[PATCH 2/2] misc: Add initial Digital Timing Engine (DTE) driver for cygnus
Arnd Bergmann
arnd at arndb.de
Thu Apr 23 01:04:35 PDT 2015
On Wednesday 22 April 2015 16:22:03 Jonathan Richardson wrote:
> Reviewed-by: Scott Branden <sbranden at broadcom.com>
> Tested-by: Scott Branden <sbranden at broadcom.com>
> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Richardson <jonathar at broadcom.com>
No description at all?
You are introducing a new subsystem here, which means you get to put
a lot of thought into the API design, to ensure that it works with
other drivers of the same type, and that we don't already have
a subsystem that does what you need here.
Please write a few pages of text about the tradeoffs that went into
the internal and user-facing API design, and explain the differences
to the existing infrastructure we have for the clocksource, clockevent,
k_clock, posix timers, posix timers, timerfd, rtc, and ptp frameworks,
in particular why your hardware cannot fit into the existing frameworks
and has to have a new one.
> +struct bcm_cygnus_dte *dte_get_dev_from_devname(const char *devname)
> +{
> + struct bcm_cygnus_dte *cygnus_dte = NULL;
> + bool found = false;
> +
> + if (!devname)
> + return NULL;
> +
> + list_for_each_entry(cygnus_dte, &dtedev_list, node) {
> + if (!strcmp(dev_name(&cygnus_dte->pdev->dev), devname)) {
> + /* Matched on device name */
> + found = true;
> + break;
> + }
> + }
> +
> + return found ? cygnus_dte : NULL;
> +}
> +EXPORT_SYMBOL(dte_get_dev_from_devname);
No, don't match on a device name. If you must have a reference, use
a phandle in DT.
> +int dte_get_timestamp(
> + struct bcm_cygnus_dte *cygnus_dte,
> + enum dte_client client,
> + struct timespec *ts)
Please use timespec64 or ktime_t for internal interfaces.
> + case DTE_IOCTL_SET_DIVIDER:
For the IOCTLs, please write a documentation in man-page form. No need
for troff formatting, plain text is fine.
> +/**
> + * DTE Client
> + */
> +enum dte_client {
> + DTE_CLIENT_MIN = 0,
> + DTE_CLIENT_I2S0_BITCLOCK = 0,
> + DTE_CLIENT_I2S1_BITCLOCK,
> + DTE_CLIENT_I2S2_BITCLOCK,
> + DTE_CLIENT_I2S0_WORDCLOCK,
> + DTE_CLIENT_I2S1_WORDCLOCK,
> + DTE_CLIENT_I2S2_WORDCLOCK,
> + DTE_CLIENT_LCD_CLFP,
> + DTE_CLIENT_LCD_CLLP,
> + DTE_CLIENT_GPIO14,
> + DTE_CLIENT_GPIO15,
> + DTE_CLIENT_GPIO22,
> + DTE_CLIENT_GPIO23,
> + DTE_CLIENT_MAX,
> +};
Make this more abstract, so we can reuse the API for other vendors.
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_BASE 'd'
> +#define DTE_IO(nr) _IO(DTE_IOCTL_BASE, nr)
> +#define DTE_IOR(nr, type) _IOR(DTE_IOCTL_BASE, nr, type)
> +#define DTE_IOW(nr, type) _IOW(DTE_IOCTL_BASE, nr, type)
> +#define DTE_IOWR(nr, type) _IOWR(DTE_IOCTL_BASE, nr, type)
> +
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_SET_DIVIDER DTE_IOW(0x00, struct dte_data)
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_ENABLE_TIMESTAMP DTE_IOW(0x01, struct dte_data)
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_SET_IRQ_INTERVAL DTE_IOW(0x02, struct dte_data)
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_GET_TIMESTAMP DTE_IOWR(0x03, struct dte_timestamp)
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_SET_TIME DTE_IOW(0x04, struct timespec)
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_GET_TIME DTE_IOR(0x05, struct timespec)
Instead of timespec, use a pair of '__u64' values, or alternatively
just a '__u64' for nanoseconds if the API does not have to cover
times before 1970 or after 2262.
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_ADJ_TIME DTE_IOW(0x06, int64_t)
> +#define DTE_IOCTL_ADJ_FREQ DTE_IOW(0x07, int32_t)
Maybe 'struct timex' for the adjustment?
Also, how about adding new syscalls along the lines of
the timerfd stuff instead of using ioctl?
> +struct dte_data {
> + enum dte_client client;
> + unsigned int data;
> +};
No 'enum' in ioctl data, always use '__u32' etc.
> +
> +struct dte_timestamp {
> + enum dte_client client;
> + struct timespec ts;
> +};
Instead of timespec, use a pair of '__u64' values, or alternatively
just a '__u64' for nanoseconds if the API does not have to cover
times before 1970 or after 2262.
> +struct bcm_cygnus_dte;
> +
> +extern struct bcm_cygnus_dte *dte_get_dev_from_devname(
> + const char *devname);
> +extern int dte_enable_timestamp(
> + struct bcm_cygnus_dte *cygnus_dte,
> + enum dte_client client,
> + int enable);
Put the internal declarations into one header in include/linux, and the
user space facing ones in another one in include/uapi/linux.
Arnd
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