[PATCH 1/6] ARM: bcm476x: Add infrastructure
Domenico Andreoli
cavokz at gmail.com
Tue Oct 9 22:50:35 EST 2012
On Mon, Oct 08, 2012 at 08:37:04PM -0600, Stephen Warren wrote:
> On 10/07/2012 04:54 PM, Domenico Andreoli wrote:
> > On Sun, Oct 07, 2012 at 09:57:59PM +0200, Jean-Christophe PLAGNIOL-VILLARD wrote:
> >> On 03:53 Sun 07 Oct , Domenico Andreoli wrote:
> >>> From: Domenico Andreoli <domenico.andreoli at linux.com>
>
> >>> Index: b/arch/arm/boot/dts/bcm476x.dtsi
>
> >>> + vic0: interrupt-controller at 80000 {
> >>> + compatible = "brcm,bcm476x-pl192", "arm,pl192-vic", "arm,primecell";
> >> why brcm specific compatbile?
> >
> > Nothing breaks if I drop it. I think it's a future-proof clause, especially
> > if you consider that the devicetree could be not easy to upgrade and you
> > may need a way to differentiate the bcm476x's implementation from the
> > common one. I'm not sure it's an actual requirement with use cases.
>
> Indeed, everything works fine right now if you drop that. However, it is
> correct practice to include a compatible value for the particular SoC
> that incorporates the IP so that if in the future some SoC-specific
> workaround is required, the compatible value needed to trigger this is
> already in all historical .dts file.
This matches with what I know but it seems anyway that in the arm,primecell
cases this is not a great concern, almost none of the dts currently in
mainline go as far as specifying the machine specific name.
> >>> Index: b/arch/arm/include/debug/bcm476x.S
>
> >>> +#if defined(CONFIG_DEBUG_BCM476X_UART0)
> >>> +# define BCM476X_DEBUG_PHYS 0x000c0000
> >>> +# define BCM476X_DEBUG_VIRT 0xd00c0000
> >>> +#elif defined(CONFIG_DEBUG_BCM476X_UART1)
> >>> +# define BCM476X_DEBUG_PHYS 0x000c1000
> >>> +# define BCM476X_DEBUG_VIRT 0xd00c1000
> >>> +#elif defined(CONFIG_DEBUG_BCM476X_UART2)
> >>> +# define BCM476X_DEBUG_PHYS 0x000b2000
> >>> +# define BCM476X_DEBUG_VIRT 0xd00b2000
> >>> +#else
> >>> +# error Unknown BCM476x debug port
> >>> +#endif
> >>
> >> can't you detect it?
> >
> > If I can assume that the boot loader will configure and enable only the
> > console port, I could use the first one in such state.
> >
> > Where could I place such detection, in the maco addruart itself?
>
> Auto-detection is not necessarily a good idea; there's no reason in
> general to believe that no future board will ever use a UART for any
> purposes other than console/debug. Being explicit is probably good.
After thinking at it a bit, I also prefer to leave the guessing out. It
can break things in non-obvious ways. I prefer a full consistent and
testable behaviour.
Thanks,
Domenico
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