On Mon, Apr 23, 2018 at 9:01 AM, Grant Likely <grant.likely@xxxxxxx> wrote: > On 21/04/2018 00:41, Stephen Boyd wrote: >> >> Quoting Rob Herring (2018-04-20 11:15:04) >>> >>> On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 11:47 AM, Stephen Boyd <sboyd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>> Quoting Rob Herring (2018-04-18 15:29:05) >>>>> >>>>> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/example-schema.yaml >>>>> b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/example-schema.yaml >>>>> new file mode 100644 >>>>> index 000000000000..fe0a3bd1668e >>>>> --- /dev/null >>>>> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/example-schema.yaml > > [...] >>>>> >>>>> + interrupts: >>>>> + # Either 1 or 2 interrupts can be present >>>>> + minItems: 1 >>>>> + maxItems: 2 >>>>> + items: >>>>> + - description: tx or combined interrupt >>>>> + - description: rx interrupt >>>>> + >>>>> + description: | >>>> >>>> >>>> The '|' is needed to make yaml happy? >>> >>> >>> Yes, this is simply how you do literal text blocks in yaml. >>> >>> We don't really need for this one really, but for the top-level >>> 'description' we do. The long term intent is 'description' would be >>> written in sphinx/rst and can be extracted into the DT spec (for >>> common bindings). Grant has experimented with that some. >> >> >> Ok. That sounds cool. Then we could embed links to datasheets and SVGs >> too. > > > I'd like it if we can define the description text blocks to be > reStructeredText markup. That makes it even easier to integrate with the > specification documentation. I think that's going to require thinking about how each binding is integrated into the spec. We're only talking about common bindings I presume, but still we have no model defined. For example, with properties, I'd assume we'd want to generate a table of properties and we wouldn't want the property descriptions in rST because the description becomes just a cell in the table. So we need some sort of template. Also, how do we validate that description contains valid rST? No point requiring it until we can validate it. > [...] >>>>> >>>>> + # Property names starting with '#' must be quoted >>>>> + '#interrupt-cells': >>>>> + # A simple case where the value must always be '2'. >>>>> + # The core schema handles that this must be a single integer. >>>>> + const: 2 >>>>> + >>>>> + interrupt-controller: {} >>>> >>>> >>>> Does '{}' mean nothing to see here? >>> >>> >>> Yes. It's just an empty schema that's always valid. > > > IIRC, in the current jsonschema draft-6 spec, the following also has the > same behaviour, which I like slightly better: > interrupt-controller: true They are not exactly the same. '{}' is a schema object and 'true' is just a boolean. But yes, it can work. We need to drop "type: object" from meta-schemas/boolean.yaml and it will work. Rob -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree-spec" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html