2
0
mirror of https://github.com/edk2-porting/linux-next.git synced 2024-12-05 03:44:03 +08:00
linux-next/Documentation/hwmon/g762
Arnaud Ebalard 594fbe713b Add support for GMT G762/G763 PWM fan controllers
GMT G762/763 fan speed PWM controller is connected directly to a fan
and performs closed-loop or open-loop control of the fan speed. Two
modes - PWM or DC - are supported by the chip. Introduced driver
provides various knobs to control the operations of the chip (via
sysfs interface). Specific characteristics of the system can be passed
either using board init code or via DT. Documentation for both the
driver and DT bindings are also provided.

Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ebalard <arno@natisbad.org>
Tested-by: Simon Guinot <simon.guinot@sequanux.org>
Signed-off-by: Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
2013-06-27 10:31:42 -07:00

66 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext

Kernel driver g762
==================
The GMT G762 Fan Speed PWM Controller is connected directly to a fan
and performs closed-loop or open-loop control of the fan speed. Two
modes - PWM or DC - are supported by the device.
For additional information, a detailed datasheet is available at
http://natisbad.org/NAS/ref/GMT_EDS-762_763-080710-0.2.pdf. sysfs
bindings are described in Documentation/hwmon/sysfs-interface.
The following entries are available to the user in a subdirectory of
/sys/bus/i2c/drivers/g762/ to control the operation of the device.
This can be done manually using the following entries but is usually
done via a userland daemon like fancontrol.
Note that those entries do not provide ways to setup the specific
hardware characteristics of the system (reference clock, pulses per
fan revolution, ...); Those can be modified via devicetree bindings
documented in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/hwmon/g762.txt or
using a specific platform_data structure in board initialization
file (see include/linux/platform_data/g762.h).
fan1_target: set desired fan speed. This only makes sense in closed-loop
fan speed control (i.e. when pwm1_enable is set to 2).
fan1_input: provide current fan rotation value in RPM as reported by
the fan to the device.
fan1_div: fan clock divisor. Supported value are 1, 2, 4 and 8.
fan1_pulses: number of pulses per fan revolution. Supported values
are 2 and 4.
fan1_fault: reports fan failure, i.e. no transition on fan gear pin for
about 0.7s (if the fan is not voluntarily set off).
fan1_alarm: in closed-loop control mode, if fan RPM value is 25% out
of the programmed value for over 6 seconds 'fan1_alarm' is
set to 1.
pwm1_enable: set current fan speed control mode i.e. 1 for manual fan
speed control (open-loop) via pwm1 described below, 2 for
automatic fan speed control (closed-loop) via fan1_target
above.
pwm1_mode: set or get fan driving mode: 1 for PWM mode, 0 for DC mode.
pwm1: get or set PWM fan control value in open-loop mode. This is an
integer value between 0 and 255. 0 stops the fan, 255 makes
it run at full speed.
Both in PWM mode ('pwm1_mode' set to 1) and DC mode ('pwm1_mode' set to 0),
when current fan speed control mode is open-loop ('pwm1_enable' set to 1),
the fan speed is programmed by setting a value between 0 and 255 via 'pwm1'
entry (0 stops the fan, 255 makes it run at full speed). In closed-loop mode
('pwm1_enable' set to 2), the expected rotation speed in RPM can be passed to
the chip via 'fan1_target'. In closed-loop mode, the target speed is compared
with current speed (available via 'fan1_input') by the device and a feedback
is performed to match that target value. The fan speed value is computed
based on the parameters associated with the physical characteristics of the
system: a reference clock source frequency, a number of pulses per fan
revolution, etc.
Note that the driver will update its values at most once per second.