[RFC PATCH 1/3] eeprom: Add a simple EEPROM framework

Maxime Ripard maxime.ripard at free-electrons.com
Sun Feb 22 06:32:11 PST 2015


On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 04:01:55PM -0600, Rob Herring wrote:
> [...]
> 
> >>> += Data consumers =
> >>> +
> >>> +Required properties:
> >>> +
> >>> +eeproms: List of phandle and data cell specifier triplet, one triplet
> >>> +        for each data cell the device might be interested in. The
> >>> +        triplet consists of the phandle to the eeprom provider, then
> >>> +        the offset in byte within that storage device, and the length
> >>> +        in byte of the data we care about.
> >>
> >>
> >> The problem with this is it assumes you know who the consumer is and
> >> that it is a DT node. For example, how would you describe a serial
> >> number?
> >
> > Correct me if I miss understood.
> > Is serial number any different?
> > Am hoping that the eeprom consumer would be aware of offset and size of
> > serial number in the eeprom
> >
> > Cant the consumer do:
> >
> > eeprom-consumer {
> >         eeproms = <&at24 0 4>;
> >         eeprom-names = "device-serial-number";
> 
> Yes, but who is "eeprom-consumer"?

Any device that should lookup values in one of the EEPROM.

> DT nodes generally describe a h/w block, but it this case, the
> consumer depends on the OS, not the h/w. 

Not really, or at least, not more than any similar binding we
currently have.

The fact that a MAC-address for the first ethernet chip is stored at a
given offset in a given eeprom has nothing to do with the OS.

> I'm not saying you can't describe where things are, but I don't
> think you should imply who is the consumer and doing so is
> unnecessarily complicated.

If you only take the case of a serial number, indeed. If you take
other usage into account, you can't really do without it.

> Also, the layout of EEPROM is likely very much platform specific.

Indeed, which is why it should be in the DT.

> Some could have a more complex structure perhaps with key ids and
> linked list structure.

Then just request the size of the whole list, and parse it afterwards
in your driver?

> I would do something more simple that is just a list of keys and their
> location like this:
> 
> device-serial-number = <start size>;
> key1 = <start size>;
> key2 = <start size>;

I'm sorry, but what's the difference?

Maxime

-- 
Maxime Ripard, Free Electrons
Embedded Linux, Kernel and Android engineering
http://free-electrons.com
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