> So, my opinion is that although what Oleksij would like to see is > admirable, I don't think that the REF_CLK direction is a matter of RMII > MAC vs PHY role, and thus, we wouldn't need to change "rmii" to "rev-rmii" > and cause breakage everywhere. It's just that - a matter of REF_CLK > direction. It's true, though, that this is a generic problem and that > the generic bindings for RMII that we currently have are under-specified. > We could try to devise an extended RMII binding which makes it clear for > both the MAC and the PHY who is responsible to drive this signal. You > are not attempting that, you are just coming up with yet another > vendor-specific MAC property which solves a generic problem. I can't say > I am completely opposed to that, either, which is why I haven't really > spoken out against it. The PHY maintainers would also have to weigh in, > and not all of them are CCed here. I would recommend looking around other PHYs and find a property which does what you want, and copy it. We do have all sorts of properties. There are some to enable the REF_CLK out of the PHY. Some to disable the REF_CLK out, some to disable it when the link is down, some to indicate what frequency it should tick at, etc. If you want to go the extra mile, maybe you can make a summary of all these properties, and maybe we can produce a guide line for what we want the properties to be called going forward. > I am afraid that creating a CCF style binding for REF_CLK will be an > enormous hammer for a very small nail and will see very limited adoption > to other drivers, but I might as well be wrong about it. Compatibility > between RMII MACs and PHYs which may or may not be CCF-ready might also > be a concern. I also don't think using the CCF makes too much sense, except for where the SoC provides the lock, and already has a CCF covering it. I would also be hesitant to add more dependencies between the MAC and the PHY. The DT often has circular dependencies and we have had issues with probing being deferred because the core does not always understand these circular dependencies. Andrew