lkml/2016/4/18/179 >