On Tue, Nov 6, 2018 at 8:46 AM Sven Van Asbroeck <thesven73@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Nov 6, 2018 at 8:58 AM Rob Herring <robh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > It doesn't really sound like the host should be in DT. The bridge > > should register itself as an anybus provider and that should in turn > > enable the anybus host protocol. > > Very good point. Just to make sure we're on the same page, could you point > me to a relevant example where something registers as a provider? Not sure exactly. Perhaps I2C SMBus functions that implement the register access protocol on top of I2C bus. > v1 of this patch did not have the host in DT. The host just required platform > data with a regmap and a reset (the interrupt was passed via resources): > > struct anybuss_host_pdata { > struct regmap *regmap; > void (*reset)(struct device *dev, bool reset); > }; > > But there were problems with this approach. A block diagram would help. Something that shows the host SoC, your CPLD, reset, irq, etc. > The review feedback told me that my self-rolled reset callback should really > be a reset controller. I looked for ways to pass a handle to a reset controller > via platform data. This has recently been introduced via: Maybe an overkill for 1 reset. > > reset_controller_add_lookup() > > This binds a client device to a reset controller, without using the devicetree, > so the device can grab its controller via (devm_)reset_control_get*. Great! > But... to make the binding, you have to specify the full device names of the > controllers and client devices. See this example from psc-da850.c: > > static struct reset_control_lookup da850_psc0_reset_lookup_table[] = { > RESET_LOOKUP("da850-psc0", 15, "davinci-rproc.0", NULL), > }; > > I very quickly found myself in ida_simple_get() hell, trying to second-guess > what the devices I was creating, would be called ! > > So instead I put the host in DT, then I could easily connect the reset > controller. This also greatly simplified the bridge driver, a lot of boilerplate > would simply disappear. If the host is not a h/w component, but just a s/w protocol then it doesn't belong in DT. Perhaps it could be a library which the bridge driver can call into. What are the resets connected to? The slots? Maybe you should model the slots in DT. Rob