Some devices can only operate in host mode, so we need means of
communicating this to the core driver on per-device basis. This
adds a flag to drvdata to signal host-only capability to the core.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shishkin <alexander.shishkin@linux.intel.com>
thdev->output.port = -1;
thdev->output.scratchpad = subdev->scrpd;
} else if (subdev->type == INTEL_TH_SWITCH) {
- thdev->host_mode = host_mode;
+ thdev->host_mode =
+ INTEL_TH_CAP(th, host_mode_only) ? true : host_mode;
th->hub = thdev;
}
struct intel_th_device *thdev;
/* only allow SOURCE and SWITCH devices in host mode */
- if (host_mode && subdev->type == INTEL_TH_OUTPUT)
+ if ((INTEL_TH_CAP(th, host_mode_only) || host_mode) &&
+ subdev->type == INTEL_TH_OUTPUT)
continue;
/*
/**
* struct intel_th_drvdata - describes hardware capabilities and quirks
* @tscu_enable: device needs SW to enable time stamping unit
+ * @host_mode_only: device can only operate in 'host debugger' mode
*/
struct intel_th_drvdata {
- unsigned int tscu_enable : 1;
+ unsigned int tscu_enable : 1,
+ host_mode_only : 1;
};
#define INTEL_TH_CAP(_th, _cap) ((_th)->drvdata ? (_th)->drvdata->_cap : 0)