[PATCH 2/3] dt-bindings: timer: sifive,clint: add compatible for OpenC906
Icenowy Zheng
uwu at icenowy.me
Mon Dec 5 07:59:44 PST 2022
在 2022-12-05星期一的 15:05 +0000,Conor Dooley写道:
> On Mon, Dec 05, 2022 at 07:03:17PM +0800, Icenowy Zheng wrote:
> > 在 2022-12-05星期一的 10:36 +0000,Conor Dooley写道:
>
> > > You lot all know the situation here a lot more than I do...
> > > I don't think "letting" people use the bare "thead,c900-foo"
> > > makes
> > > much
> > > sense as it gives us no chance to deal with quirks down the line.
> >
> > Well, after rechecking the manual, I found it possible to handle
> > quirks
> > -- T-Head has a custom "mcpuid" CSR (@ RISC-V CSR 0xFC0), which can
> > be
> > used to retrieve some identification info of the core, including
> > its
> > model ID, version, etc; and the T-Head PLIC/CLINT are part of their
> > C906 SoC design that there's another "mapbaddr" CSR that could be
> > used
> > to retrieve the base address of them.
> >
> > So I think it okay to just use "thead,c900-clint" here, and when
> > necessary, try to retrieve mcpuid for dealing with quirks.
>
> I'm not super sure I follow. What's the relevance of "mapbaddr" here?
> We've got a reg property, so I don't think we need "mapbaddr"?
Yes, it's not relevant to us here, it's only to prove that PLIC/CLINT
is part of C906 "Core Complex".
>
> For "mcpuid", can you be sure that implementers will not omit setting
> that value to something unique? I'd be happier if we were overly
> clear
> now rather than have some headaches later. Have I missed something?
These values are set by T-Head instead of individual SoC implementers
as a CPU CSR, and it's not for uniqueness, but it's for identification
of the CPU core revision (thus the PLIC/CLINT that come with it).
>
> > > I don't think that using "thead,openc906-clint", "thead,c900-
> > > clint"
> > > makes all that much sense either, in case someone does something
> > > wacky
> > > with the open-source version of the core.
> > >
> > > That leaves us with either:
> > > "vendor,soc-clint", "thead,openc906-clint", "thead,c900-clint"
> > > or:
> > > "vendor,soc-clint", "thead,c900-clint"
> > > right?
> > >
> > > The first one seems like possibly the better option as you'd
> > > kinda
> > > expect that, in a perfect word, all of the open-source IP
> > > implementations would share quirks etc?
>
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