[PATCH v2] docs: dt-bindings: add DTS Coding Style document

Chen-Yu Tsai wens at kernel.org
Wed Nov 22 00:09:00 PST 2023


On Wed, Nov 22, 2023 at 4:05 PM Krzysztof Kozlowski
<krzysztof.kozlowski at linaro.org> wrote:
>
> On 21/11/2023 14:50, Rafał Miłecki wrote:
> >> +Order of Nodes
> >> +--------------
> >> +
> >> +1. Nodes within any bus, thus using unit addresses for children, shall be
> >> +   ordered incrementally by unit address.
> >> +   Alternatively for some sub-architectures, nodes of the same type can be
> >> +   grouped together (e.g. all I2C controllers one after another even if this
> >> +   breaks unit address ordering).
> >> +
> >> +2. Nodes without unit addresses should be ordered alpha-numerically by the node
> >> +   name.  For a few types of nodes, they can be ordered by the main property
> >> +   (e.g. pin configuration states ordered by value of "pins" property).
> >> +
> >> +3. When extending nodes in the board DTS via &label, the entries should be
> >> +   ordered alpha-numerically.
> >
> > Just an idea. Would that make (more) sense to make &label-like entries
> > match order of nodes in included .dts(i)?
> >
> > Adventages:
> > 1. We keep unit address incremental order that is unlikely to change
> >
> > Disadventages:
> > 1. More difficult to verify
>
> Rob also proposed this and I believe above disadvantage here is crucial.
> If you add new SoC with board DTS you are fine. But if you add only new
> board, the order of entries look random in the diff hunk. Reviewer must
> open SoC DTSI to be able to review the patch with board DTS.
>
> If review is tricky and we do not have tool to perform it automatically,
> I am sure submissions will have disordered board DTS.
>
> >
> >
> >> +Example::
> >> +
> >> +    // SoC DTSI
> >> +
> >> +    / {
> >> +            cpus {
> >> +                    // ...
> >> +            };
> >> +
> >> +            psci {
> >> +                    // ...
> >> +            };
> >> +
> >> +            soc@ {
> >> +                    dma: dma-controller at 10000 {
> >> +                            // ...
> >> +                    };
> >> +
> >> +                    clk: clock-controller at 80000 {
> >> +                            // ...
> >> +                    };
> >> +            };
> >> +    };
> >> +
> >> +    // Board DTS
> >> +
> >> +    &clk {
> >> +            // ...
> >> +    };
> >> +
> >> +    &dma {
> >> +            // ...
> >> +    };
> >> +
> >> +
> >> +Order of Properties in Device Node
> >> +----------------------------------
> >> +
> >> +Following order of properties in device nodes is preferred:
> >> +
> >> +1. compatible
> >> +2. reg
> >> +3. ranges
> >> +4. Standard/common properties (defined by common bindings, e.g. without
> >> +   vendor-prefixes)
> >> +5. Vendor-specific properties
> >> +6. status (if applicable)
> >> +7. Child nodes, where each node is preceded with a blank line
> >> +
> >> +The "status" property is by default "okay", thus it can be omitted.
> >
> > I think it would really help to include position of #address-cells and
> > #size-cells here. In some files I saw them above "compatible" that seems
> > unintuitive. Some prefer putting them at end which I think makes sense
> > as they affect children nodes.
> >
> > Whatever you choose it'd be just nice to have things consistent.
>
> This is a standard/common property, thus it goes to (4) above.

It's probably a mix, but AFAIK a lot of the device trees in tree have
#*-cells after "status". In some cases they are added in the board
.dts files, not the chip/module .dtsi files.

+1 that it makes sense at the end as they affect child nodes.

ChenYu



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