How to handle named resources with DT?
Cousson, Benoit
b-cousson at ti.com
Wed Aug 10 07:44:35 EST 2011
On 8/9/2011 11:17 PM, Grant Likely wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 09, 2011 at 11:08:09PM +0200, Cousson, Benoit wrote:
>> On 8/9/2011 10:57 PM, Grant Likely wrote:
>>> On Tue, Aug 09, 2011 at 01:26:29PM -0500, Scott Wood wrote:
>>>> On 08/09/2011 12:47 PM, Cousson, Benoit wrote:
>>>>> On 8/9/2011 7:23 PM, Grant Likely wrote:
>>>>>> There is no analogous mechanism for _byname in the device tree. The
>>>>>> DT binding for a device must explicitly state what order the register
>>>>>> ranges are in. The driver will need to be adapted.
>>>>>
>>>>> That seems to be a small regression for my point of view. Relying on the
>>>>> order is not super safe. This is not very readable either. That's for
>>>>> that exact reason that we changed our drivers to use
>>>>> platform_get_resource_byname. That's probably the reason why that API is
>>>>> there as well.
>>>>> For the same IP, the number of entries can vary depending of the SoC
>>>>> revision.
>>>>> By using the _byname, we can check if the resource is there or not
>>>>> without having to care about the position.
>>>>
>>>> You could have a named u32 property that contains the reg index, e.g.:
>>>>
>>>> dev {
>>>> reg =<0x20000 0x200 0x24000 0x200>;
>>>> foo-reg =<0>;
>>>> bar-reg =<1>;
>>>> };
>>>
>>> That's a little nasty. A reg-names = "foo", "bar"; would probably be
>>> better.
>>
>> Yep, I agree.
>>
>> And what about something like that?
>> reg =<0x20000 0x200>, "foo",
>> <0x20000 0x200>, "bar" ;
>>
>> It is doable?
>
> Definitely not. It would break all existing 'reg' parsing
> implementations quite badly.
OK, so what about extending the reg attribute to be a reg node?
dev {
reg {
name = "foo_wrapper";
start = <0x10000>;
end = <0x200>;
}
reg {
name = "foo";
start = <0x20000>;
end = <0x200>;
}
}
A little bit more verbose, but at least we can add any attribute we want.
Regards,
Benoit
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