Hi Andreas, >>>>> Am 12.11.2018 um 21:59 schrieb Andreas Kemnade <andreas@xxxxxxxxxxxx>: >>>>> On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 03:46:48 +0100 >>>>> Sebastian Reichel <sebastian.reichel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>> On Sun, Nov 11, 2018 at 12:20:34AM +0100, Andreas Kemnade wrote: >>>>>>> This is a first try to be able to use h4 devices specified in >>>>>>> the devicetree, so you do not need to call hciattach and >>>>>>> it can be automatically probed. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Of course, proper devicetree bindings documentation is >>>>>>> missing. And also you would extend that by regulator/ >>>>>>> enable gpio settings. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> But before proceeding further it should be checked if the >>>>>>> general way of doing things is right. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Andreas Kemnade <andreas@xxxxxxxxxxxx> >>>>>>> --- >>>>>> >>>>>> Patch looks good to me, just one note >>>>>> >>>>> I found one thing myself: >>>>> Shouldn't we have a generic compatible string like "generic-h4". >>>>> ehci-platform.c has for example: >>>>> { .compatible = "generic-ehci", }, >>>> >>>> There might be differences in h4 compatible devices (e.g. default >>>> baud rate) so that I would not bet there a "generic-h4" suffices >>>> in the long run. >> >> It will not because that doesn't define clocks, resets, gpios, >> supplies, etc. and the interactions of all those. >> > well, we need a simple supply being on when the device is on. > Nothing more. > >>> My suggestion is to use this in DT: >>> >>> compatible = "wi2wi,w2cbw003-bluetooth", "<something generic>"; >>> > That would be my slight preference here. > >>> The driver can start with supporting just the generic compatible >>> string. If somebody finds some incompatible differences, the driver >>> can add a custom handler for the wi2wi chip without breaking DT >>> ABI. >> >> Any idea how many H4 devices there are? Somehow I doubt there are that >> many to be unmanageable. >> > Well, many devices are h4 devices with some more or less important > vendor-specific commands. Well, "hciattach any" uses simple h4 protocol. > > those firmware download commands and they have their own drivers. > Most devices I had used bluetooth uart from the command line with, were > simple enough. The other question is whether those devices will run a > modern kernel. > > No strong opinion here. doing the firmware load from user space via some magic tool is no longer going to work smoothly. It will be actually almost impossible with serdev. However I did post btuart.c driver which is pretty much just plain H:4. You would still somehow define the default baudraute since just picking 115200 is not always going to work. Btw. I see nothing standing in the way of merging btuart.c driver and then go from there. Either I dig this out and submit or someone else does. Regards Marcel