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Samuel Holland 7ab365f6cd irqchip/sun6i-r: Add wakeup support
Maintain bitmaps of wake-enabled IRQs and mux inputs, and program them
to the hardware during the syscore phase of suspend and shutdown. Then
restore the original set of enabled IRQs (only the NMI) during resume.

This serves two purposes. First, it lets power management firmware
running on the ARISC coprocessor know which wakeup sources Linux wants
to have enabled. That way, it can avoid turning them off when it shuts
down the remainder of the clock tree. Second, it preconfigures the
coprocessor's interrupt controller, so the firmware's wakeup logic
is as simple as waiting for an interrupt to arrive.

The suspend/resume logic is not conditional on PM_SLEEP because it is
identical to the init/shutdown logic. Wake IRQs may be enabled during
shutdown to allow powering the board back on. As an example, see
commit a5c5e50cce ("Input: gpio-keys - add shutdown callback").

Acked-by: Maxime Ripard <mripard@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Holland <samuel@sholland.org>
Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <maz@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210118055040.21910-5-samuel@sholland.org
2021-01-21 20:21:49 +00:00
Samuel Holland 4e34614636 irqchip/sun6i-r: Use a stacked irqchip driver
The R_INTC in the A31 and newer sun8i/sun50i SoCs is more similar to the
original sun4i interrupt controller than the sun7i/sun9i NMI controller.
It is used for two distinct purposes:
 - To control the trigger, latch, and mask for the NMI input pin
 - To provide the interrupt input for the ARISC coprocessor

As this interrupt controller is not documented, information about it
comes from vendor-provided firmware blobs and from experimentation.

Differences from the sun4i interrupt controller appear to be:
 - It only has one or two registers of each kind (max 32 or 64 IRQs)
 - Multiplexing logic is added to support additional inputs
 - There is no FIQ-related logic
 - There is no interrupt priority logic

In order to fulfill its two purposes, this hardware block combines four
types of IRQs. First, the NMI pin is routed to the "IRQ 0" input on this
chip, with a trigger type controlled by the NMI_CTRL_REG. The "IRQ 0
pending" output from this chip, if enabled, is then routed to a SPI IRQ
input on the GIC. In other words, bit 0 of IRQ_ENABLE_REG *does* affect
the NMI IRQ seen at the GIC.

The NMI is followed by a contiguous block of 15 "direct" (my name for
them) IRQ inputs that are connected in parallel to both R_INTC and the
GIC. Or in other words, these bits of IRQ_ENABLE_REG *do not* affect the
IRQs seen at the GIC.

Following the direct IRQs are the ARISC's copy of banked IRQs for shared
peripherals. These are not relevant to Linux. The remaining IRQs are
connected to a multiplexer and provide access to the first (up to) 128
SPIs from the ARISC. This range of SPIs overlaps with the direct IRQs.

Because of the 1:1 correspondence between R_INTC and GIC inputs, this is
a perfect scenario for using a stacked irqchip driver. We want to hook
into setting the NMI trigger type, but not actually handle any IRQ here.

To allow access to all multiplexed IRQs, this driver requires a new
binding where the interrupt number matches the GIC interrupt number.
(This moves the NMI from number 0 to 32 or 96, depending on the SoC.)
For simplicity, copy the three-cell GIC binding; this disambiguates
interrupt 0 in the old binding (the NMI) from interrupt 0 in the new
binding (SPI 0) by the number of cells.

Since R_INTC is in the always-on power domain, and its output is visible
to the power management coprocessor, a stacked irqchip driver provides a
simple way to add wakeup support to any of its IRQs. That is the next
patch; for now, just the NMI is moved over.

This commit mostly reverts commit 173bda53b3 ("irqchip/sunxi-nmi:
Support sun6i-a31-r-intc compatible").

Acked-by: Maxime Ripard <mripard@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Holland <samuel@sholland.org>
Signed-off-by: Marc Zyngier <maz@kernel.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210118055040.21910-4-samuel@sholland.org
2021-01-21 20:21:49 +00:00