On 09/19/17 11:50, Dave Stevenson wrote: > Hi Eric. > > Thanks for the review. > > On 18 September 2017 at 19:18, Eric Anholt <eric@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Dave Stevenson <dave.stevenson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >>> diff --git a/drivers/media/platform/bcm2835/bcm2835-unicam.c b/drivers/media/platform/bcm2835/bcm2835-unicam.c >>> new file mode 100644 >>> index 0000000..5b1adc3 >>> --- /dev/null >>> +++ b/drivers/media/platform/bcm2835/bcm2835-unicam.c >>> @@ -0,0 +1,2192 @@ >>> +/* >>> + * BCM2835 Unicam capture Driver >>> + * >>> + * Copyright (C) 2017 - Raspberry Pi (Trading) Ltd. >>> + * >>> + * Dave Stevenson <dave.stevenson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>> + * >>> + * Based on TI am437x driver by Benoit Parrot and Lad, Prabhakar and >>> + * TI CAL camera interface driver by Benoit Parrot. >>> + * >> >> Possible future improvement: this description of the driver is really >> nice and could be turned into kernel-doc. > > Documentation?! Surely not :-) > For now I'll leave it as a task for another day. > >>> + * There are two camera drivers in the kernel for BCM283x - this one >>> + * and bcm2835-camera (currently in staging). >>> + * >>> + * This driver is purely the kernel control the Unicam peripheral - there >> >> Maybe "This driver directly controls..."? > > Will do in v3. > >>> + * is no involvement with the VideoCore firmware. Unicam receives CSI-2 >>> + * or CCP2 data and writes it into SDRAM. The only processing options are >>> + * to repack Bayer data into an alternate format, and applying windowing >>> + * (currently not implemented). >>> + * It should be possible to connect it to any sensor with a >>> + * suitable output interface and V4L2 subdevice driver. >>> + * >>> + * bcm2835-camera uses with the VideoCore firmware to control the sensor, >> >> "uses the" > > Will do in v3. > >>> + * Unicam, ISP, and all tuner control loops. Fully processed frames are >>> + * delivered to the driver by the firmware. It only has sensor drivers >>> + * for Omnivision OV5647, and Sony IMX219 sensors. >>> + * >>> + * The two drivers are mutually exclusive for the same Unicam instance. >>> + * The VideoCore firmware checks the device tree configuration during boot. >>> + * If it finds device tree nodes called csi0 or csi1 it will block the >>> + * firmware from accessing the peripheral, and bcm2835-camera will >>> + * not be able to stream data. >> >> Thanks for describing this here! >> >>> +/* >>> + * The peripheral can unpack and repack between several of >>> + * the Bayer raw formats, so any Bayer format can be advertised >>> + * as the same Bayer order in each of the supported bit depths. >>> + * Use lower case to avoid clashing with V4L2_PIX_FMT_SGBRG8 >>> + * formats. >>> + */ >>> +#define PIX_FMT_ALL_BGGR v4l2_fourcc('b', 'g', 'g', 'r') >>> +#define PIX_FMT_ALL_RGGB v4l2_fourcc('r', 'g', 'g', 'b') >>> +#define PIX_FMT_ALL_GBRG v4l2_fourcc('g', 'b', 'r', 'g') >>> +#define PIX_FMT_ALL_GRBG v4l2_fourcc('g', 'r', 'b', 'g') >> >> Should thes fourccs be defined in a common v4l2 header, to reserve it >> from clashing with others later? > > I'm only using them as flags and probably in a manner that nothing > else is likely to copy, so it seems a little excessive to put them in > a common header. > Perhaps it's better to switch to 0xFFFFFFF0 to 0xFFFFFFF3 or other > value that won't come up as a fourcc under any normal circumstance. > Any thoughts from other people? I think that's better, yes. > >> This is really the only question I have about this driver before seeing >> it merged. As far as me wearing my platform maintainer hat, I'm happy >> with the driver, and my other little notes are optional. >> >>> +static int unicam_probe(struct platform_device *pdev) >>> +{ >>> + struct unicam_cfg *unicam_cfg; >>> + struct unicam_device *unicam; >>> + struct v4l2_ctrl_handler *hdl; >>> + struct resource *res; >>> + int ret; >>> + >>> + unicam = devm_kzalloc(&pdev->dev, sizeof(*unicam), GFP_KERNEL); >>> + if (!unicam) >>> + return -ENOMEM; >>> + >>> + unicam->pdev = pdev; >>> + unicam_cfg = &unicam->cfg; >>> + >>> + res = platform_get_resource(pdev, IORESOURCE_MEM, 0); >>> + unicam_cfg->base = devm_ioremap_resource(&pdev->dev, res); >>> + if (IS_ERR(unicam_cfg->base)) { >>> + unicam_err(unicam, "Failed to get main io block\n"); >>> + return PTR_ERR(unicam_cfg->base); >>> + } >>> + >>> + res = platform_get_resource(pdev, IORESOURCE_MEM, 1); >>> + unicam_cfg->clk_gate_base = devm_ioremap_resource(&pdev->dev, res); >>> + if (IS_ERR(unicam_cfg->clk_gate_base)) { >>> + unicam_err(unicam, "Failed to get 2nd io block\n"); >>> + return PTR_ERR(unicam_cfg->clk_gate_base); >>> + } >>> + >>> + unicam->clock = devm_clk_get(&pdev->dev, "lp_clock"); >>> + if (IS_ERR(unicam->clock)) { >>> + unicam_err(unicam, "Failed to get clock\n"); >>> + return PTR_ERR(unicam->clock); >>> + } >>> + >>> + ret = platform_get_irq(pdev, 0); >>> + if (ret <= 0) { >>> + dev_err(&pdev->dev, "No IRQ resource\n"); >>> + return -ENODEV; >>> + } >>> + unicam_cfg->irq = ret; >>> + >>> + ret = devm_request_irq(&pdev->dev, unicam_cfg->irq, unicam_isr, 0, >>> + "unicam_capture0", unicam); >> >> Looks like there's no need to keep "irq" in the device private struct. > > Agreed. I'll remove in v3. > >>> + if (ret) { >>> + dev_err(&pdev->dev, "Unable to request interrupt\n"); >>> + return -EINVAL; >>> + } >>> + >>> + ret = v4l2_device_register(&pdev->dev, &unicam->v4l2_dev); >>> + if (ret) { >>> + unicam_err(unicam, >>> + "Unable to register v4l2 device.\n"); >>> + return ret; >>> + } >>> + >>> + /* Reserve space for the controls */ >>> + hdl = &unicam->ctrl_handler; >>> + ret = v4l2_ctrl_handler_init(hdl, 16); >>> + if (ret < 0) >>> + goto probe_out_v4l2_unregister; >>> + unicam->v4l2_dev.ctrl_handler = hdl; >>> + >>> + /* set the driver data in platform device */ >>> + platform_set_drvdata(pdev, unicam); >>> + >>> + ret = of_unicam_connect_subdevs(unicam); >>> + if (ret) { >>> + dev_err(&pdev->dev, "Failed to connect subdevs\n"); >>> + goto free_hdl; >>> + } >>> + >>> + /* Enabling module functional clock */ >>> + pm_runtime_enable(&pdev->dev); >> >> I think pm_runtime is only controlling the power domain for the PHY, not >> the clock (which you're handling manually). > > You're right. Copy and paste from the driver I'd based this on. > Will correct in v3. > > Dave > Dave, I plan to review this Friday or Monday. It would help me if you could post a v3 before Friday so that I'm reviewing the latest code. It would be great if you can also post your tc358743 patches. I have an RPi with a tc358743 attached, so it would be very useful if I can review and test both this driver and the tc358743 changes. I also have a selfish motive: I want to do a CEC demo next week during the Kernel Recipes conference with my RPi/tc358743 and your driver. It's nice if I can use the latest version for that. Regards, Hans -- 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