Re: [v4 07/11] dt-bindings: hwmon: Add documents for PECI hwmon client drivers

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On 5/24/2018 6:47 AM, Rob Herring wrote:
On Wed, May 23, 2018 at 4:56 PM, Jae Hyun Yoo
<jae.hyun.yoo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 5/23/2018 1:03 PM, Jae Hyun Yoo wrote:

On 5/23/2018 12:33 PM, Rob Herring wrote:

On Wed, May 23, 2018 at 11:37 AM, Jae Hyun Yoo
<jae.hyun.yoo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 5/23/2018 8:11 AM, Rob Herring wrote:


On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 12:18 PM, Jae Hyun Yoo
<jae.hyun.yoo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


On 5/22/2018 9:42 AM, Rob Herring wrote:



On Mon, May 21, 2018 at 12:59:05PM -0700, Jae Hyun Yoo wrote:



This commit adds dt-bindings documents for PECI hwmon client
drivers.

Signed-off-by: Jae Hyun Yoo <jae.hyun.yoo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: Haiyue Wang <haiyue.wang@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: James Feist <james.feist@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: Vernon Mauery <vernon.mauery@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Andrew Jeffery <andrew@xxxxxxxx>
Cc: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx>
Cc: Jason M Biils <jason.m.bills@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Joel Stanley <joel@xxxxxxxxx>
---
     .../bindings/hwmon/peci-cputemp.txt           | 23
++++++++++++++++++
     .../bindings/hwmon/peci-dimmtemp.txt          | 24
+++++++++++++++++++
     2 files changed, 47 insertions(+)
     create mode 100644
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/hwmon/peci-cputemp.txt
     create mode 100644
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/hwmon/peci-dimmtemp.txt

diff --git
a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/hwmon/peci-cputemp.txt
b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/hwmon/peci-cputemp.txt
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..2f59aee12d9e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/hwmon/peci-cputemp.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
+Bindings for Intel PECI (Platform Environment Control Interface)
cputemp
driver.
+
+Required properties:
+- compatible : Should be "intel,peci-cputemp".
+- reg        : Should contain address of a client CPU. Address
range
of
CPU
+              clients is starting from 0x30 based on PECI
specification.
+
+Example:
+       peci-bus@0 {
+               #address-cells = <1>;
+               #size-cells = <0>;
+               < more properties >
+
+               peci-cputemp@30 {
+                       compatible = "intel,peci-cputemp";
+                       reg = <0x30>;
+               };




[...]

+               peci-dimmtemp@30 {
+                       compatible = "intel,peci-dimmtemp";
+                       reg = <0x30>;
+               };




As I said in the prior version, 2 nodes at the same address is wrong.

Rob


In PECI bus, there is one and only bus host (adapter) and multiple
clients on a PECI bus, and PECI spec doesn't allow multiple
originators
so only the host device can originate message.



Yes, I get that. A single host still has to address slave devices.

In this implementation,
all message transactions on a bus from client driver modules and user
space will be serialized well in the PECI core bus driver so bus
occupation and traffic arbitration will be managed well in the PECI
core
bus driver even in case of a bus has 2 client drivers at the same
address. I'm sure that this implementation doesn't make that kind of
problem to OS.



Multiple clients to a single device is common, but that is a software
problem and doesn't belong in DT.

I don't think there is a single other case in the kernel where
multiple drivers can bind to the same device at a given bus address.
That is why we have things like MFD. Though in this case, why can't
one hwmon driver register multiple hwmon devices (cpu and dimm temps)?


It was implemented as a single driver until v2 but dimm temps need
delayed creation unlikely the cpu temps on hwmon subsystem because of
memory training behavior of remote x86 cpus. Since hwmon doesn't allow
incremental creation, I had to divide it into two, cputemp and dimmtemp,
so that cputemp can be registered immediately when the remote x86 cpu
turns on and dimmtemp can be registered by delayed creation. It is the
reason why I had to make the two hwmon driver modules that sharing a
single device address.


That all sounds like kernel problems to me. Stop designing your DT
binding around what the kernel can or can't *currently* support.

Additionally, PECI isn't limited for temperature
monitoring feature but it can be used for other functions such as
platform management, cpu interface tuning and diagnostics and failure
analysis, so in case of adding a new driver for the functions, we should
add an another DT node which is sharing the same cpu address.


No, the driver should add support for those additional functions.
Perhaps you will need to use MFD.


Do you mean that the device address sharing is acceptable if I make
these nodes under "simple-mfd"?

Thanks,

-Jae


Hi Rob,

I'm planning to change the whole PECI node like below:

peci: peci@1e78b000 {
         compatible = "simple-bus";
         #address-cells = <1>;
         #size-cells = <1>;
         ranges = <0x0 0x1e78b000 0x60>;

         peci0: peci-bus@0 {
                 compatible = "aspeed,ast2500-peci";
                 reg = <0x0 0x60>;
                 #address-cells = <1>;
                 #size-cells = <0>;
                 interrupts = <15>;
                 clocks = <&syscon ASPEED_CLK_GATE_REFCLK>;
                 resets = <&syscon ASPEED_RESET_PECI>;
                 clock-frequency = <24000000>;
                 msg-timing = <1>;
                 addr-timing = <1>;
                 rd-sampling-point = <8>;
                 cmd-timeout-ms = <1000>;
                 status = "disabled";

                 peci-client@30 {
                         compatible = "simple-mfd", "syscon";

These compatibles alone is not correct. There should be a specific
compatible for the device.

Also, I don't think "syscon" even makes sense in this case.


Got it. I'll change it like:

compatible = "intel,peci-client", "simple-mfd";

so that drivers could be instantiated altogether if the drivers use the
"intel,peci-client" compatible string.

                         reg = <0x30>;

                         cputemp: cputemp {
                                 compatible = "intel,peci-cputemp";
                         };

There is no point in this node being in DT. It doesn't define any
resources. All it does is provide you a convenient way to bind your
driver, but that is not the purpose of DT. Put a specific compatible
in the parent and its driver can instantiate whatever child devices it
wants.


My intention is making each driver can be selectively instantiated by
this node and it could use its parent reg resource which is in
simple-mfd node. If the selective instantiation is not needed, drivers
could use "intel,peci-client". Please correct me if it is still
unacceptable.

Thanks,

-Jae


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