The tas2781-i2c driver gets an IRQ from either ACPI or device tree,
then proceeds to check if the IRQ has a corresponding GPIO and in
case it does enforce the GPIO as input and set a label on it.
This is abuse of the API:
- First we cannot guarantee that the numberspaces of the GPIOs and
the IRQs are the same, i.e that an IRQ number corresponds to
a GPIO number like that.
- Second, GPIO chips and IRQ chips should be treated as orthogonal
APIs, the irqchip needs to ascertain that the backing GPIO line
is set to input etc just using the irqchip.
- Third it is using the legacy <linux/gpio.h> API which should not
be used in new code yet this was added just a year ago.
Delete the offending code.
If this creates problems the GPIO and irqchip maintainers can help
to fix the issues.
It *should* not create any problems, because the irq isn't
used anywhere in the driver, it's just obtained and then
left unused.
Fixes: ef3bcde75d ("ASoC: tas2781: Add tas2781 driver")
Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20240807-asoc-tas-gpios-v2-1-bd0f2705d58b@linaro.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>