On 11/18/2013 09:06 AM, Thierry Reding wrote: ... > Part of my point was that you could possibly still use the same IP > with only a modified (standard) register interface. That way no > licensing of third party IP would be needed. You'd only need to > rewrite parts of the IP to make it look (and behave) like the > standard one. > > That's exactly how 16550-compatible UARTs work, isn't it? Or even > the way that USB (EHCI, ...) work. There's a standardize register > interface, possibly with a way for vendor-specific extensions, but > the interface itself doesn't need to be licensed, so there are no > additional costs to supporting the standard interface. There are > only the advantages of being able to reuse a well-tested body of > code. Your idea would be great if it could be made to work in practice. I'm not convinced how possible this would be, without ARM mandating it in their contractual licensing terms, or large customers mandating it in order to use SoCs for their flagship designs. The one fly in the ointment is that even in cases where there are standard register interfaces, there are always quirks in how vendors implement those interfaces, so HW ends up being 90-99.5% compliant with the interface, but with subtle differences. Take a look at Tegra's SDHCI, EHCI and PCIe controllers for examples! Still, I suppose that even with that caveat, having a 90% identical driver compared to a 0% identical driver would be better than where we are today. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html