Hi, Am Sonntag, 10. Januar 2021, 16:37:15 CET schrieb Chen-Yu Tsai: > > > + vcc_sd: sdmmc-regulator { > > > + compatible = "regulator-fixed"; > > > + gpio = <&gpio0 RK_PD6 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; > > > + pinctrl-names = "default"; > > > + pinctrl-0 = <&sdmmc0m1_pin>; > > > > > + regulator-boot-on; > > > + regulator-name = "vcc_sd"; > > > > regulator-name above other regulator properties > > That is actually what I was used to, but some other rockchip dts files > have all the properties sorted alphabetically. So I stuck with what I > saw. I try to keep it alphabetical except for the exceptions :-D . regulator-name is such an exception. Similar to compatibles, the regulator-name is an entry needed to see if you're at the right node, so I really like it being the topmost regulator-foo property - just makes reading easier. (same for the compatible first, then regs, interrupts parts, as well as "status-last") But oftentimes, I just fix the ordering when applying - but seem to have missed this somewhere in those "other Rockchip dts files" ;-) . > > regulator voltage missing > > make things as complete as possible > > > > from fixed-regulator.yaml: > > > > description: > > Any property defined as part of the core regulator binding, defined in > > regulator.yaml, can also be used. However a fixed voltage regulator is > > expected to have the regulator-min-microvolt and regulator-max-microvolt > > to be the same. > > However this is not a real regulator; it is merely an on/off switch. > I believe in this case it should just pass through the voltage from > its upstream. regulator-voltages are not marked required so can stay away if it's just a dumb switch. I guess it's ok both ways and for individual board- devicetrees the impact either way is minimal. > > > +&i2c1 { > > > + status = "okay"; > > > + > > > + rk805: pmic@18 { > > > + compatible = "rockchip,rk805"; > > > + reg = <0x18>; > > > + interrupt-parent = <&gpio2>; > > > + interrupts = <6 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_LOW>; > > > > > + #clock-cells = <1>; > > > > all thing that start with "#" down the list > > Is there a proper "preferred" sorting method defined somewhere? I struggle with that often as well, but normally I'd do #clocks to clocks with out "#", but really don't have a hard preference here. especially as just ignoring the "#" would make #address-cells + #size-cells look strangely sorted ... so more of a common sense thingy. > > > + eth_phy_int_pin: eth-phy-int-pin { > > > + rockchip,pins = <1 RK_PD0 RK_FUNC_GPIO &pcfg_pull_down>; > > > + }; > > > + > > > + eth_phy_reset_pin: eth-phy-reset-pin { > > > + rockchip,pins = <1 RK_PC2 RK_FUNC_GPIO &pcfg_pull_down>; > > > + }; > > > + }; > > > + > > > + leds { > > > + led_pin: led-pin { > > > + rockchip,pins = <3 RK_PA5 RK_FUNC_GPIO &pcfg_pull_none>; > > > + }; > > > + }; > > > + > > > + pmic { > > > + pmic_int_l: pmic-int-l { > > > + rockchip,pins = <2 RK_PA6 RK_FUNC_GPIO &pcfg_pull_up>; > > > + }; > > > + }; > > > + > > > > > + usb3 { > > > > usb > > > > Last numbers in nodenames are more related to the sort order then to > > capabillity. > > ie: mmc0, mmc1 > > All usb pin related things here. > > I'd say it is more related to functionality in this case, as in "this group > is for USB3 related pins". Makes more sense if the board supported both USB2 > and USB3. I'd agree :-) ... especially as usb controllers on Rockchip boards are not really numbered and I think we already have precedent for usb2 -> usb version 2 pins in some other boards ;-) > > > + cap-sd-highspeed; > > > + disable-wp; > > > + pinctrl-names = "default"; > > > + pinctrl-0 = <&sdmmc0_clk>, <&sdmmc0_cmd>, <&sdmmc0_dectn>, <&sdmmc0_bus4>; > > > + vmmc-supply = <&vcc_sd>; > > > + status = "okay"; > > > +}; > > > + > > > > > +&saradc { > > > + vref-supply = <&vcc_18>; > > > + status = "okay"; > > > +}; > > > > What happened to the recovery key from the schematic? > > I believe I originally planned on adding it, but failed to find a proper > key event for it. Any suggestions? Most boards seem to use the KEY_VENDOR keycode. Heiko