On Wed, Feb 01, 2017 at 11:13:23PM +0100, Lukasz Majewski wrote: > Hi Andrew, > > > > We would need a tri-state device tree properly: > > > > > > 1. Not defined - do nothing > > > 2. Defined as 0 -> explicitly disable port mirroring > > > 3. Defined as 1 -> explicitly enable port mirriring > > > > > > The "net-phy-lane-swap" only fulfills points 1 and 3 above. > > > > > > In my use case I do need point 2. > > > > Looking at the datasheet, PORT_MIRROR_EN defaults to 0. So it seems > > reasonable to unconditionally set it to 0 when the PHY driver > > loads. Any device which needs a value of 1 can set "net-phy-lane-swap" > > Unconditionally setting this field to 0 (as we expect the reset default > setting) seems to me like a good solution. > > However, I was not sure if such approach is acceptable by the community. So the issue here is, are there boards with bootloaders which set this "lane swap" bit, and rely on Linux not changing it, because the hardware design has such a swap? It seems the bootloader you are using does this. But in your case, it does it wrongly. I'm guessing you have a vendor bootloader? And no easy access to the sources? Otherwise you would of fixed the bootloader. So can we assume there are vendor designed boards which require the swap? Do they run a mainline kernel? Or only the vendor kernel? If we know of mainline boards which are going to break, we should not do this. If however we do decide to reset it to default value, i think it would be good to implement net-phy-lane-swap as well, so giving people an easier path towards mainline. Andrew -- 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