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- Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) interface
- This provides an overview about the Linux PWM interface
- PWMs are commonly used for controlling LEDs, fans or vibrators in
- cell phones. PWMs with a fixed purpose have no need implementing
- the Linux PWM API (although they could). However, PWMs are often
- found as discrete devices on SoCs which have no fixed purpose. It's
- up to the board designer to connect them to LEDs or fans. To provide
- this kind of flexibility the generic PWM API exists.
- Identifying PWMs
- ----------------
- Users of the legacy PWM API use unique IDs to refer to PWM devices.
- Instead of referring to a PWM device via its unique ID, board setup code
- should instead register a static mapping that can be used to match PWM
- consumers to providers, as given in the following example:
- static struct pwm_lookup board_pwm_lookup[] = {
- PWM_LOOKUP("tegra-pwm", 0, "pwm-backlight", NULL),
- };
- static void __init board_init(void)
- {
- ...
- pwm_add_table(board_pwm_lookup, ARRAY_SIZE(board_pwm_lookup));
- ...
- }
- Using PWMs
- ----------
- Legacy users can request a PWM device using pwm_request() and free it
- after usage with pwm_free().
- New users should use the pwm_get() function and pass to it the consumer
- device or a consumer name. pwm_put() is used to free the PWM device. Managed
- variants of these functions, devm_pwm_get() and devm_pwm_put(), also exist.
- After being requested a PWM has to be configured using:
- int pwm_config(struct pwm_device *pwm, int duty_ns, int period_ns);
- To start/stop toggling the PWM output use pwm_enable()/pwm_disable().
- Implementing a PWM driver
- -------------------------
- Currently there are two ways to implement pwm drivers. Traditionally
- there only has been the barebone API meaning that each driver has
- to implement the pwm_*() functions itself. This means that it's impossible
- to have multiple PWM drivers in the system. For this reason it's mandatory
- for new drivers to use the generic PWM framework.
- A new PWM controller/chip can be added using pwmchip_add() and removed
- again with pwmchip_remove(). pwmchip_add() takes a filled in struct
- pwm_chip as argument which provides a description of the PWM chip, the
- number of PWM devices provider by the chip and the chip-specific
- implementation of the supported PWM operations to the framework.
- Locking
- -------
- The PWM core list manipulations are protected by a mutex, so pwm_request()
- and pwm_free() may not be called from an atomic context. Currently the
- PWM core does not enforce any locking to pwm_enable(), pwm_disable() and
- pwm_config(), so the calling context is currently driver specific. This
- is an issue derived from the former barebone API and should be fixed soon.
- Helpers
- -------
- Currently a PWM can only be configured with period_ns and duty_ns. For several
- use cases freq_hz and duty_percent might be better. Instead of calculating
- this in your driver please consider adding appropriate helpers to the framework.
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