On Tue, 26 Apr 2022 11:28:53 +0200 Andrea Merello <andrea.merello@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Il giorno dom 24 apr 2022 alle ore 19:37 Jonathan Cameron > <jic23@xxxxxxxxxx> ha scritto: > > > > On Tue, 19 Apr 2022 09:10:54 +0200 > > Andrea Merello <andrea.merello@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > Il giorno ven 15 apr 2022 alle ore 19:35 Jonathan Cameron > > > <jic23@xxxxxxxxxx> ha scritto: > > > > > > > > On Fri, 15 Apr 2022 14:59:59 +0200 > > > > Andrea Merello <andrea.merello@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > From: Andrea Merello <andrea.merello@xxxxxx> > > > > > > > > > > This patch adds a core driver for the BNO055 IMU from Bosch. This IMU > > > > > can be connected via both serial and I2C busses; separate patches will > > > > > add support for them. > > > > > > > > > > The driver supports "AMG" (Accelerometer, Magnetometer, Gyroscope) mode, > > > > > that provides raw data from the said internal sensors, and a couple of > > > > > "fusion" modes (i.e. the IMU also do calculations in order to provide > > > > > euler angles, quaternions, linear acceleration and gravity measurements). > > > > > > > > > > In fusion modes the AMG data is still available (with some calibration > > > > > refinements done by the IMU), but certain settings such as low pass > > > > > filters cut-off frequency and sensors ranges are fixed, while in AMG mode > > > > > they can be customized; this is why AMG mode can still be interesting. > > > > > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Andrea Merello <andrea.merello@xxxxxx> > > [...] > > > > > > > > > > + > > > > > + ret = regmap_read(priv->regmap, BNO055_CHIP_ID_REG, &val); > > > > > + if (ret) > > > > > + return ret; > > > > > + > > > > > + if (val != BNO055_CHIP_ID_MAGIC) { > > > > > > > > We've run into this a few times recently. Traditionally IIO has been very > > > > restrictive on allowing drivers to probe if the Who Am I type values > > > > don't match. That causes problems for backwards compatibility in > > > > device tree - e.g. (with made up compatible part number 055b :) > > > > compatible = "bosch,bno055b", "bosch,bno055" > > > > > > > > The viewpoint of the dt maintainers is that we should assume the > > > > dt is correct and at most warn about missmatched IDs before trying > > > > to carry on. So to avoid hitting that again please relax this to a > > > > warning and cross your fingers after this point if it doesn't match. > > > > I'm fine on the firmware question because we know we are dealing > > > > with buggy firmware. Ideally we'll get some working firmware > > > > additions at somepoint then we can just label the bad firmwares > > > > and assume one less bug in the ones that don't match :) > > > > > > To be honest my point wasn't about the correctness of the DT at all.. > > > > > > I've hit this several times when I was switching my test board from > > > serial to i2c and vice-versa, because I made wrong connections or I > > > forgot to switch FPGA image (which contains the serial IP here). I got > > > my test script failing because the IIO device didn't pop up at all, > > > which is better than getting e.g. random data. In the real world > > > people may have less chance to have to worry about this, but they may > > > when e.g. they have an RPi and a hand-wired IMU. > > > > > > .. IOW I'm seeing this as a hardware self-test rather than a SW > > > check.. But if the DT thing makes this a no-go, then I can live with > > > the warning, and e.g. by making my script to check the kernel log.. > > > > Hmm. I wonder if we can get the best of both worlds. Given there > > is a WHOAMI and these very rarely / never take the value of all 0's or all 1's > > (what you'd see with a wiring error) maybe we can sanity check against > > those to provide the hardware self-test element. Then accept any > > 'sane' value of WHOAMI, but with a warning? > > While trying to do this and testing it, I've realized that indeed when > the BUS is broken (e.g. incorrect wiring) the probe() fails even > earlier. When we are unable to communicate with the device, this is > caught by the lower layer protocols (e.g. I2C sees no ACK, I suppose), > so there is no need to fail here; the IIO device doesn't eventually > pop up anyway. Ah. Good point. I was thinking we had SPI which is the one where a lack of reply is harder to detect. For I2C we are definitely fine and I guess the serial protocol protects against this as well. Great that indeed makes things simpler. Jonathan > > So, I now revert my previous request to keep a check to bail out for > crazy IDs here :) ; I'd say we can just relax the check to just a > warning as you said before, without the need for checking for 0x00 and > 0xff.. > > > Jonathan > > > >