[RFC PATCH 5/9] Thermal: Support using dt node to get sensor
Stephen Warren
swarren at wwwdotorg.org
Wed Feb 20 10:12:48 EST 2013
On 02/18/2013 04:30 AM, Wei Ni wrote:
> Add functions to support using dt node with args to get sensor.
You need to write a device tree binding document to explain this.
> diff --git a/drivers/thermal/thermal_sys.c b/drivers/thermal/thermal_sys.c
> +struct thermal_sensor *get_sensor_by_node(struct node_args *np_args)
> +{
> + struct thermal_sensor *pos;
"pos" isn't a great variable name. Why not use "sensor", or just the
"ts" variable you have right below?
> + struct thermal_sensor *ts = NULL;
> + struct node_args *args;
> +
> + mutex_lock(&sensor_list_lock);
> + for_each_thermal_sensor(pos) {
> + args = &pos->np_args;
> + if (args->np) {
> + if ((args->np == np_args->np) &&
> + (args->index == np_args->index)) {
> + ts = pos;
> + break;
Replace those 2 lines with "goto out;".
> + }
> + }
> + }
here, add:
ts = NULL;
out:
That way, you can use "ts" as the loop iteration variable.
This whole patch rather assumes that all DT nodes can identify their
exposed thermal sensors using an index in a single DT cell. That's not
very flexible. All other DT bindings work like this:
Provider of a service indicates how many DT cells are in the object
(GPIO, IRQ, thermal sensors) specifier:
sensor1: lm90 at 1c {
...
#thermal-sensor-cells = <1>;
};
Each consumer of a service imports it by referencing it:
thermal-zone {
...
sensors = <&sensor1 0>;
};
The driver for LM90 provides an "of_xlate" function which receives a
struct of_phandle_args and outputs/returns whatever Linux-internal
identification/representation of the object is required. For example, see:
> include/linux/pwm.h:161: struct pwm_device * (*of_xlate)(struct pwm_chip *pc,
This allows each providing object's DT binding to define its own value
of #thermal-sensor-cells, as suited for its own requirements, and allows
each driver to implement the mapping from DT to internal ID in whatever
way is necessary.
Now, many bindings/drivers might just end up using a common simple
implementation. That's why functions such as of_pwm_simple_xlate() or
of_gpio_simple_xlate() exist.
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