On 2017-02-09 00:44, Florian Fainelli wrote:
On 02/08/2017 03:39 PM, Rafał Miłecki wrote:
On 2017-02-09 00:32, Florian Fainelli wrote:
On 02/08/2017 03:30 PM, Rafał Miłecki wrote:
From: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@xxxxxxxxxx>
This reverts commit d7bc1a7d41bf ("phy: Add USB3 PHY support for
Broadcom NSP SoC") as we already have driver for this PHY (shared by
NS
and NSP). It was added in commit e5666281d9ea ("phy: bcm-ns-usb3:
new
driver for USB 3.0 PHY on Northstar").
Instead of adding separated driver & duplicating code we should work
on
improving existing (old) one. Thanks to work done by Broadcom we
know
there is MDIO bus we weren't aware of & we know register names which
makes initialization more clear. This is very valuable info and we
should work on using it in existing driver afterwards.
Should not we first extend the old driver to support NSP and then
revert
d7bc1a7d41bf ("phy: Add USB3 PHY support for Broadcom NSP SoC")?
Sounds like a weird / dirty development method to me: adding
duplicated
code
first then working on cleaning it. Unless you mean drivers/staging/.
There was clearly a mistake in submitting this NSP USB PHY driver, and
it should have been a patch against the existing NS USB PHY driver, but
it was not, okay fair enough.
It's one thing to address that in the future, and it's another thing to
flat out revert the driver just because you don't like the duplication.
I don't like that either, and we can discuss on how to improve things
(like have the maintainer review that too), but duplication is a lesser
evil than not having the hardware supported at all, and even more so,
purposely reverting in the name of removing that duplication, that's
intentionally breaking working hardware!
Hardware support is not excuse and I don't think it ever was in the
Linux.
We don't accept badly designed drivers just because they provide new hw
support.
We have various standards (for quality, style, design, code) at kernel
and we
stick to them unless it's drivers/staging/. As you said this driver
shouldn't be
pushed in the first place.
Dropping hardware support in kernel happens. Sometimes it's about
ancient
devices, sometimes about code quality (some forgotten staging drivers
used to be
dropped AFAIK).
Additionally you're talking about support that was *just* added and
isn't used
by anyone in the wild world yet.
This hardware was missing upstream support for 4 years so 2 extra months
won't
really hurt anyone.
I really don't see excusee or need for keeping this driver.
If you want to (and you feel it's well designed), we can keep
brcm,nsp-usb3-phy.txt
I vote for focusing on existing driver improvements instead of looking
for
excuses for keeping driver that shouldn't be added in the first place.
Jon seems to be already working on this, I'm willing to help him, I'm
sure we
can get you a proper support for the next merge window.
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