1Microchip MCP2308/MCP23S08/MCP23017/MCP23S17 driver for 28-/16-bit I/O expander with serial interface (I2C/SPI) 3 4Required properties: 5- compatible : Should be 6 - "mcp,mcp23s08" (DEPRECATED) for 8 GPIO SPI version 7 - "mcp,mcp23s17" (DEPRECATED) for 16 GPIO SPI version 8 - "mcp,mcp23008" (DEPRECATED) for 8 GPIO I2C version or 9 - "mcp,mcp23017" (DEPRECATED) for 16 GPIO I2C version of the chip 10 11 - "microchip,mcp23s08" for 8 GPIO SPI version 12 - "microchip,mcp23s17" for 16 GPIO SPI version 13 - "microchip,mcp23008" for 8 GPIO I2C version or 14 - "microchip,mcp23017" for 16 GPIO I2C version of the chip 15 NOTE: Do not use the old mcp prefix any more. It is deprecated and will be 16 removed. 17- #gpio-cells : Should be two. 18 - first cell is the pin number 19 - second cell is used to specify flags. Flags are currently unused. 20- gpio-controller : Marks the device node as a GPIO controller. 21- reg : For an address on its bus. I2C uses this a the I2C address of the chip. 22 SPI uses this to specify the chipselect line which the chip is 23 connected to. The driver and the SPI variant of the chip support 24 multiple chips on the same chipselect. Have a look at 25 microchip,spi-present-mask below. 26 27Required device specific properties (only for SPI chips): 28- mcp,spi-present-mask (DEPRECATED) 29- microchip,spi-present-mask : This is a present flag, that makes only sense for SPI 30 chips - as the name suggests. Multiple SPI chips can share the same 31 SPI chipselect. Set a bit in bit0-7 in this mask to 1 if there is a 32 chip connected with the corresponding spi address set. For example if 33 you have a chip with address 3 connected, you have to set bit3 to 1, 34 which is 0x08. mcp23s08 chip variant only supports bits 0-3. It is not 35 possible to mix mcp23s08 and mcp23s17 on the same chipselect. Set at 36 least one bit to 1 for SPI chips. 37 NOTE: Do not use the old mcp prefix any more. It is deprecated and will be 38 removed. 39- spi-max-frequency = The maximum frequency this chip is able to handle 40 41Optional properties: 42- #interrupt-cells : Should be two. 43 - first cell is the pin number 44 - second cell is used to specify flags. 45- interrupt-controller: Marks the device node as a interrupt controller. 46NOTE: The interrupt functionality is only supported for i2c versions of the 47chips. The spi chips can also do the interrupts, but this is not supported by 48the linux driver yet. 49 50Optional device specific properties: 51- microchip,irq-mirror: Sets the mirror flag in the IOCON register. Devices 52 with two interrupt outputs (these are the devices ending with 17 and 53 those that have 16 IOs) have two IO banks: IO 0-7 form bank 1 and 54 IO 8-15 are bank 2. These chips have two different interrupt outputs: 55 One for bank 1 and another for bank 2. If irq-mirror is set, both 56 interrupts are generated regardless of the bank that an input change 57 occurred on. If it is not set, the interrupt are only generated for the 58 bank they belong to. 59 On devices with only one interrupt output this property is useless. 60- microchip,irq-active-high: Sets the INTPOL flag in the IOCON register. This 61 configures the IRQ output polarity as active high. 62 63Example I2C (with interrupt): 64gpiom1: gpio@20 { 65 compatible = "microchip,mcp23017"; 66 gpio-controller; 67 #gpio-cells = <2>; 68 reg = <0x20>; 69 70 interrupt-parent = <&gpio1>; 71 interrupts = <17 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_LOW>; 72 interrupt-controller; 73 #interrupt-cells=<2>; 74 microchip,irq-mirror; 75}; 76 77Example SPI: 78gpiom1: gpio@0 { 79 compatible = "microchip,mcp23s17"; 80 gpio-controller; 81 #gpio-cells = <2>; 82 spi-present-mask = <0x01>; 83 reg = <0>; 84 spi-max-frequency = <1000000>; 85}; 86