[PATCH v3 7/9] net: mvmdio: add xmdio xsmi support
Russell King - ARM Linux
linux at armlinux.org.uk
Mon Jun 12 03:17:39 PDT 2017
On Mon, Jun 12, 2017 at 11:57:43AM +0200, Antoine Tenart wrote:
> +static const struct orion_mdio_ops *orion_mdio_get_ops(struct orion_mdio_dev *dev,
> + int regnum)
> +{
> + if (dev->bus_type == BUS_TYPE_XSMI && (regnum & MII_ADDR_C45))
> + return &orion_mdio_xsmi_ops;
> + else if (dev->bus_type == BUS_TYPE_SMI)
> + return &orion_mdio_smi_ops;
> +
> + return ERR_PTR(-EOPNOTSUPP);
> +}
Oh, this is where you're doing it - I'm not sure having this complexity
is really necessary - there is no dynamic choice between the two. This
seems to be way over-engineered.
You might as well make the SMI operations fail if MII_ADDR_C45 is set,
and the XSMI operations fail if MII_ADDR_C45 is not set.
Hmm, I think this whole driver is over-engineered:
1. the mdio read/write functions implement their own locking.
At the MDIO level, there is already locking in the form of a per-bus
lock "bus->mdio_lock" which will be taken whenever either of these
functions is called. So the driver's "dev->lock" is redundant.
2. with the redundant locking removed, orion_mdio_write() becomes a
call to orion_mdio_wait_ready() followed by a call to dev->ops->write.
It seems that orion_mdio_wait_ready() could be a library function
shared between a SMI version of orion_mdio_write() and a XSMI version.
3. the same is really true of orion_mdio_read(), although that function
is a little more complex in itself, the result would actually end up
being simpler.
With those changes together, it elimates "struct orion_mdio_ops" entirely,
and I think makes the driver smaller, simpler, and cleaner.
--
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