Hi, On 21/05/19 19:40, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: > Em Tue, 8 Jan 2019 23:39:49 +0100 > Luca Ceresoli <luca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> escreveu: > >> Hi, >> >> there has been some discussion on linux-media about video >> serializer/deserializer chipsets with remote I2C capabilities from TI >> [0] and Maxim [1]. I took part discussing how the remote I2C feature >> of such chips could be best implemented in Linux while I was >> implementing a driver for the Texas Instruments DS90UB954-Q1 video >> deserializer. My approach is different from both the one used by >> Vladimir Zapolskiy on other TI chips, which look similar to the >> DS90UB954 in their I2C management, and the one used by Kieran Bingham >> with Maxim chips, which have a different and simpler I2C management. >> >> After that I had to stop that work, so it is unfinished and I have no >> plan to continue it. Upon suggestion by some linux-media developers >> I'm sending my patches as RFC in the hope that they bring additional >> material for the discussion. >> >> I2C management is quite complete in my patches, and it shows how I >> envisioned I2C management. For the rest the code is in large part >> incomplete. Don't consider the V4L2, GPIO and other sections as ready >> for any review. >> >> The whole idea is structured around a central node, called the ATR >> (Address Translator). It is similar to an I2C mux except it changes >> the I2C addresses of transactions with an "alias" address for each >> remote chip. Patch 2 has a detailed description of this process. >> >> >> A typical setup looks like: >> >> Slave X @ 0x10 >> .-----. | >> .-----. | |---+---- B >> | CPU |--A--| ATR | >> `-----' | |---+---- C >> `-----' | >> Slave Y @ 0x10 >> >> A = "local" bus >> B = "remote" bus 0 >> C = "remote" bus 1 >> >> In patch 2 I enriched the i2c-mux to also act as an ATR. However the >> implementation grew larger than I desired, so now I think it would >> make sense to leave i2c-mux as is, and add a new i2c-atr.c which has >> ATR features without much of the MUX code. However the implementation >> would not change too much, so you can look at i2c-mux to see how I >> implemented the ATR. >> >> In the ATR (i2c-mux.c) I implemented the logic needed to remap slave >> addresses according to a table. Choosing appropriate aliases and >> filling that table is driver-specific, so in this case it is done by >> ds90ub954.c. The ATR driver needs to know when a new client appears on >> the remote bus to setup translation and when it gets disconnected to >> undo it. So I added a callback pair, attach_client and detach_client, >> from i2c-core to i2c-mux and from there to the ATR driver. When >> getting the callback the ATR driver chooses an alias to be used on the >> local bus for the new chip, configures the ATR (perhaps setting some >> registers) returns the alias back to the ATR which sill add the new >> chip-alias pair to its table. The ATR (i2c-mux) then will do the >> translation for each message, so that the alias will be used on the >> local bus and the physical chip address on the remote bus. >> >> The alias address for a new client is chosen from an alias pool that >> must be defined in device tree. It is the responsibility of the DT >> writer to fill the pool with addresses that are otherwise unused on >> the local bus. The pool could not be filled automatically because >> there might be conflicting chips on the local bus that are unknown to >> the software, or that are just connected later. >> >> The alias pool and the mapping done at runtime allow to model >> different camera modules [or display or other modules] similarly to >> beaglebone capes or rpi hats, up to a model where: >> >> 1. there can be different camera modules being designed over time >> 2. there can be different base boards being designed over time >> 3. there is a standard interconnection between them (mechanical, >> electrical, communication bus) >> 4. camera modules and base boards are designed and sold independently >> (thanks to point 3) >> >> The implementation is split in the following patches: >> * Patch 1 adds the attach_client() and detach_client() callbacks to >> i2c-core >> * Patch 2 adds similar callbacks for the use of device drivers and, >> most importantly, implements the ATR engine >> * Patch 3 adds a farily complete DT bindings document, including the >> alias map >> * Patch 4 adds the DS90UB954-Q1 dual deserializer driver >> >> There is no serializer driver here. The one I have is just a skeleton >> setting a few registers, just enough to work on the deserializer >> driver. > > Not sure what to do here... I guess I'll just mark the patches as > RFC at media patchwork, as someone has to need support for it and need > to finish its implementation. I just did it. As I wrote in the cover letter, I was not actively working on the topic and sent these patches as an additional input for the discussion about I2C address translation and serdes chips in general. -- Luca