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authorAndré Fabian Silva Delgado <emulatorman@parabola.nu>2016-09-11 04:34:46 -0300
committerAndré Fabian Silva Delgado <emulatorman@parabola.nu>2016-09-11 04:34:46 -0300
commit863981e96738983919de841ec669e157e6bdaeb0 (patch)
treed6d89a12e7eb8017837c057935a2271290907f76 /Documentation/gpio
parent8dec7c70575785729a6a9e6719a955e9c545bcab (diff)
Linux-libre 4.7.1-gnupck-4.7.1-gnu
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/gpio')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/gpio/driver.txt97
1 files changed, 97 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/gpio/driver.txt b/Documentation/gpio/driver.txt
index bbeec415f..6cb35a78e 100644
--- a/Documentation/gpio/driver.txt
+++ b/Documentation/gpio/driver.txt
@@ -68,6 +68,103 @@ control callbacks) if it is expected to call GPIO APIs from atomic context
on -RT (inside hard IRQ handlers and similar contexts). Normally this should
not be required.
+
+GPIOs with open drain/source support
+------------------------------------
+
+Open drain (CMOS) or open collector (TTL) means the line is not actively driven
+high: instead you provide the drain/collector as output, so when the transistor
+is not open, it will present a high-impedance (tristate) to the external rail.
+
+
+ CMOS CONFIGURATION TTL CONFIGURATION
+
+ ||--- out +--- out
+ in ----|| |/
+ ||--+ in ----|
+ | |\
+ GND GND
+
+This configuration is normally used as a way to achieve one of two things:
+
+- Level-shifting: to reach a logical level higher than that of the silicon
+ where the output resides.
+
+- inverse wire-OR on an I/O line, for example a GPIO line, making it possible
+ for any driving stage on the line to drive it low even if any other output
+ to the same line is simultaneously driving it high. A special case of this
+ is driving the SCL and SCA lines of an I2C bus, which is by definition a
+ wire-OR bus.
+
+Both usecases require that the line be equipped with a pull-up resistor. This
+resistor will make the line tend to high level unless one of the transistors on
+the rail actively pulls it down.
+
+The level on the line will go as high as the VDD on the pull-up resistor, which
+may be higher than the level supported by the transistor, achieveing a
+level-shift to the higher VDD.
+
+Integrated electronics often have an output driver stage in the form of a CMOS
+"totem-pole" with one N-MOS and one P-MOS transistor where one of them drives
+the line high and one of them drives the line low. This is called a push-pull
+output. The "totem-pole" looks like so:
+
+ VDD
+ |
+ OD ||--+
+ +--/ ---o|| P-MOS-FET
+ | ||--+
+IN --+ +----- out
+ | ||--+
+ +--/ ----|| N-MOS-FET
+ OS ||--+
+ |
+ GND
+
+The desired output signal (e.g. coming directly from some GPIO output register)
+arrives at IN. The switches named "OD" and "OS" are normally closed, creating
+a push-pull circuit.
+
+Consider the little "switches" named "OD" and "OS" that enable/disable the
+P-MOS or N-MOS transistor right after the split of the input. As you can see,
+either transistor will go totally numb if this switch is open. The totem-pole
+is then halved and give high impedance instead of actively driving the line
+high or low respectively. That is usually how software-controlled open
+drain/source works.
+
+Some GPIO hardware come in open drain / open source configuration. Some are
+hard-wired lines that will only support open drain or open source no matter
+what: there is only one transistor there. Some are software-configurable:
+by flipping a bit in a register the output can be configured as open drain
+or open source, in practice by flicking open the switches labeled "OD" and "OS"
+in the drawing above.
+
+By disabling the P-MOS transistor, the output can be driven between GND and
+high impedance (open drain), and by disabling the N-MOS transistor, the output
+can be driven between VDD and high impedance (open source). In the first case,
+a pull-up resistor is needed on the outgoing rail to complete the circuit, and
+in the second case, a pull-down resistor is needed on the rail.
+
+Hardware that supports open drain or open source or both, can implement a
+special callback in the gpio_chip: .set_single_ended() that takes an enum flag
+telling whether to configure the line as open drain, open source or push-pull.
+This will happen in response to the GPIO_OPEN_DRAIN or GPIO_OPEN_SOURCE flag
+set in the machine file, or coming from other hardware descriptions.
+
+If this state can not be configured in hardware, i.e. if the GPIO hardware does
+not support open drain/open source in hardware, the GPIO library will instead
+use a trick: when a line is set as output, if the line is flagged as open
+drain, and the IN output value is low, it will be driven low as usual. But
+if the IN output value is set to high, it will instead *NOT* be driven high,
+instead it will be switched to input, as input mode is high impedance, thus
+achieveing an "open drain emulation" of sorts: electrically the behaviour will
+be identical, with the exception of possible hardware glitches when switching
+the mode of the line.
+
+For open source configuration the same principle is used, just that instead
+of actively driving the line low, it is set to input.
+
+
GPIO drivers providing IRQs
---------------------------
It is custom that GPIO drivers (GPIO chips) are also providing interrupts,