On 07/06/17 15:20, Sean Wang wrote:
On Tue, 2017-06-06 at 13:07 +0200, Matthias Brugger wrote:
On 31/05/17 20:44, sean.wang@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
From: Sean Wang <sean.wang@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Add the generic binding for allowing the support of RNG on MediaTek SoCs
such as MT7622.
Signed-off-by: Sean Wang <sean.wang@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/rng/mtk-rng.txt | 3 ++-
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/rng/mtk-rng.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/rng/mtk-rng.txt
index a6d62a2..0772913 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/rng/mtk-rng.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/rng/mtk-rng.txt
@@ -2,7 +2,8 @@ Device-Tree bindings for Mediatek random number generator
found in Mediatek SoC family
Required properties:
-- compatible : Should be "mediatek,mt7623-rng"
+- compatible : Should be "mediatek,generic-rng" or
+ "mediatek,mt7623-rng".
What does generic-rng mean. Is it for all mt7xxx, or also for mt6xxx and
mt8xxx based SoCs? I think we should stick with SoC specific bindings,
as we don't know if Mediatek won't publish a new IP block next year
which is differnet.
Yes, what I mean is generic-rng can be applied to all
platform MediaTek provides.
Just in case we should add a binding for the actual SoC + a fallback.
For example.
- compatible " Should be
"mediatek,mt7622-rng", "mediatek,mt7623-rng" for SoC mt7622
"mediatek,mt7623-rng" for SoC mt7623
This will also eliminate the need of adding mt6722-rng to the driver, as
it will use mt7623-rng as fallback. If in the future we realize that
mt7622-rng has a extra feature/bug, we can still work around it, without
breaking the bindings.
I knew the fallback rules you said here because I saw them being used in
many drivers such as sysirq and uart driver, such kind of basic drivers.
These drivers are basic enough, various following chipsets almost fall
back into the oldest one. So the clues let me think the hardware
interface shouldn't have too much differences among them.
If there is string used like generic-uart or generic-sysirq, it can
stop we blindly add new string into the binding document when a new
platform is introduced.
And they easily allows users unfamiliar MediaTek platform (they didn't
know what the oldest MediaTek chipset is) pick up the right compatible
string to start bring up the new platform.
The specific one can be added after new feature required is added or
critical hardware bug is found. Otherwise the generic one can fit
all generic needs for those.
Those are only opinions, if you don't like it, I still can accept the
original way as you suggest :)
I can see your reasoning, but the device tree maintainers prefer to have
the bindings updated for a new SoC. As I mentioned before, just imagine
next year Mediatek changes the IP block and from now on, it uses the new
device in all SoCs. In 5 years we would have a binding which states
'generic' although it is not compatible with any SoC of the last So
So please keep with the bindings as done up to now.
Best regards,
Matthias
Makes sense?
Regards,
Matthias
- clocks : list of clock specifiers, corresponding to
entries in clock-names property;
- clock-names : Should contain "rng" entries;
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