[PATCH v2 04/14] dt-bindings: arm: mediatek: document WED binding for MT7622
Krzysztof Kozlowski
krzysztof.kozlowski at linaro.org
Wed Apr 6 01:57:21 PDT 2022
On 06/04/2022 10:32, Felix Fietkau wrote:
> On 06.04.22 10:29, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
>> On Wed, Apr 6, 2022 at 10:18 AM Felix Fietkau <nbd at nbd.name>
>> wrote:
>>> On 06.04.22 10:09, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
>>>> On 05/04/2022 21:57, Felix Fietkau wrote:
>>>>> From: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo at kernel.org>
>>>>>
>>>>> Document the binding for the Wireless Ethernet Dispatch core
>>>>> on the MT7622 SoC, which is used for Ethernet->WLAN
>>>>> offloading Add related info in mediatek-net bindings.
>>>>>
>>>>> Signed-off-by: Lorenzo Bianconi <lorenzo at kernel.org>
>>>>> Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd at nbd.name>
>>>>
>>>> Thank you for your patch. There is something to
>>>> discuss/improve.
>>>>
>>>>> --- .../arm/mediatek/mediatek,mt7622-wed.yaml | 50
>>>>> +++++++++++++++++++
>>>>> .../devicetree/bindings/net/mediatek-net.txt | 2 + 2 files
>>>>> changed, 52 insertions(+) create mode 100644
>>>>> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/mediatek/mediatek,mt7622-wed.yaml
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>
Don't store drivers in arm directory. See:
>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-devicetree/YkJa1oLSEP8R4U6y@robh.at.kernel.org/
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
Isn't this a network offload engine? If yes, then probably it should be
>>>> in "net/".
>>> It's not a network offload engine by itself. It's a SoC component
>>> that connects to the offload engine and controls a MTK PCIe WLAN
>>> device, intercepting interrupts and DMA rings in order to be able
>>> to inject packets coming in from the offload engine. Do you think
>>> it still belongs in net, or maybe in soc instead?
>>
>> I think it belongs into drivers/net/. Presumably this has some kind
>> of user interface to configure which packets are forwarded? I would
>> not want to maintain that in a SoC driver as this clearly needs to
>> communicate with both of the normal network devices in some form.
> The WLAN driver attaches to WED in order to deal with the intercepted
> DMA rings, but other than that, WED itself has no user
> configuration. Offload is controlled by the PPE code in the ethernet
> driver (which is already upstream), and WED simply provides a
> destination port for PPE, which allows packets to flow to the
> wireless device.
Thanks for clarification. I still wonder about the missing drivers as I
responded to your second bindings:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220405195755.10817-1-nbd@nbd.name/T/#m6d108c644f0c05cd12c05e56abe2ef75760c6cef
Both of these compatibles - WED and PCIe - are not actually used. Now
everything is done inside your Ethernet driver which pokes WED and
PCIe-mirror address space via regmap/syscon.
Separate bindings might have sense if WED/PCIe mirror were ever
converted to real drivers.
Best regards,
Krzysztof
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