[PATCH 3/3] dt: paz00: define nvec as child of i2c bus
Marc Dietrich
marvin24 at gmx.de
Thu Apr 2 02:37:07 PDT 2015
Am Mittwoch, 1. April 2015, 11:28:32 schrieb Stephen Warren:
> On 03/31/2015 09:46 AM, Andrey Danin wrote:
> > On 31.03.2015 17:09, Stephen Warren wrote:
> >> On 03/31/2015 12:40 AM, Andrey Danin wrote:
> >>> Hi,
> >>>
> >>> Thanks for the review.
> >>>
> >>> On 03.02.2015 0:20, Stephen Warren wrote:
[ snipped old patch parts ]
> >>>>> diff --git a/arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra20-paz00.dts
> >>>>> b/arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra20-paz00.dts
> >>>>>
> >>>>> - nvec at 7000c500 {
> >>>>> - compatible = "nvidia,nvec";
> >>>>> - reg = <0x7000c500 0x100>;
> >>>>> - interrupts = <GIC_SPI 92 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
> >>>>> - #address-cells = <1>;
> >>>>> - #size-cells = <0>;
> >>>>> + i2c at 7000c500 {
> >>>>> + status = "okay";
> >>>>>
> >>>>> clock-frequency = <80000>;
> >>>>>
> >>>>> - request-gpios = <&gpio TEGRA_GPIO(V, 2) GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>;
> >>>>> - slave-addr = <138>;
> >>>>> - clocks = <&tegra_car TEGRA20_CLK_I2C3>,
> >>>>> - <&tegra_car TEGRA20_CLK_PLL_P_OUT3>;
> >>>>> - clock-names = "div-clk", "fast-clk";
> >>>>> - resets = <&tegra_car 67>;
> >>>>> - reset-names = "i2c";
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> + nvec: nvec at 45 {
> >>>>
> >>>> This doesn't feel correct. There's nothing here to indicate that this
> >>>> child device is a slave that is implemented by the host SoC rather than
> >>>> something external attached to the I2C bus.
> >>>>
> >>>> Perhaps you can get away with this, since the driver for nvidia,nvec
> >>>> only calls I2C APIs suitable for internal slaves rather than external
> >>>> slaves? Even so though, I think the distinction needs to be clearly
> >>>> marked in the DT so that any generic code outside the NVEC driver that
> >>>> parses the DT can determine the difference.
> >>>>
> >>>> I would recommend the I2C controller having #address-cells=<2> with
> >>>> cell
> >>>> 0 being 0==master,1==slave, cell 1 being the I2C address. The I2C
> >>>> driver
> >>>> would need to support #address-cells=<1> for backwards-compatibility.
Stephen, we haven't used your suggestion because Wolfram disliked the idea in
e.g. http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1409.1/03446.html
> >>> Driver (nvec in this case) can decide what mode should it use according
> >>> to compatible value. Is it not enough ?
> >>
> >> No, I don't think so.
> >>
> >> The I2C binding model is that each child of an I2C controller represents
> >> a device attached to the bus. which SW will communicate with using the
> >> I2C controller as master and the device as a slave. If there's no
> >> explicit representation of child-vs-slave in the DT, how does the I2C
> >> core know whether a particular node is intended to be accessed as a
> >> master or slave?
> >
> > Device driver registers itself via slave API. Bus driver calls
> > appropriate callback function when needed.
> > If device driver decides to access hardware via master API, then it can
> > do it.
> >
> > Am I missing something ?
> >
> >> In other words, without an explicit "communicate with this device" or
> >> "implement this device as a slave" flag, how could DT contain:
> >>
> >> i2c-controller {
> >>
> >> ...
> >> master at 1a {
> >>
> >> compatible = "foo,device";
> >> reg = <0x1a 1>;
> >>
> >> };
> >> slave at 1a {
> >>
> >> compatible = "foo,device-slave";
> >> reg = <0x1a 1>;
> >>
> >> };
> >>
> >> };
> >>
> >> where:
> >>
> >> - "foo,device" means: instantiate a driver to communicate with a device
> >> of this type.
> >>
> >> - "foo,device-slave" means: instantiate a driver to act as this I2C
> >> device.
> >>
> >> Sure it's possible for the drivers for those two nodes to simply use the
> >> I2C subsystem's master or slave APIs, but I suspect DT content would
> >> confuse the I2C core into thinking that two I2C devices with the same
> >> address had been represented in DT, and the I2C core would refuse to
> >> instantiate one of them. The solution here is for the reg value to
> >> encode a "master" vs. "slave" flag, so the I2C core can allow both a
> >> master and a slave for each address.
> >
> > If there is one device, then it must be one node. If there is two
> > devices then it looks incorrect to me to have two devices with the same
> > address. Does I2C allow two devices with same address ?
>
> One of the nodes is to indicate that the kernel should implement the
> slave mode device and one is to indicate that the kernel should
> implement the master mode device. Those two devices/nodes have
> completely different semantics, so while they share the I2C bus address
> they don't represent the same thing.
>
> Admittedly it would be uncommon to do this, since it'd be using the I2C
> bus in loopback mode. However, I don't see why we should set out to
> prevent that.
We are sitting between the chairs currently. I hope Wolfram can further
comment on this.
Having a generic loopback slave driver which just echos all messages it
received back to the master (on the same controller or a different one) would
be nice IMHO.
> > I can imagine this:
> > - we have hardware with I2C device. This device can act as master or as
> > slave
> > - we have device driver, that can work in one, other or both modes.
> >
> > If we want to force master or slave mode, we can use flags (for combined
> > mode we can use two nodes, but it looks weird).
> > If we want to let driver decide (preferred mode, arbitration, something
> > else), we can use current rules.
> >
> >> I'm pretty sure this is the nth time I've explained this.
> >
> > Sorry. I don't understand why you still suggest to use flags. We can use
> > existing infrastructure in this case. There is already similar case in
> > arch/arm/boot/dts/r8a7790-lager.dts (see i2c1 and eeprom).
> >
> > Do we *really* need this extra rules at this moment ?
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