On Sun, Jul 24, 2022 at 04:49:25AM +0800, Mike Yang wrote: > On 7/24/22 04:07, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > > On 23/07/2022 21:27, Mark Brown wrote: > >> On Sun, Jul 24, 2022 at 02:47:14AM +0800, Mike Yang wrote: > >>> On 7/24/22 01:43, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > >>>> On 23/07/2022 18:50, Zhou Yanjie wrote: > >> > >>>>> No offense, does it really need to be named that way? > >>>>> I can't seem to find documentation with instructions on this :( > >> > >> ... > >> > >>>> All bindings are to follow this rule, so I don't understand why you > >>>> think it is an exception for you? > >> > >>> Zhou didn't ask you to make an exception. They have a valid > >>> point and they're asking why. > >> > >>> You may want to avoid further incidents of this kind by stop > >>> being bossy and actually writing a guideline of naming these > >>> .yaml files and publish it somewhere online. I don't like your tone. Patches are welcome to fix deficiencies in documentation. Out of the hundreds of bindings a year, I see <5 documentation patches a year. The documentation clearly says to run 'make dt_binding_check' and that was obviously not followed here. > >> Yeah, I do have to say that I was also completely unaware that > >> there was any enforced convention here. > > > > Indeed, it's not a enforced pattern. But there are many other > > insignificant ones which we also tend to forget during review, like > > using words "Device Tree bindings" in title or using unnecessary quotes > > around "refs" (also in ID of schema). It's not a big deal, but I ask > > when I notice it. > > Good. Thanks for paying attention to these details. > > > >> Zhou already mentioned he was unable find the naming guidelines of these .yaml files. > >> > >> Apparently you think it's unacceptable for new contributors of a certain subsystem to use existing code as examples, and/or they're responsible for figuring out what's a good example and what's a bad one in the existing codebase. Please wrap your lines on replies. > > > > It's everywhere in the kernel, what can I say? If you copy existing > > code, you might copy poor code... > > Still, it shouldn't be a responsibility of new contributors to > determine the quality of an existing piece of code, unless there are > clear guidelines (i.e. one should use the new "cs-gpios" attribute in SPI controllers). Generally the guidance is to look at newer drivers for current best practices. > >>> It might never grow to new devices (because they might be different), so > >>> that is not really an argument. > >> > >> It is an argument. A very valid one. > >> > >> "they *might* be different". You may want to get your hands on real hardware and try another word. Or at least read the datasheets instead of believing your imagination. > >> > >> I would enjoy duplicating the st,stm32-spi.yaml into st,stm32{f,h}{0..7}-spi.yaml if I'm bored at a Sunday afternoon. > >> > >>> > >>> All bindings are to follow this rule, so I don't understand why you > >>> think it is an exception for you? > >> > >> Zhou didn't ask you to make an exception. They have a valid point and they're asking why. > > > > Hm, everyone has the same valid point and such recommendation is to > > everyone, although it is nothing serious. > > > >> You may want to avoid further incidents of this kind by stop being bossy and actually writing a guideline of naming these .yaml files and publish it somewhere online. > > > > I did not see any incident here... Process of review includes comments > > and there is nothing bad happening when you receive a comment. No > > incident... > > > Okay. After careful inspection of the Ingenic datasheets, now I have > the conclusion: The Ingenic X1000, X1021, X1500, X1501, X1520, X1600, > X1800, X1830, X2000, X2100, X2500 have the same SFC controller. So if they are all 'the same', then I expect they all have a fallback compatible with x1000 and using that for the filename makes sense. > X1600 has a newer version (let's say v2) of the SFC, and X2000-2500 > have v3. Others have the original version (let's say v1). Each new > version introduced new features such as arbitrary DMA sizes, and the > rest features are the same. So backwards compatible? If so, then they should have x1000 for fallback. > > So IMO the name "ingenic,sfc.yaml" is perfectly logical. Covering all 3 versions? If so and not backwards compatible, then I would agree. Rob