On Wed, 24 Jun 2020, Frank Rowand wrote: > On 2020-06-22 16:03, Michael Walle wrote: > > Am 2020-06-14 12:26, schrieb Michael Walle: > >> Hi Rob, > >> > >> Am 2020-06-10 00:03, schrieb Rob Herring: > >> [..] > >>> Yes, we should use 'reg' whenever possible. If we don't have 'reg', > >>> then you shouldn't have a unit-address either and you can simply match > >>> on the node name (standard DT driver matching is with compatible, > >>> device_type, and node name (w/o unit-address)). We've generally been > >>> doing 'classname-N' when there's no 'reg' to do 'classname@N'. > >>> Matching on 'classname-N' would work with node name matching as only > >>> unit-addresses are stripped. > >> > >> This still keeps me thinking. Shouldn't we allow the (MFD!) device > >> driver creator to choose between "classname@N" and "classname-N". > >> In most cases N might not be made up, but it is arbitrarily chosen; > >> for example you've chosen the bank for the ab8500 reg. It is not > >> a defined entity, like an I2C address if your parent is an I2C bus, > >> or a SPI chip select, or the memory address in case of MMIO. Instead > >> the device driver creator just chooses some "random" property from > >> the datasheet; another device creator might have chosen another > >> property. Wouldn't it make more sense, to just say this MFD provides > >> N pwm devices and the subnodes are matching based on pwm-{0,1..N-1}? > >> That would also be the logical consequence of the current MFD sub > >> device to OF node matching code, which just supports N=1. It's funny. You reiterate things like "arbitrarily chosen" and "randomly chosen from the datasheet" but yet your suggestion is just that. The only difference is that you wish to place the numerical differentiator in the node name, rather than the reg property. Worse still, you are suggesting that you wish to just enumerate them off sequentially from some arbitrary base (likely 0). I don't know of many cases off, the top of my head at least, where this is a problem. As you've mentioned, in the case of the AB8500, the bank is used which is semantically how the devices are actually addressed. It's not random, it's physical. How are the identical devices addressed/identified/differentiated from each other on your H/W? You must have a way of saying "I want PWM X to act in a different way from PWM Y". What is 'X' and 'Y' in your datasheet? -- Lee Jones [李琼斯] Senior Technical Lead - Developer Services Linaro.org │ Open source software for Arm SoCs Follow Linaro: Facebook | Twitter | Blog