On Tue 24 Sep 22:41 PDT 2019, Stephen Boyd wrote: > I don't see any users of icc_get() in the kernel today, and adding them > doesn't make sense. That's because adding calls to that function in a > driver will make the driver SoC specific given that the arguments are > some sort of source and destination numbers that would typically be > listed in DT or come from platform data so they can match a global > numberspace of interconnect numbers. It would be better to follow the > approach of other kernel frameworks where the API is the same no matter > how the platform is described (i.e. platform data, DT, ACPI, etc.) and > swizzle the result in the framework to match whatever the device is by > checking for a DT node pointer or a fwnode pointer, etc. Therefore, > install icc_get() as the defacto API and make drivers use that instead > of of_icc_get() which implies the driver is DT specific when it doesn't > need to be. > +1 on this part! > The DT binding could also be simplified somewhat. Currently a path needs > to be specified in DT for each and every use case that is possible for a > device to want. Typically the path is to memory, which looks to be > reserved for in the binding with the "dma-mem" named path, but sometimes > the path is from a device to the CPU or more generically from a device > to another device which could be a CPU, cache, DMA master, or another > device if some sort of DMA to DMA scenario is happening. Let's remove > the pair part of the binding so that we just list out a device's > possible endpoints on the bus or busses that it's connected to. > > If the kernel wants to figure out what the path is to memory or the CPU > or a cache or something else it should be able to do that by finding the > node for the "destination" endpoint, extracting that node's > "interconnects" property, and deriving the path in software. For > example, we shouldn't need to write out each use case path by path in DT > for each endpoint node that wants to set a bandwidth to memory. We > should just be able to indicate what endpoint(s) a device sits on based > on the interconnect provider in the system and then walk the various > interconnects to find the path from that source endpoint to the > destination endpoint. > But doesn't this implies that the other end of the path is always some specific node, e.g. DDR? With a single node how would you describe CPU->LLCC or GPU->OCIMEM? > Obviously this patch doesn't compile but I'm sending it out to start > this discussion so we don't get stuck on the binding or the kernel APIs > for a long time. It looks like we should be OK in terms of backwards > compatibility because we can just ignore the second element in an old > binding, but maybe we'll want to describe paths in different directions > (e.g. the path from the CPU to the SD controller may be different than > the path the SD controller takes to the CPU) and that may require > extending interconnect-names to indicate what direction/sort of path it > is. I'm basically thinking about master vs. slave ports in AXI land. > > Cc: Maxime Ripard <mripard@xxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: <linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: Rob Herring <robh+dt@xxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: <devicetree@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@xxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: Evan Green <evgreen@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: David Dai <daidavid1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <swboyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > --- > .../bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt | 19 ++++--------------- > include/linux/interconnect.h | 13 ++----------- > 2 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 26 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt > index 6f5d23a605b7..f8979186b8a7 100644 > --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt > +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interconnect/interconnect.txt > @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ The interconnect provider binding is intended to represent the interconnect > controllers in the system. Each provider registers a set of interconnect > nodes, which expose the interconnect related capabilities of the interconnect > to consumer drivers. These capabilities can be throughput, latency, priority > -etc. The consumer drivers set constraints on interconnect path (or endpoints) > +etc. The consumer drivers set constraints on interconnect paths (or endpoints) > depending on the use case. Interconnect providers can also be interconnect > consumers, such as in the case where two network-on-chip fabrics interface > directly. > @@ -42,23 +42,12 @@ multiple paths from different providers depending on use case and the > components it has to interact with. > > Required properties: > -interconnects : Pairs of phandles and interconnect provider specifier to denote > - the edge source and destination ports of the interconnect path. > - > -Optional properties: > -interconnect-names : List of interconnect path name strings sorted in the same > - order as the interconnects property. Consumers drivers will use > - interconnect-names to match interconnect paths with interconnect > - specifier pairs. > - > - Reserved interconnect names: > - * dma-mem: Path from the device to the main memory of > - the system > +interconnects : phandle and interconnect provider specifier to denote > + the edge source for this node. > > Example: > > sdhci@7864000 { > ... > - interconnects = <&pnoc MASTER_SDCC_1 &bimc SLAVE_EBI_CH0>; > - interconnect-names = "sdhc-mem"; > + interconnects = <&pnoc MASTER_SDCC_1>; This example seems incomplete, as it doesn't describe the path between CPU and the config space, with this in place I think you need the interconnect-names. But with a single interconnect, the interconnect-names should be omitted, as done in other frameworks. > }; > diff --git a/include/linux/interconnect.h b/include/linux/interconnect.h > index d70a914cba11..e1ae704f5ab1 100644 > --- a/include/linux/interconnect.h > +++ b/include/linux/interconnect.h > @@ -25,23 +25,14 @@ struct device; > > #if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_INTERCONNECT) > > -struct icc_path *icc_get(struct device *dev, const int src_id, > - const int dst_id); > -struct icc_path *of_icc_get(struct device *dev, const char *name); > +struct icc_path *icc_get(struct device *dev, const char *name); > void icc_put(struct icc_path *path); > int icc_set_bw(struct icc_path *path, u32 avg_bw, u32 peak_bw); > void icc_set_tag(struct icc_path *path, u32 tag); > > #else > > -static inline struct icc_path *icc_get(struct device *dev, const int src_id, > - const int dst_id) > -{ > - return NULL; > -} > - > -static inline struct icc_path *of_icc_get(struct device *dev, > - const char *name) > +static inline struct icc_path *icc_get(struct device *dev, const char *name) I like this part, if mimics what's done in other frameworks and removes the ties to OF from the API. Regards, Bjorn > { > return NULL; > } > > base-commit: b5b3bd898ba99fb0fb6aed3b23ec6353a1724d6f > -- > Sent by a computer through tubes >