[PATCH v2 07/11] ARM:stixxxx: Add STiH416 SOC support
Srinivas KANDAGATLA
srinivas.kandagatla at st.com
Tue Jun 11 02:17:53 EST 2013
Thankyou for your comments.
On 10/06/13 14:52, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Monday 10 June 2013 10:27:05 Srinivas KANDAGATLA wrote:
>
>> + soc {
>> + pin-controller-sbc {
>> + #address-cells = <1>;
>> + #size-cells = <1>;
>> + compatible = "st,stih416-pinctrl", "simple-bus";
>
> Why is this both its own device with a compatible string and a
> "simple-bus" at the same time? Wouldn't it be simpler to just
> scan the child device nodes from the "st,stih416-pinctrl"
> driver instead of having a separate platform_driver for them?
Am happy to get rid of gpio platform_driver, But looking at the existing
pinctrl drivers like at91, they do it exactly like this.
Also having a gpio platform driver ties the resources to driver in a
neat way.
>
>> + st,retime-in-delay = <0 300 500 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 2250 2500 2750 3000 3250>;
>> + st,retime-out-delay = <0 300 500 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 2250 2500 2750 3000 3250>;
>> + st,syscfg = <&syscfg_sbc>;
>> + st,syscfg-offsets = <0 40 50 60 100>;
>> + ranges;
>> + PIO0: pinctrl at fe610000 {
>> + #gpio-cells = <1>;
>> + compatible = "st,stixxxx-gpio";
>> + gpio-controller;
>> + reg = <0xfe610000 0x100>;
>> + st,bank-name = "PIO0";
>> + st,retime-pin-mask = <0xff>;
>> + };
>> + PIO1: pinctrl at fe611000 {
>> + #gpio-cells = <1>;
>> + compatible = "st,stixxxx-gpio";
>> + gpio-controller;
>> + reg = <0xfe611000 0x100>;
>> + st,bank-name = "PIO1";
>> + st,retime-pin-mask = <0xff>;
>> + };
>
> What is in the ranges between these registers? It seems you have
> 256 bytes for each pinctrl node, with 4kb spacing. I wonder if
> it would make sense to declare the entire range to belong to a single
> pinctrl device. At least since all of the registers are in a single
> range, you could add a property like
>
> ranges = <0 0xfe610000 0x10000>;
>
> and use relative addresses in the sub-nodes.
>
OK, I will change to use ranges.
> Please don't use identifiers with 'xxx' in them. Instead use numbers
> of actual chips, ideally using the first one that this is compatible
> with.
Ok, I will change st,stixxxx-gpio to st,stih415-gpio.
>
>> + syscfg_sbc:syscfg at fe600000{
>> + compatible = "st,stih416-syscfg";
>> + reg = <0xfe600000 0x1000>;
>> + syscfg-range = <0 999>;
>> + syscfg-name = "SYSCFG_SBC";
>> + };
>> + syscfg_front:syscfg at fee10000{
>> + compatible = "st,stih416-syscfg";
>> + reg = <0xfee10000 0x1000>;
>> + syscfg-range = <1000 999>;
>> + syscfg-name = "SYSCFG_FRONT";
>> + };
>
> Did you mean to declare ranges excluding 1000 and 2000 here?
> Normally I would expect inclusive ranges like syscfg-range=<0 1000>;
>
These numbers are from data sheet so I used it as it is.
> What is the idea of the 'syscfg-name'? If the nodes are all different,
The idea of having syscfg-name is to lookup any sysconf bank(regmap)
from code which do not have reference to phandle from device trees.
> I would expect them to have distinct "compatible" values and not
> need them.
Yes, If we have distinct compatible we would not need them, but there
will be 5-10 compatibility list for each SOC.
It looks like its going to be much neater Am going to try this change
and see how it looks like.
>
> Arnd
> _______________________________________________
> devicetree-discuss mailing list
> devicetree-discuss at lists.ozlabs.org
> https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/devicetree-discuss
>
More information about the devicetree-discuss
mailing list