On Wed, Mar 08, 2023 at 12:32:07PM -0600, Daniel Kaehn wrote: > On Wed, Mar 8, 2023 at 10:36 AM Andy Shevchenko > <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Mar 08, 2023 at 06:30:46PM +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > > > On Wed, Mar 08, 2023 at 04:55:27PM +0100, Benjamin Tissoires wrote: > > > > On Mar 08 2023, Daniel Kaehn wrote: > > > > > On Wed, Mar 8, 2023 at 9:26 AM Benjamin Tissoires > > > > > <benjamin.tissoires@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: ... > > > > ToUUID("daffd814-6eba-4d8c-8a91-bc9bbf4aa301"), > > > > Package () { > > > > Package () { "cell-names", Package () { "i2c", "gpio" } > > > > } > > > > > > Yeah, looking at this, I think it still fragile. First of all, either this is > > > missing, or simply wrong. We would need to access indices. ACPI _ADR is in the > > > specification. As much as with PCI it may be considered reliable. > > > > > > So, that said, forget about it, and simply use _ADR as indicator of the node. > > > See how MFD (in the Linux kernel) cares about this. Ex. Diolan DLN-2 driver. > > > > And that said, maybe CP2112 should simply re-use what MFD _already_ provides? > > Great point -- it definitely seems like this driver belongs in the mfd > directory to begin with. It can be iteratively converted later on. > It seems like aside from rewriting the CP2112 driver into an mfd > driver and two platform drivers, > my route forward for now would be to just do something like this (not > yet tested): > > + struct acpi_device *adev = ACPI_COMPANION(&hdev->dev); > + if (adev) > + ACPI_COMPANION_SET(&dev->adap.dev, acpi_find_child_device(adev, > 0x0, false)); ACPI_COMPANION_SET() is something different to simple device_set_node(). I would expect that in this driver we simply use the child fwnode as is. But since you are not using so called secondary fwnode, I believe it's fine for now. > + else > + device_set_node(&dev->adap.dev, > device_get_named_child_node(&hdev->dev, "i2c")); > > (and the same for the gpiochip) > > The follow-up question -- does there exist something analogous to DT > bindings for ACPI devices, > other than the ACPI spec itself, where this should be documented? Or > will consumers truly have to > read the driver code to determine that _ADR 0 is I2C and _ADR 1 is > GPIO? (I haven't seen anything > in my search so far -- but knowing that it truly doesn't exist would > make me respect people developing > embedded ACPI-based systems all the more!) See how the acpi_get_local_address() is used in the 3 users of it. Ideally we need a new callback in the fwnode ops to return either (least) 32-bit of _ADR or "reg" property. Dunno, if "reg" is actually what suits here. That said, I would do something like (pseudo-code) device_for_each_child_node() { if (name == $NAME) $NAME->fwnode = child; else if (_ADR = $INDEX) $NAME->fwnode = child; } > Thanks for your patience in working through all of this, especially > considering how long of an email > chain this has become! You're welcome! -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko