[PATCH] powerpc: Create "rom" (MTD) device prpmc2800
Sergei Shtylyov
sshtylyov at ru.mvista.com
Sun Jun 3 14:31:16 EDT 2007
Segher Boessenkool wrote:
>>>> I think "direct-mapped" as compatible is a bit too broad or vague.
>>>> The compatible is supposed to be useable to find and match a driver
>>>> without regard to the name of the node. Perhaps direct-mapped-rom?
>>>> (as opossed to a direct-mapped-ram, sram, or some width flash bank).
>>> "actual-name-of-the-chip", "cfi-command-set-#", "cfi" seems
>>> like a good start.
>> No, it doesn't -- since that info is almost *absolutely* useless
>> (the only exception is "cfi") in the context of Linux MTD subsys.
>> Please, try to understand that knowing that chip is CFI compatible
>> in itself doesn't yet guarantee that you can access the chip -- it all
>> depends on its mapping to the real physical address range, therefore
>> this group IMO cannot even constitute a valid "compatible" property.
> You obviously completely misunderstand the semantics
> of the "compatible" property.
Oh well, on the chip level, your "compatible" prop would be correct. But
that only means we need another level representating the flash mapping for
which the chip node would be a child... That seems a viable representation but
it would certainly complicate things Linux-wise.
>>> People here tried to create a generic "flash" device binding.
>>> It didn't work out (part of the problem is its scope was way
>>> too big; another problem is it was too Linux-mtd specific).
>> And that's why its worked, and the abstaractly "correct" scheme
>> wouldn't have.
> Ha. Ha. Ha. Great joke :-)
/me bows
>>> Now since the probing is done in platform-specific code here,
>>> you don't *need* an "official" binding -- just get your
>>> "compatible" prop right so you can correctly probe the device
>>> node, and then maybe add some node-specific properties if you
>>> need them.
>> I wonder what are you trying to get us to do: directly call stuff
>> from drivers/mtd/ or what (that's especially starnge because we now
>> have an OF driver for simply mapped NOR flashes)?
> I am pointing out how to do a flash node in a platform-
> specific way, in platform-specific code, since there is
I don't thing that confining the "bloody" MTD details into platform code
would be an acceptable solution.
> no working "generic" way yet (and very likely there will
> never be).
There is something working, at least Linux-generic.
However, the MTD device node was certainly misplaced my me, and probably
oversimplified too -- that's the cost one usually pays when he has to think
something up and to fit it into existing scheme in a limited time. :-<
> Segher
WBR, Sergei
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