[PATCH linux dev-4.10 6/6] drivers/hwmon: Add a driver for a generic PECI hwmon

Jae Hyun Yoo jae.hyun.yoo at linux.intel.com
Fri Jan 12 07:49:18 AEDT 2018


On 1/11/2018 5:22 AM, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 11, 2018 at 12:45 AM, Jae Hyun Yoo
> <jae.hyun.yoo at linux.intel.com> wrote:
>> On 1/10/2018 4:29 AM, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
>>>
>>> On Tue, Jan 9, 2018 at 11:31 PM, Jae Hyun Yoo
>>> <jae.hyun.yoo at linux.intel.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> This commit adds driver implementation for a generic PECI hwmon.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Jae Hyun Yoo <jae.hyun.yoo at linux.intel.com>
>>>
>>>
>>>> +static int xfer_peci_msg(int cmd, void *pmsg)
>>>> +{
>>>> +       int rc;
>>>> +
>>>> +       mutex_lock(&peci_hwmon_lock);
>>>> +       rc = peci_ioctl(NULL, cmd, (unsigned long)pmsg);
>>>> +       mutex_unlock(&peci_hwmon_lock);
>>>> +
>>>> +       return rc;
>>>> +}
>>>
>>>
>>> I said earlier that peci_ioctl() looked unused, that was obviously
>>> wrong, but what you have here
>>> is not a proper way to abstract a bus.
>>>
>>> Maybe this can be done more like an i2c bus: make the peci controller
>>> a bus device
>>> and register all known target/index pairs as devices with the peci bus
>>> type, and have
>>> them probed from DT. The driver can then bind to each of those
>>> individually.
>>> Not sure if that is getting to granular at that point, I'd have to
>>> understand better
>>> how it is expected to get used, and what the variances are between
>>> implementations.
>>>
>>
>> Thanks for sharing your opinion. In fact, this was also suggested by openbmc
>> community so I should consider of redesigning it. I'm currently thinking
>> about adding a new PECI device class as an abstract layer and any BMC
>> chipset specific driver could be attached to the PECI class driver. Then,
>> each CPU client could be registered as an individual device as you
>> suggested. Will consider your suggestion.
> 
> Another idea might be to pretend that PECI was I2C. We already have a few
> drivers for hardware that is not I2C but whose software interface looks
> similar enough that it just works. No idea if that is the case for PECI, but
> xfer_peci_msg might be close enough to i2c_xfer to make it work. If you
> are able to do that, then the PECI controller would just register itself
> as an i2c controller and it can be accessed using /dev/i2c from user space
> or a high-level i2c_driver.
> 
>        Arnd
> 

Thanks for the good idea. It looks like one of possible options. I'll 
check this idea as well. :)

Thanks,
Jae


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