On 17/02/2023 07:09, Binbin Zhou wrote: >>> Hi Krzysztof: >>> >>> Allow me to give a brief overview of the current status of eiointc (DT-based): >>> Loongson-3A series supports eiointc; >>> Loongson-2K1000 does not support eiointc now; >>> Loongson-2K0500 supports eiointc, with differences from >>> Loongson-3, e.g. only up to 128 devices are supported; >>> Loongson-2K2000 supports eiointc, similar to Loongson-3. >>> .... >>> >>> As can be seen, there is now a bit of confusion in the chip's design of eiointc. >>> >>> The design of eiointc is probably refined step by step with the chip. >>> The same version of eiointc can be used for multiple chips, and the >>> same chip series may also use different versions of eiointc. Low-end >>> chips may use eiointc-2.0, and high-end chips may use eiointc-1.0, >>> depending on the time it's produced. >>> >>> So in the Loongson-2K series I have defined the current state as >>> eiointc-1.0, using the dts property to indicate the maximum number of >>> devices supported by eiointc that can be used directly in the driver. >>> >>> If there are new changes to the design later on, such as the >>> definition of registers, we can call it eiointc-2.0, which can also >>> cover more than one chip. >> >> Just go with SoC-based compatibles. If your version is not specific >> enough, then it is not a good way to represent the hardware. >> > > Hi Krzysztof: > > I have tried to write the following SoC-based compatibles, is it fine? > > compatible: > enum: > - loongson,ls3a-eiointc # For MIPS Loongson-3A if necessary. > - loongson,ls2k0500-eiointc > - loongson,ls2k200-eiointc Looks good, but didn't you state these are compatible between each other? I have impression there is a common set, so maybe one compatible work on other device with reduced number of devices? Best regards, Krzysztof