On Wed, Dec 21, 2022 at 6:55 AM Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Dec 21, 2022 at 02:41:50AM +0100, Andrew Lunn wrote: > > > > > + }; > > > > > + > > > > > + led@1 { > > > > > + reg = <1>; > > > > > + color = <LED_COLOR_ID_AMBER>; > > > > > + function = LED_FUNCTION_LAN; > > > > > + function-enumerator = <1>; > > > > > > > > Typo? These are supposed to be unique. Can't you use 'reg' in your case? > > > > > > reg in this context is the address of the PHY on the MDIO bus. This is > > > an Ethernet switch, so has many PHYs, each with its own address. > > > > Actually, i'm wrong about that. reg in this context is the LED number > > of the PHY. Typically there are 2 or 3 LEDs per PHY. > > > > There is no reason the properties need to be unique. Often the LEDs > > have 8 or 16 functions, identical for each LED, but with different > > reset defaults so they show different things. > > > > Are we taking about reg or function-enumerator? > > For reg it's really specific to the driver... My idea was that since a > single phy can have multiple leds attached, reg will represent the led > number. > > This is an example of the dt implemented on a real device. > > mdio { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > > phy_port1: phy@0 { > reg = <0>; > > leds { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > > lan1_led@0 { > reg = <0>; > color = <LED_COLOR_ID_WHITE>; > function = LED_FUNCTION_LAN; > function-enumerator = <1>; > linux,default-trigger = "netdev"; > }; > > lan1_led@1 { > reg = <1>; > color = <LED_COLOR_ID_AMBER>; > function = LED_FUNCTION_LAN; > function-enumerator = <1>; > linux,default-trigger = "netdev"; > }; > }; > }; > > phy_port2: phy@1 { > reg = <1>; > > leds { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > > > lan2_led@0 { > reg = <0>; > color = <LED_COLOR_ID_WHITE>; > function = LED_FUNCTION_LAN; > function-enumerator = <2>; > linux,default-trigger = "netdev"; > }; > > lan2_led@1 { > reg = <1>; > color = <LED_COLOR_ID_AMBER>; > function = LED_FUNCTION_LAN; > function-enumerator = <2>; > linux,default-trigger = "netdev"; > }; > }; > }; > > phy_port3: phy@2 { > reg = <2>; > > leds { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > > lan3_led@0 { > reg = <0>; > color = <LED_COLOR_ID_WHITE>; > function = LED_FUNCTION_LAN; > function-enumerator = <3>; > linux,default-trigger = "netdev"; > }; > > lan3_led@1 { > reg = <1>; > color = <LED_COLOR_ID_AMBER>; > function = LED_FUNCTION_LAN; > function-enumerator = <3>; > linux,default-trigger = "netdev"; > }; > }; > }; > > In the following implementation. Each port have 2 leds attached (out of > 3) one white and one amber. The driver parse the reg and calculate the > offset to set the correct option with the regs by also checking the phy > number. Okay, the full example makes more sense. But I still thought 'function-enumerator' values should be globally unique within a value of 'function'. Maybe Jacek has an opinion on this? You are using it to distinguish phys/ports, but there's already enough information in the DT to do that. You have the parent nodes and I assume you have port numbers under 'ethernet-ports'. For each port, get the phy node and then get the LEDs. > An alternative way would be set the reg to be the global led number in > the switch and deatch the phy from the calculation. > > Something like > port 0 led 0 = reg 0 > port 0 led 1 = reg 1 > port 1 led 0 = reg 2 > port 1 led 1 = reg 3 > ... No. Rob