[PATCH v6 07/12] usb: chipidea: add a usb2 driver for ci13xxx
Felipe Balbi
balbi at ti.com
Thu Sep 25 17:37:50 PDT 2014
HI,
On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 07:39:34AM +0800, Peter Chen wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 25, 2014 at 09:15:53AM -0500, Felipe Balbi wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 02:23:38PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > > On Wednesday 24 September 2014 19:29:05 Peter Chen wrote:
> > > >
> > > > So, it is IP CORE LIB (you suggest) vs IP CORE Platform Driver
> > > > (dwc3, musb, chipidea) you are talking about, right? Except for
> > > > creating another platform driver as well as related DT node (optional),
> > > > are there any advantages compared to current IP core driver structure?
> > >
> > > Having a library module usually requires less code, and is more
> > > consistent with other drivers, which helps new developers understand
> > > what the driver is doing.
> >
> > I beg to differ. You end-up having to pass function pointers through
> > platform_data to handle differences which could be handled by the core
> > IP.
> >
> > > The most important aspect though is the DT binding: once the structure
> > > with separate kernel drivers leaks out into the DT format, you can't
> > > easily change the driver any more, e.g. to make a property that was
> > > introduced for one glue driver more general so it can get handled by
> > > the common part. Having a single node lets us convert to the library
> > > model later, so that would be a strong reason to keep the DT binding
> > > simple, without child nodes.
> > >
> > > Following that logic, it turns into another reason for using the library
> > > model to start with, because otherwise the child device does not have
> > > any DT properties itself and has to rely on the parent device properties,
> > > which somewhat complicates the driver structure.
> >
> > this is bullcrap. Take a look at
> > Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/dwc3.txt:
> >
> > synopsys DWC3 CORE
> >
> > DWC3- USB3 CONTROLLER
> >
> > Required properties:
> > - compatible: must be "snps,dwc3"
> > - reg : Address and length of the register set for the device
> > - interrupts: Interrupts used by the dwc3 controller.
> >
> > Optional properties:
> > - usb-phy : array of phandle for the PHY device. The first element
> > in the array is expected to be a handle to the USB2/HS PHY and
> > the second element is expected to be a handle to the USB3/SS PHY
> > - phys: from the *Generic PHY* bindings
> > - phy-names: from the *Generic PHY* bindings
> > - tx-fifo-resize: determines if the FIFO *has* to be reallocated.
> >
> > This is usually a subnode to DWC3 glue to which it is connected.
> >
> > dwc3 at 4a030000 {
> > compatible = "snps,dwc3";
> > reg = <0x4a030000 0xcfff>;
> > interrupts = <0 92 4>
> > usb-phy = <&usb2_phy>, <&usb3,phy>;
> > tx-fifo-resize;
> > };
> >
> > This contains all the attributes it needs to work. In fact, this could
> > be used without any glue.
> >
>
> If you want to add "vbus-supply" core node to support ID switch, what's
> the plan for that?
send a patch ? Just make sure it's optional because not everybody needs
a vbus-supply. Also, DRD will still take a few merge windows to become a
reality. I don't want to merge something before considering it carefuly,
otherwise we will having which is broken and doesn't work for everybody
;-)
> Is it possible that the glue layer needs to access core register
> (eg, portsc.phcd during suspend)? The wrapper IP may wait some signals
> at core IP to change.
why would a glue layer need to access registers from the core ? That
sounds very odd. I haven't seen that and will, definitely, NACK such a
patch :-)
can you further describe why you think a glue layer might need to access
core IP's registers ?
--
balbi
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