On Friday, December 2, 2016 3:10:13 PM CET Philipp Zabel wrote: > Am Freitag, den 02.12.2016, 13:32 +0100 schrieb Arnd Bergmann: > > On Friday, December 2, 2016 8:21:33 AM CET zhangfei wrote: > > > On 2016年12月01日 20:05, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > > > On Thursday, December 1, 2016 8:48:40 AM CET Zhangfei Gao wrote: > > > >> + hisi,reset-bits = <0x20 0x8 /* 0: i2c0 */ > > > >> + 0x20 0x10 /* 1: i2c1 */ > > > >> + 0x20 0x20 /* 2: i2c2 */ > > > >> + 0x20 0x8000000>; /* 3: i2c6 */ > > > >> + }; > > > >> + > > > >> +Specifying reset lines connected to IP modules > > > >> +============================================== > > > >> +example: > > > >> + > > > >> + i2c0: i2c@..... { > > > >> + ... > > > >> + resets = <&iomcu_rst 0>; > > > >> + ... > > > >> + }; > > > > I don't really like this approach, since now the information is > > > > in two places. Why not put the data into the reset specifier > > > > directly when it is used? > > From my point of view, with the binding above, all reset controller > register/bit layout information is in a single place and can be easily > compared to a list in the reference manual, whereas with your suggestion > the description of the reset controller register layout is spread > throughout one or even several dtsi files. > Also, since no two reset controllers are exactly the same, we get a > proliferation of different slightly phandle argument meanings. There is no reason for this to be any different from other subsystems that all do it the same way: interrupts, gpios, dma, clk, ... all define #foo-cells to be used for addressing uniform things, and the data is only in the reference, so that the node that describes the controller needs no knowledge of what it's being used for. One exception is the case (often on clk bindings) where the register layout is anything but uniform and every input line has a completely different behavior. For that case, we define our own numbering system in the driver and hardcode those tables there. This reset driver does not seem to belong into that category though. Even if it did, we putting information about the controller into its own node is redundant as the driver already identifies the register layout by the compatible string. > > > Any example, still not understand. > > > They are consumer and provider. > > > > I mean in the i2c node, have > > > > i2c0: i2c@..... { > > ... > > resets = <&iomcu_rst 0x20 0x8>; > > ... > > } > > There already are a few drivers that use this, and I fear people having > to change their bindings because new flags are needed that have not been > previously thought of. It rarely happens on other subsystems, and the binding can always specify different behavior depending on #reset-cells. Arnd -- 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