On Sat, Apr 02, 2022 at 01:52:28AM +0000, Peng Fan wrote: > > Subject: Re: [PATCH 0/4] dt-bindings: imx: add nvmem property > > > > On Thu, Mar 24, 2022 at 12:11:04PM +0100, Uwe Kleine-König wrote: > > > Hello, > > > > > > On Thu, Mar 24, 2022 at 12:20:20PM +0800, Peng Fan (OSS) wrote: > > > > From: Peng Fan <peng.fan@xxxxxxx> > > > > > > > > To i.MX SoC, there are many variants, such as i.MX8M Plus which > > > > feature 4 A53, GPU, VPU, SDHC, FLEXCAN, FEC, eQOS and etc. > > > > But i.MX8M Plus has many parts, one part may not have FLEXCAN, the > > > > other part may not have eQOS or GPU. > > > > But we use one device tree to support i.MX8MP including its parts, > > > > then we need update device tree to mark the disabled IP status > > "disabled". > > > > > > > > In NXP U-Boot, we hardcoded node path and runtime update device tree > > > > status in U-Boot according to fuse value. But this method is not > > > > scalable and need encoding all the node paths that needs check. > > > > > > > > By introducing nvmem property for each node that needs runtime > > > > update status property accoridng fuse value, we could use one > > > > Bootloader code piece to support all i.MX SoCs. > > > > > > > > The drawback is we need nvmem property for all the nodes which maybe > > > > fused out. > > > > > > I'd rather not have that in an official binding as the syntax is > > > orthogonal to status = "..." but the semantic isn't. Also if we want > > > something like that, I'd rather not want to adapt all bindings, but > > > would like to see this being generic enough to be described in a > > > single catch-all binding. > > > > > > I also wonder if it would be nicer to abstract that as something like: > > > > > > / { > > > fuse-info { > > > compatible = "otp-fuse-info"; > > > > > > flexcan { > > > devices = <&flexcan1>, <&flexcan2>; > > > nvmem-cells = <&flexcan_disabled>; > > > nvmem-cell-names = "disabled"; > > > }; > > > > > > m7 { > > > .... > > > }; > > > }; > > > }; > > > > > > as then the driver evaluating this wouldn't need to iterate over the > > > whole dtb but just over this node. But I'd still keep this private to > > > the bootloader and not describe it in the generic binding. > > > > There's been discussions (under the system DT umbrella mostly) about > > bindings for peripheral enable/disable control/status. Most of the time it is in > > context of device assignment to secure/non-secure world or partitions in a > > system (via a partitioning hypervisor). > > > > This feels like the same thing and could use the same binding. But someone > > has to take into account all the uses and come up with something. One off > > solutions are a NAK. > > Loop Stefano. > > Per my understanding, system device tree is not a runtime generated device > tree, in case I am wrong. I said it was part of 'system DT' discussions, not that you need 'system DT'. There's been binding patches on the list from ST for the 'trustzone protection controller' if I remember the name right. I think there was another proposal too. > To i.MX, one SoC has many different parts, one kind part may not have > VPU, another part may not have GPU, another part may be a full feature > one. We have a device tree for the full feature one, but we not wanna > introduce other static device tree files for non-full feature parts. > > So we let bootloader to runtime setting status of a device node according > to fuse info that read out by bootloader at runtime. Sounds like the same problem for the OS perspective. A device may or may not be available to the OS. The reason being because the device is assigned to TZ or another core vs. fused off doesn't matter. > I think my case is different with system device tree, and maybe NXP i.MX > specific. So I would introduce a vendor compatible node, following Uwe's > suggestion. We Just need such binding doc and device node in Linux kernel > tree. The code to scan this node is in U-Boot. Again, device assignment is a common problem. I'm only going to accept a common solution. Rob