On Mon, Jul 16, 2018 at 10:56 PM Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, 2018-07-16 at 07:55 -0600, Rob Herring wrote: > > If that data is one set per SoC, then i'm not that concerned having > > platform-specific data in the driver. That doesn't mean the driver is > > not "generic". It's still not clear to me in this thread, how much of > > this is board specific, but given that you've placed all the data in > > an SoC dtsi file it seems to be all per SoC. > > So Rob, I think that's precisely where the disconnect is. > > I think we all (well hopefully) agree that those few tunables don't fit > in any existing subystem and aren't likely to ever do (famous last > words...). > > Where we disagree is we want to make this parametrized via the DT, and > you want us to hard wire the list in some kind of SoC driver for a > given SoC family/version. > > The reason I think hard wiring the list in the driver is not a great > solution is that that list in itself is prone to variations, possibly > fairly often, between boards, vendors, versions of boards, etc... Can we separate the list of what's enabled from the details of the registers? Even if we put all this into DT, we may still want to have some separation for dts file structure. Some portion of this has to be SoC specific because you are simply exposing SoC registers. > We can't know for sure every SoC tunable (out of the gazillions in > those chips) are going to be needed for a given system. We know which > ones we do use for ours, and that's a couple of handfuls, but it could > be that Dell need a slightly different set, and so might Yadro, or so > might our next board revision for that matter. That's very hand wavy. Do you have some concrete examples (i.e. dts files) showing the differences. One problem I'm having with this is you are still going to need per board specifics in userspace. You may be moving some of details out, but moving to DT is not going to completely eliminate that. I agree that not using /dev/mem is a good thing, but there are several ways you could do that independent of any DT binding. > Now, updating the device-tree in the board flash with whatever vendor > specific information is needed is a LOT easier than getting the kernel > driver constantly updated. The device-tree after all is there to > reflect among other things system specific ways in which the SoC is > wired and configured. This is rather close... Sadly, updating my kernel is easier than updating my PC firmware (though packaged firmware on my current laptop changes that). I can assure you that ARM boards are generally much worse in that regard. BTW, you may want to pay attention to EBBR[1][2]. Not sure how much you care for BMCs, but there may be some interest. Rob [1] https://github.com/ARM-software/ebbr [2] https://lists.linaro.org/pipermail/boot-architecture/ -- 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