[PATCH] serial: tegra: add serial driver
Grant Likely
grant.likely at secretlab.ca
Thu Dec 20 00:03:05 EST 2012
On Mon, 17 Dec 2012 12:17:16 -1000, Mitch Bradley <wmb at firmworks.com> wrote:
> On 12/17/2012 12:04 PM, Stephen Warren wrote:
> > On 12/17/2012 02:58 PM, Mitch Bradley wrote:
> >> On 12/17/2012 11:36 AM, Stephen Warren wrote:
> >>> On 12/17/2012 05:10 AM, Laxman Dewangan wrote:
> >>>> Nvidia's Tegra has multiple uart controller which supports:
> >>>> - APB dma based controller fifo read/write.
> >>>> - End Of Data interrupt in incoming data to know whether end
> >>>> of frame achieve or not.
> >>>> - Hw controlled RTS and CTS flow control to reduce SW overhead.
> >>>
> >>>> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/serial/nvidia,serial-tegra.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/serial/nvidia,serial-tegra.txt
> >>>
> >>>> +NVIDIA Tegra20/Tegra30 high speed (dma based) UART controller driver.
> >>>> +
> >>>> +Required properties:
> >>>> +- compatible : should be "nvidia,tegra20-hsuart", "nvidia,tegra30-hsuart".
> >>>
> >>> One question that isn't addressed here is:
> >>>
> >>> Tegra has 5 UARTs. All of them can use the existing 8250.c by specifying
> >>> compatible = "nvidia,tegra20-uart".
> >>
> >> The way it is supposed to work is that the compatible property should
> >> list "nvidia,tegra30-hsuart" first, followed by a fallback name that
> >> refers to the generic 8250 compatibility. Having the 8250.c driver bind
> >> to the more-specific tegra30-hsuart name is wrong.
> >
> > 8250.c binds to nvidia,tegra20-uart, so that aspect is fine.
> >
> > However, the real issue is that we probably want 4 of the 5 ports to use
> > the plain old 8250.c (so as not to use up too many DMA channels), but
> > just 1 of the ports to use the DMA-capable high-performance driver (e.g.
> > the one that a particular board has hooked up to a Bluetooth radio). The
> > only way to do that with DT that I know of would be to specify different
> > subsets of legal compatible values for each UART in the per-board .dts file.
>
>
> That's an okay way to do it. The whole purpose of the compatible
> property is to support driver binding. The mantra to "describe the
> hardware" is good, but shouldn't be taken to extremes.
>
> It would be a good idea to comment the .dts file to explain why the
> compatible property differs between the otherwise-identical nodes.
+1
g.
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