Re: [PATCH 13/26] ARM: omap3.dtsi: add omapdss information

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Hi Tomi,

On Monday 09 December 2013 14:45:25 Tomi Valkeinen wrote:
> On 2013-12-05 19:05, Tony Lindgren wrote:
> > * Tomi Valkeinen <tomi.valkeinen@xxxxxx> [131204 04:31]:
> > 
> > Description missing.. But other than that can you please check that
> > the latest patch I posted in thread "[PATCH] ARM: OMAP2+: Fix populating
> > the hwmod data from device" works with this?
> > 
> > The test to do is to remove the related reg, interrupt and dma entries
> > from omap_hwmod_*_data.c, and make sure the related hwmod data is
> > initialized from DT properly.
> 
> I made a quick test with panda, by applying your patch and reverting
> b38911f3472be89551bfca740adf0009562b9873. That only effectively tests
> the DISPC IRQ, but that worked fine.
> 
> > I don't know if it makes sense to have them as children of dss_core, they
> > really all seem to be completely independent devices?
> 
> The DSS subdevices depend on the dss_core. dss_core has to be powered up
> for any of the subdevices to work. This is done automatically by the
> runtime PM when the subdevices are children of the dss_core.

I'd like to get a clearer picture of the hardware here. The OMAP3 ISP is 
organized in a seemingly similar way, with the hardware subdivided in high-
level more-or-less independent modules. However, from a system point of view, 
the ISP submodules are not standalone: they're part of the same power domain 
as the ISP core, with subclocks management and interrupts being handled by the 
ISP core. For those reasons we've modeled the ISP as a single platform device.

Are the DSS submodules really independent, or are they organized similarly ? 
For instance do they each have a clock handled by the OMAP core clock IP, or 
are the clocks gated by the DSS core ? Do they have interrupts routed to the 
GIC, or does the DSS core driver demux the interrupts ?

If the submodules are not independent, would it make sense to have a single DT 
node that would be matched with the DSS core driver ? You could list 
information about the submodules in subnodes, and possibly create platform 
devices internally in the DSS core, but a single platform device would be 
instantiated from DT, and the DSS core wouldn't need a "simple-bus" compatible 
string. My gut feeling is that this would be a better representation of the 
hardware, but I might not known enough about the DSS and be completely wrong.

> > BTW, for v3.15, I'm hoping to do patches where we deprecate ti,hwmods
> > property and do the lookup based on the compatible property instead ;)
> > So from that point of view we need to get the device mapping right in
> > the .dtsi files, and don't want to start mixing up separate devices into
> > single .dtsi entry.
> 
> Hmm, was that just a general comment, or something that affects the DSS
> DT data I have in my patch? As far as I understand, the DSS nodes
> reflect the current hwmods correctly.
> 
> With the exception that DPI and SDI do not have a matching hwmod, as
> they are really part of dss_core/dispc. They are separate nodes as they
> are "video outputs" the same way as the other subnodes.
> 
> I could perhaps remove the DPI and SDI nodes, and have them as direct
> video ports from DISPC, but... That's easier said than done.

DPI and SDI indeed seem like ports to me, node devices. Have you given the 
implementation a thought ? How difficult would it be ?

-- 
Regards,

Laurent Pinchart

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