On 03/23/2018 12:20 PM, Mike Looijmans wrote: > On 23-3-2018 16:11, Andrew Lunn wrote: >> On Fri, Mar 23, 2018 at 03:24:34PM +0100, Mike Looijmans wrote: >>> It's common practice to store MAC addresses for network interfaces into >>> nvmem devices. However the code to actually do this in the kernel lacks, >>> so this patch adds of_get_nvmem_mac_address() for drivers to obtain the >>> address from an nvmem cell provider. >>> >>> This is particulary useful on devices where the ethernet interface >>> cannot >>> be configured by the bootloader, for example because it's in an FPGA. >>> >>> Tested by adapting the cadence macb driver to call this instead of >>> of_get_mac_address(). >> >> Hi Mike >> >> Please can you document the device tree binding. I assume you are >> adding a nvmen-cells and nvmem-cell-names to the Ethernet node in >> device tree. > > Indeed. I'll add my settings as an example. Where should I put this > documentation, in the commit comment or somewhere in > Documents/devicetree/bindings? > >>> +/** >>> + * Search the device tree for a MAC address, by calling >>> of_get_mac_address >>> + * and if that doesn't provide an address, fetch it from an nvmem >>> provider >>> + * using the name 'mac-address'. >>> + * On success, copies the new address is into memory pointed to by >>> addr and >>> + * returns 0. Returns a negative error code otherwise. >>> + * @dev: Pointer to the device containing the device_node >>> + * @addr: Pointer to receive the MAC address using ether_addr_copy() >>> + */ >>> +int of_get_nvmem_mac_address(struct device *dev, char *addr) >>> +{ >>> + const char *mac; >>> + struct nvmem_cell *cell; >>> + size_t len; >>> + int ret; >>> + >>> + mac = of_get_mac_address(dev->of_node); >>> + if (mac) { >>> + ether_addr_copy(addr, mac); >>> + return 0; >>> + } >> >> Is there a need to add a new API? Could of_get_mac_address() be >> extended to look in NVMEM? The MAC driver does not care. It is saying, >> using OF get me a MAC address. One API seems sufficient, and would >> mean you don't need to change the MAC drivers. > > It's what I intended to do, but there were two problems with that: > - of_get_mac_address() returns a pointer to constant data in memory, but > the nvmem functions return an allocated memory object that must be freed > after use. This changes the way the call is to be made. Yeah... > - The nvmem functions need the "struct device" pointer as well, while > of_get_mac_address() only gets passed the DT node. Bummer, you can't assume there is always a struct device associated with a struct device_node. Also, bigger question is, how can we make this work, for e.g: ACPI systems and therefore use an abstract fw_node handle? > > One approach would be to deprecate the of_get_mac_address() interface > and migrate existing drivers to the of_get_nvmem_mac_address() interface. Humm maybe, but clearly making of_get_mac_address() look for a nvmem is less error prone and does not require people to opt-in for the new helper, that seems beneficial to me. -- Florian -- 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