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authorHans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com>2018-10-17 10:59:28 +0200
committerRafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>2018-10-18 09:26:37 +0200
commit589edb56b424876cbbf61547b987a1f57d7ea99d (patch)
tree43b587cb13fc40e07baca25fa425ab6f2434b0ac /drivers/acpi
parentLinux 4.19-rc8 (diff)
downloadlinux-dev-589edb56b424876cbbf61547b987a1f57d7ea99d.tar.xz
linux-dev-589edb56b424876cbbf61547b987a1f57d7ea99d.zip
ACPI / scan: Create platform device for INT33FE ACPI nodes
Bay and Cherry Trail devices with a Dollar Cove or Whiskey Cove PMIC have an ACPI node with a HID of INT33FE which is a "virtual" battery device implementing a standard ACPI battery interface which depends upon a proprietary, undocument OpRegion called BMOP. Since we do have docs for the actual fuel-gauges used on these boards we instead use native fuel-gauge drivers talking directly to the fuel-gauge ICs on boards which rely on this INT33FE device for their battery monitoring. On boards with a Dollar Cove PMIC the INT33FE device's resources (_CRS) describe a non-existing I2C client at address 0x6b with a bus-speed of 100KHz. This is a problem on some boards since there are actual devices on that same bus which need a speed of 400KHz to function properly. This commit adds the INT33FE HID to the list of devices with I2C resources which should be enumerated as a platform-device rather then letting the i2c-core instantiate an i2c-client matching the first I2C resource, so that its bus-speed will not influence the max speed of the I2C bus. This fixes e.g. the touchscreen not working on the Teclast X98 II Plus. The INT33FE device on boards with a Whiskey Cove PMIC is somewhat special. Its first I2C resource is for a secondary I2C address of the PMIC itself, which is already described in an ACPI device with an INT34D3 HID. But it has 3 more I2C resources describing 3 other chips for which we do need to instantiate I2C clients and which need device-connections added between them for things to work properly. This special case is handled by the drivers/platform/x86/intel_cht_int33fe.c code. Before this commit that code was binding to the i2c-client instantiated for the secondary I2C address of the PMIC, since we now instantiate a platform device for the INT33FE device instead, this commit also changes the intel_cht_int33fe driver from an i2c driver to a platform driver. This also brings the intel_cht_int33fe drv inline with how we instantiate multiple i2c clients from a single ACPI device in other cases, as done by the drivers/platform/x86/i2c-multi-instantiate.c code. Reported-and-tested-by: Alexander Meiler <alex.meiler@protonmail.com> Signed-off-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com> Acked-by: Andy Shevchenko <andy.shevchenko@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/acpi')
-rw-r--r--drivers/acpi/scan.c1
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/acpi/scan.c b/drivers/acpi/scan.c
index e1b6231cfa1c..1dcc48b9d33c 100644
--- a/drivers/acpi/scan.c
+++ b/drivers/acpi/scan.c
@@ -1550,6 +1550,7 @@ static bool acpi_device_enumeration_by_parent(struct acpi_device *device)
*/
static const struct acpi_device_id i2c_multi_instantiate_ids[] = {
{"BSG1160", },
+ {"INT33FE", },
{}
};