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authorGabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>2013-06-15 20:33:05 -0700
committerStefan Reinauer <stefan.reinauer@coreboot.org>2013-07-10 21:49:55 +0200
commitfe6406033fe327d4ae408b02efc060b4b421bc03 (patch)
tree7977185b4d8a2448430ec54b31f983c52c460ad4 /documentation/cbfs.txt
parent001056f560dfec46aa98659f318819cce7098e5b (diff)
exynos5250: De-switch-ify the pinmux configuration code.
The pinmux code for the exynos5250 was all bundled into a single, large function which contained a switch statement that would set up the pins for different peripherals within the SOC. There was also a "flags" parameter, the meaning of which, if any, depended on which peripheral was being set up. There are several problems with that approach. First, the code is inefficient in both time and space. The caller knows which peripheral it wants to set up, but that information is encoded in a constant which has to be unpacked within the function before any action can be taken. If there were a function per peripheral, that information would be implicit. Also, the compiler and linker are forced to include the entire function with all its cases even if most of them are never called. If each peripheral was a function, the unused ones could be garbage collected. Second, it would be possible to try to set up a peripheral which that function doesn't know about, so there has to be additional error checking/handling. If each peripheral had a function, the fact that there was a function to call at all would imply that the call would be understood. Third, the flags parameter is fairly opaque, usually doesn't do anything, and sometimes has to have multiple values embedded in it. By having separate functions, you can have only the parameters you actually want, give them names that make sense, and pass in values directly. Fourth, having one giant function pretends to be a generic, portable API, but in reality, the only way it's useful is to call it with constants which are specific to a particular implementation of that API. It's highly unlikely that a bit of code will need to set up a peripheral but have no idea what that peripheral actually is. Call sights for the prior pinmux API have been updated. Also, pinmux initialization within the i2c driver was moved to be in the board setup code where it really probably belongs. The function block that implements the I2C controller may be shared between multiple SOCs (and in fact is), and those SOCs may have different pinmuxes (which they do). Other places this same sort of change can be made are the pinmux code for the 5420, and the clock configuration code for both the 5250 and the 5420. Change-Id: Ie9133a895e0dd861cb06a6d5f995b8770b6dc8cf Signed-off-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@chromium.org> Reviewed-on: http://review.coreboot.org/3673 Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) Reviewed-by: Stefan Reinauer <stefan.reinauer@coreboot.org>
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