[PATCH v1 3/3] ARM64 LPC: update binding doc

Rongrong Zou zourongrong at gmail.com
Mon Jan 11 18:39:36 PST 2016


On 2016/1/12 0:14, liviu.dudau at arm.com wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 04, 2016 at 12:13:05PM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
>> On Sunday 03 January 2016 20:24:14 Rongrong Zou wrote:
>>> 在 2015/12/31 23:00, Rongrong Zou 写道:
>>>> 2015-12-31 22:40 GMT+08:00 Arnd Bergmann <arnd at arndb.de <mailto:arnd at arndb.de>>:
>>>>   > On Thursday 31 December 2015 22:12:19 Rongrong Zou wrote:
>>>>   > > 在 2015/12/30 17:06, Arnd Bergmann 写道:
>>>>   > > > On Tuesday 29 December 2015 21:33:52 Rongrong Zou wrote:
>>>>   >
>>>>   > The DT sample above looks good in principle. I believe what you are missing
>>>>   > here is code in your driver to scan the child nodes to create the platform
>>>>   > devices. of_bus_isa_translate() should work with your definition here
>>>>   > and create the correct IORESOURCE_IO resources. You don't have any MMIO
>>>>   > resources, so the absence of a ranges property is ok. Maybe all you
>>>>   > are missing is a call to of_platform_populate() or of_platform_bus_probe()?
>>>>   >
>>>>
>>>> You are right. thanks, i'll try on test board .  if i get the correct result , the new patch
>>>> will be sent later. By the way, it's my another email account use when i at home.
>>>
>>> I tried, and there need some additional changes.
>>>
>>> isa at a01b0000 {
>>>
>>> /*the node name should start with "isa", because of below definition
>>> * static int of_bus_isa_match(struct device_node *np)
>>> * {
>>> *	return !strcmp(np->name, "isa");
>>> * }
>>
>> Looks good. It would be nicer to match on device_type than on name,
>> but this is ancient code and it's probably best not to touch it
>> so we don't accidentally break some old SPARC or PPC system.
>>
>>> */
>>> 	compatible = "low-pin-count";
>>> 	device_type = "isa";
>>> 	#address-cells = <2>;
>>> 	#size-cells = <1>;
>>> 	reg = <0x0 0xa01b0000 0x0 0x10000>;
>>> 	ranges = <0x1 0x0 0x0 0x0 0x1000>;
>>> /*
>>> *  ranges is required, then i can get the IORESOURCE_IO <0xe4,4> from "reg = <0x1, 0x000000e4, 4>".
>>> *
>>> */
>>> 	ipmi_0:ipmi at 000000e4{
>>> 		device_type = "ipmi";
>>> 		compatible = "ipmi-bt";
>>> 		reg = <0x1 0x000000e4 0x4>;
>>> };
>>>
>>
>> This looks wrong: the property above says that the I/O port range is
>> translated to MMIO address 0x00000000 to 0x00010000, which is not
>> true on your hardware. I think this needs to be changed in the code
>> so the ranges property is not required for I/O ports.
>>
>>> drivers\of\address.c
>>> static int __of_address_to_resource(struct device_node *dev,
>>>                   const __be32 *addrp, u64 size, unsigned int flags,
>>>                   const char *name, struct resource *r)
>>> {
>>>           u64 taddr;
>>>
>>>           if ((flags & (IORESOURCE_IO | IORESOURCE_MEM)) == 0)
>>>                   return -EINVAL;
>>>           taddr = of_translate_address(dev, addrp);
>>>           if (taddr == OF_BAD_ADDR)
>>>                   return -EINVAL;
>>>           memset(r, 0, sizeof(struct resource));
>>>           if (flags & IORESOURCE_IO) {
>>>                   unsigned long port;
>>>
>>> /*****************************************************************/
>>> /*legacy port(< 0x1000) is reserved, and need no translation here*/
>>> /*****************************************************************/
>>>                   if(taddr + size < PCIBIOS_MIN_IO){
>>>                           r->start = taddr;
>>>                           r->end = taddr + size - 1;
>>>                   }
>>
>> I don't like having a special case based on the address here,
>> the same kind of hack might be needed for PCI I/O spaces in
>> hardware that uses an indirect method like your LPC bus
>> does, and the code above will not work on any LPC implementation
>> that correctly multiplexes its I/O ports with the first PCI domain.
>>
>> I think it would be better to avoid translating the port into
>> a physical address to start with just to translate it back into
>> a port number, what we need instead is the offset between the
>> bus specific port number and the linux port number. I've added
>> Liviu to Cc, he wrote this code originally and may have some idea
>> of how we could do that.
>
> Hi,

Hi Liviu,

Thanks for reviewing this.

>
> Getting back to work after a longer holiday, my brain might not be running
> at full speed here, so I'm trying to clarify things a bit here.
>
> It looks to me like Rongrong is trying to trap the inb()/outb() calls that he
> added to arm64 by patch 1/3 and redirect those operations to the memory
> mapped LPC driver. I think the whole redirection and registration of inb/outb
> ops can be made cleaner, so that the general concept resembles the DMA ops
> registration? (I have this mental picture that what Rongrong is trying to do
> is similar to what a DMA engine does, except this is slowing down things to
> byte level). If that is done properly in the parent node, then we should not
> care what the PCIBIOS_MIN_IO value is as the inb()/outb() calls will always
> go through the redirection for the children.
>
> As for the ranges property: does he wants the ipmi-bt driver to see in the
> reg property the legacy ISA I/O ports values or the CPU addresses? If the former,
> then I agree that the range property should not be required, but also the
> reg values need to be changed (drop the top bit). If the later, then the
> ranges property is required to do the proper translation.

The former, thanks.

>
> Rongrong, removing the ranges property and with a reg = <0xe4 0x4> property
> in the ipmi-bt node, what IO_RESOURCE type resources do you get back from
> the of_address_to_resource() translation?

I want to get IORESOURCE_IO type resource, but if the parent node drop the
"rangs" property, the of_address_to_resource() translation will return with -EINVAL.

>
> Best regards,
> Liviu
>
>
>>
>> 	Arnd
>>
>
Regards,
Rongrong



More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list