Re: [PATCH 1/9] dt-bindings: display: Add yamls for JH7110 display subsystem

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On Wed, Jun 07, 2023 at 12:22:33AM +0200, Heiko Stübner wrote:
> Am Dienstag, 6. Juni 2023, 20:41:17 CEST schrieb Shengyu Qu:
> > > On Fri, Jun 02, 2023 at 03:40:35PM +0800, Keith Zhao wrote:
> > >> Add bindings for JH7110 display subsystem which
> > >> has a display controller verisilicon dc8200
> > >> and an HDMI interface.

> > >> +description:
> > >> +  The StarFive SoC uses the HDMI signal transmiter based on innosilicon IP
> > > Is innosilicon the same thing as verisilicon? Also
> > > s/transmiter/transmitter/, both here and in the title.
> > 
> > I think that is not the same, I remember Rockchip has used a HDMI 
> > transmitter from
> > 
> > Innosilicon, and there is a existing driver for that in mainline.
> 
> Yep, I think Innosilicon is the company you turn to when you want to save
> a bit of money ;-) . In the bigger SoCs Rockchip most of the time uses
> Designware hdmi blocks and looking at the history only the rk3036 ever
> used an Innosilicon block.
> 
> Looking at the history, 2016 really was a long time ago :-D.
> 
> > So Keith, if that's true, I think it is better to seperate the HDMI 
> > stuff and reuse existing driver.
> 
> I'm not so sure about that - at least from a cursory glance :-) .
> 
> The registers do look slightly different and I don't know how much
> the IP changed between the rk3036-version and the jh7110 version.
> 
> At the very least, I know my rk3036 board isn't booting right now, so
> I can't really provide help for generalizing the rockchip-driver.
> 
> At the very least both the binding and driver could drop the "starfive-hdmi"
> and actually use the Innosilicon in the naming somewhere, so that it's
> clear for future developers :-)

Seeing "based on" always makes me a little bit nervous to be honest when
it comes to using a compatible from the IP. Is it the IP? What version
is it? etc. Perhaps "starfive,jh7110-hdmi" & falling back to some sort
of "innosilicon,hdmi" would be more future/IP-silliness proof.
Driver can always be generic & bind against "innosilicon,hdmi" until
that becomes impossible.

Cheers,
Conor.

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