On 09/08/2022 15:14, Rob Herring wrote: > EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know the content is safe > > On Mon, Aug 08, 2022 at 10:01:11PM +0000, Conor.Dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >> On 08/08/2022 22:34, Jessica Clarke wrote: >>> On Fri, Aug 05, 2022 at 05:28:42PM +0100, Conor Dooley wrote: >>>> From: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>>> >>>> The device trees produced automatically for the virt and spike machines >>>> fail dt-validate on several grounds. Some of these need to be fixed in >>>> the linux kernel's dt-bindings, but others are caused by bugs in QEMU. >>>> >>>> Patches been sent that fix the QEMU issues [0], but a couple of them >>>> need to be fixed in the kernel's dt-bindings. The first patches add >>>> compatibles for "riscv,{clint,plic}0" which are present in drivers and >>>> the auto generated QEMU dtbs. >>> >>> IMO the correct thing is to have QEMU use a qemu,plicX rather than to >>> weaken the requirement that a non-generic compatible be used. Otherwise >>> you end up with QEMU using something that's marked as deprecated and >>> either the warning remains and annoys people still or it becomes too >>> weak and people ignore it when creating real hardware. >> >> It's already in a driver so I figure it should be in the bindings too. >> >> In arm's virt.c they use the generic gic compatible & I don't see any >> evidence of other archs using "qemu,foo" bindings. I suppose there's >> always the option of just removing the "riscv,plic0" from the riscv's >> virt.c > > I think we're pretty much stuck with what's in use already. > > I'm on the fence whether to mark it deprecated though if there is no > plan to 'fix' it. Doesn't really matter until the tools can selectively > remove deprecated properties from validation. > I guess I had considered "deprecated" to mean "don't use it in new device trees" rather than "don't use it at all". I am not sure how it could be "fixed" if it is potentially used by who-tf-knows-what. I do think that adding the deprecated flag adds information in the absence of tooling that responds to the property. Thanks, Conor.