[PATCH 05/11] drivers: pinctrl: add driver for Allwinner A64 SoC

Maxime Ripard maxime.ripard at free-electrons.com
Tue Feb 2 02:00:46 PST 2016


Hi Andre,

On Mon, Feb 01, 2016 at 10:49:16PM +0000, André Przywara wrote:
> On 01/02/16 18:27, Karsten Merker wrote:
> 
> Hi Karsten,
> 
> thank you very much for your feedback!
> 
> > On Mon, Feb 01, 2016 at 05:39:24PM +0000, Andre Przywara wrote:
> >> Based on the Allwinner A64 user manual and on the previous sunxi
> >> pinctrl drivers this introduces the pin multiplex assignments for
> >> the ARMv8 Allwinner A64 SoC.
> >> Port A is apparently used for the fixed function DRAM controller, so
> >> the ports start at B here (the manual mentions "n from 1 to 7", so
> >> not starting at 0).
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara at arm.com>
> >> ---
> >>  .../bindings/pinctrl/allwinner,sunxi-pinctrl.txt   |   1 +
> >>  arch/arm64/Kconfig.platforms                       |   1 +
> >>  drivers/pinctrl/sunxi/Kconfig                      |   4 +
> >>  drivers/pinctrl/sunxi/Makefile                     |   1 +
> >>  drivers/pinctrl/sunxi/pinctrl-a64.c                | 606 +++++++++++++++++++++
> >>  5 files changed, 613 insertions(+)
> >>  create mode 100644 drivers/pinctrl/sunxi/pinctrl-a64.c
> >>
> >> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/allwinner,sunxi-pinctrl.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/allwinner,sunxi-pinctrl.txt
> >> index 9213b27..9050002 100644
> >> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/allwinner,sunxi-pinctrl.txt
> >> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/allwinner,sunxi-pinctrl.txt
> >> @@ -21,6 +21,7 @@ Required properties:
> >>    "allwinner,sun9i-a80-r-pinctrl"
> >>    "allwinner,sun8i-a83t-pinctrl"
> >>    "allwinner,sun8i-h3-pinctrl"
> >> +  "allwinner,a64-pinctrl"
> > 
> > Hello,
> > 
> > on all other Allwinner SoCs we use the SoC family as part of the
> > compatible, as well as in the names of the Kconfig options. To
> > keep things consistent, I would like to propose doing the same on
> > Arm64, i.e. using allwinner,sun50i-a64-pinctrl instead of
> > allwinner,a64-pinctrl.
> 
> Yes, I have been told this already. However I don't like this idea so
> much, for the following reasons:
> a) It is mostly redundant. The actual SoC (marketing) name is unique,
> there is no sun6i-a20 or sun7i-a23.

At the same time, the family name is mostly valid too.

We do share some DTSI across some SoCs already by their family name
(sun5i.dtsi for the A10s/A13/R8, sun8i-a23-a33.dtsi for the A23 and
A33, etc.)

> b) It is not even helpful. If I got Maxime correctly, then the newer
> sunxi generation numbers depend on the ARM _cores_ used in the SoC,
> which is frankly the least interesting part from a Linux support
> perspective. I would see some sense if it would reflect the generation
> of IP blocks used, but so it is even more confusing to see that
> sun7i-a20 and sun8i-a23 are related, but sun8i-h3 is a completely
> different beast. The Allwinner marketing name tells you that, but the
> sunxi one does not.

The opposite can be said too.

The A31 is quite different from the A33, while the A83 is much closer
to the H3 than it is to the A80. Their marketing scheme is messy. In
all aspects. We have a scheme that worked, I'd really like to stick
with it.

> c) It is very confusing for people not dealing with it everyday. Just
> because I own a BananaPi I know that the A20 is sun7i, but I am totally
> lost when it comes to all the other names. And even now it took me about
> a minute to find the appropriate Wiki page which explains part of that
> story.
> d) Most importantly ;-): It kills TAB completion, unless you know the
> sunxi number, which is mostly not true as pointed out in c)

Both of these are true, but are about the DT filenames, and not the
compatibles. I'd agree with you on this one now that we have
per-vendor subfolders in boot/dts, but it was not the case before, and
I'm pretty sure that to anyone that is not aware of the Allwinner SoCs
names, having an A<number>.dtsi in arch/arm/boot/dts, it would be
about a Cortex-A<number>, and definitely not an SoC from some random
vendor.

So, droping it in the filenames, why not. But I'd really like to keep
the same compatible scheme.

Maxime

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