[PATCH] ARM: dts: specify all the per-cpu interrupts of arch timer for exynos5440

Santosh Shilimkar santosh.shilimkar at ti.com
Thu Jan 24 07:53:21 EST 2013


On Thursday 24 January 2013 06:12 PM, Benoit Cousson wrote:
> Hi Santosh,
>
> On 01/23/2013 11:55 AM, Santosh Shilimkar wrote:
>> Looping Marc, Benoit
>>
>> On Wednesday 23 January 2013 04:06 PM, Mark Rutland wrote:
>>> On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 10:05:18PM +0000, Kukjin Kim wrote:
>>>> Mark Rutland wrote:
>>>>>
>>>> + devicetree-discuss, Grant Likely, Rob Herring and Tony Lindgren
>>>>
>>>>> On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 01:41:27AM +0000, Kukjin Kim wrote:
>>>>>> From: Thomas Abraham <thomas.ab at samsung.com>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Need to be changed requirements in the 'cpus' node for exynos5440
>>>>>> to specify all the per-cpu interrupts of arch timer.
>>>>>
>>>>> The node(s) for the arch timer should not be in the cpus/cpu at N nodes.
>>>>> Instead, there should be one node (in the root of the tree).
>>>>>
>>>> Well, I don't think so. As per my understanding, the local timers are
>>>> attached to every ARM cores (cpus) and it generates certain interrupt
>>>> to the
>>>> GIC. So the correct representation for this in device tree is to
>>>> include the
>>>> interrupts in the cpu nodes in dts file. Your comments  refer to a
>>>> limitation in the Linux kernel implementation of the arch_timer and it
>>>> should not result in representing the hardware details incorrectly in
>>>> the
>>>> dts file.
>>>
>>> I disagree. The "correct representation" is whatever the devicetree
>>> binding
>>> documentation describes. It does not describe placing timer nodes in
>>> the cpu
>>> nodes.
>>>
>> This seems to be exact same topic what is getting discussed here [1]
>> Technically DT is suppose to represent how the hardware is rather than
>> how the bindings are done.
>>
>> But as Marc pointed out, the approach taken currently is to not
>> duplicate the banked information. The thread [1] isn't concluded
>> yet but looks like we might want to avoid duplicating the information
>> considering, more of such duplication needs to follow. e.g gic i/f
>>
>> Am still waiting on what Benoit has to say ?
>
> I agree with you :-)
>
> I'm not sure the binding was properly done to reflect the HW accurately.
>
> A local timer for my point of view should be located in the cpu node
> like a L1 cache. Or at least referenced in each cpu by a phandle.
>
> What was the rational to put it in the root?
>
 From Marc's answer it seems to avoid the duplication of data but
I let him elaborate it.

Regards,
Santosh







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