Hi Peter,
On 11/3/23 15:11, Peter Griffin wrote:
Hi Maksym,
Thanks for your feedback.
On Thu, 2 Nov 2023 at 22:32, Maksym Holovach
<maksym.holovach.an.2022@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi, all
I wanted to inquire about how do you all feel about calling this SoC by
the Google "gs101" name.
Interesting question, I think calling it gs101 is the correct approach see
below for my rationale.
I believe the proper name for it should be the actual Samsung name,
written in the silicon and reported in the Chip ID hardware: Exynos9845.
This also touches the Tensor G2 (Exynos9855), Tensor G3 (Exynos9865),
and possibly the "Tesla" SoCs.
I do not think the Linux kernel should be a marketing material: it
should reflect reality. The chip is almost 100% composed of Samsung
Exynos IP blocks and should be called that way.
As you alluded to Tesla fsd and Axis artpec8 SoCs are also based on
Exynos designs and support upstream uses the axis,artpec8* or tesla,fsd*
compatibles.
So using google,gs101 is consistent with the existing upstream naming
scheme, for customized ASICs that were based off a Exynos design. But
it also reflects the reality that this SoC is not a Exynos9845 as there is
also a lot of Google owned and other third party IP integrated that is not
found in Exynos9845.
A quick question: Do you imply Exynos9845 exists outside of the context
of Tensor G1? I used to believe Exynos9845 **is** Tensor G1.
Also, what kind of Google IP are you talking about? I believe only the
neural accelerator should be custom-ish.
Additionally, I believe it having or not having Google IP is irrelevant:
for example, the new Raspberry Pi 5 Broadcom SoC has a lot of
Raspberry's own IP, but it's still called Broadcom as it's the real
manufacturer and designer of the chip.
I guess the same is also true for `axis,artpec8` and `tesla,fsd` SoCs.
IMO the SoC compatible string should be uniquely identifying the actual
SoC, not a close relative.
Regarding product_id you are correct this reads 0x09845000 but even
within Samsung Exynos family there are examples where the register
value does not match the SoC compatible. For example Exynos850 SoC
has a product ID value of "E3830". Where the Linux compatible is
matching the Samsung marketing name, not the internal/outdated name.
I did not know Exynos 850 is also not going under it's real name.
Ultimately, I believe all of those SoCs should go under their technical
name in the exynos/ directory.
Another concern is that Google could in the future license other SoC: be
it Qualcomm, Nvidia or anything. If we put completely different hw under
google/ directory, does it really make sense? In that case, who'll
maintain the google/ directory? Exynos people? Qualcomm people if they
license it? Some other people?
Then, I don't think Tensor G3 has a proper "GS" name, it goes by "Zuma"
in decompiled kernel modules as far as I see.
Finally, Tesla people already tried to submit drivers called by Tesla
name, but which basically copied the functionality of the Exynos
drivers. We would want to avoid that, ideally.
My opinion is that all the Tesla and Google SoCs should be in the
exynos/ directory, not only because they are basically Samsung Exynos,
but also because they don't really need a separate directory: neither
Google nor Tesla didn't neither manufacture or design those SoCs from
scratch. The only reason I can think of for them to have it in a
separate directory is maybe because Google and Tesla actually paid
Samsung money for the right to call Exynos "Google designed" SoCs, but I
believe the kernel should be left out of that.
regards,
Peter.
Yours,
- Markuss
On 10/11/23 01:49, Peter Griffin wrote:
Hi folks,
Firstly, thanks to everyone who reviewed the v1 series! V2 incorporates all
the review feedback received so far.
This series adds initial SoC support for the GS101 SoC and also initial board
support for Pixel 6 phone (Oriole).
The gs101 / Tensor SoC is also used in Pixel6a (bluejay) and Pixel 6 Pro
(raven) phones. Currently DT is added for the gs101 SoC and Oriole.
As you can see from the patches the SoC is based on a Samsung Exynos SoC,
and therefore lots of the low level Exynos drivers can be re-used.
The support added in this series consists of:
* cpus
* pinctrl
* some CCF implementation
* watchdog
* uart
* gpio
This is enough to boot through to a busybox initramfs and shell using an
upstream kernel though :) More platform support will be added over the
following weeks and months.
Note 1: I've removed the dtbo overlay from v2 submission and will re-submit once
I have appropriate documentation for it.
Note 2: I've left the bootargs in dts with earlycon for now, for two reasons.
1) The bootloader hangs if bootargs isn't present in the dtb as it tries to
re-write this with additional bootargs.
2) there is a issue whereby the full serial console doesn't come up properly
if earlycon isn't also specified. This issue needs further investigation.
Note 3: In `dt-bindings: pinctrl: samsung: add google,gs101-pinctrl compatible`
I tried to narrow the interrupts check to google,gs101-pinctrl but I still see
a warning:
gs101-oriole.dtb: pinctrl@174d0000: interrupts: [[0, 0, 4],[..] is too long
If anyone can educate me on what I've done wrong here it would be most
appreciated!
kind regards,
Peter.
Changes since v1:
- Remove irq/gs101.h and replace macros with irq numbers globally
- exynos-pmu - keep alphabetical order
- add cmu_apm to clock bindings documentation
- sysreg bindings - remove superfluous `google,gs101-sysreg`
- watchdog bindings - Alphanumerical order, update gs201 comment
- samsung,pinctrl.yaml - add new "if:then:else:" to narrow for google SoC
- samsung,pinctrl-wakeup-interrupt.yaml - Alphanumerical order
- samsung,pinctrl- add google,gs101-wakeup-eint compatible
- clk-pll: fixup typos
- clk-gs101: fix kernel test robot warnings (add 2 new clocks,dividers,gate)
- clk-gs101: fix alphabetical order
- clk-gs101: cmu_apm: fixup typo and missing empty entry
- clk-gs101: cmu_misc: remove clocks that were being registerred twice
- pinctrl: filter sel: rename/reorder variables, add comment for FLTCON bitfield
- pinctrl: filter sel: avoid setting reserved bits by loop over FLTCON1 pins as well
- pinctrl: gs101: rename bank_type_6/7 structs to be more specific, split from filter
- watchdog: s3c2410_wdt: remove dev_info prints
- gs101.dtsi/oriole.dts: order by unit node, remove underscores from node name, blank lines
add SoC node, split dts and dtsi into separate patches, remove 'DVT' suffix
- gs101-oriole.dtso: Remove overlay until board_id is documented properly
- Add GS101_PIN_* macros to gs101-pinctrl.h instead of using Exynos ones
- gpio-keys: update linux,code to use input-event-code macros
- add dedicated gs101-uart compatible
Peter Griffin (20):
dt-bindings: soc: samsung: exynos-pmu: Add gs101 compatible
dt-bindings: clock: Add Google gs101 clock management unit bindings
dt-bindings: soc: google: exynos-sysreg: add dedicated SYSREG
compatibles to GS101
dt-bindings: watchdog: Document Google gs101 & gs201 watchdog bindings
dt-bindings: arm: google: Add bindings for Google ARM platforms
dt-bindings: pinctrl: samsung: add google,gs101-pinctrl compatible
dt-bindings: pinctrl: samsung: add gs101-wakeup-eint compatible
dt-bindings: serial: samsung: Add google-gs101-uart compatible
clk: samsung: clk-pll: Add support for pll_{0516,0517,518}
clk: samsung: clk-gs101: Add cmu_top registers, plls, mux and gates
clk: samsung: clk-gs101: add CMU_APM support
clk: samsung: clk-gs101: Add support for CMU_MISC clock unit
pinctrl: samsung: Add filter selection support for alive banks
pinctrl: samsung: Add gs101 SoC pinctrl configuration
watchdog: s3c2410_wdt: Add support for Google tensor SoCs
tty: serial: samsung: Add gs101 compatible and SoC data
arm64: dts: google: Add initial Google gs101 SoC support
arm64: dts: google: Add initial Oriole/pixel 6 board support
arm64: defconfig: Enable Google Tensor SoC
MAINTAINERS: add entry for Google Tensor SoC
.../devicetree/bindings/arm/google.yaml | 46 +
.../bindings/clock/google,gs101-clock.yaml | 125 +
.../samsung,pinctrl-wakeup-interrupt.yaml | 2 +
.../bindings/pinctrl/samsung,pinctrl.yaml | 19 +
.../bindings/serial/samsung_uart.yaml | 2 +
.../bindings/soc/samsung/exynos-pmu.yaml | 2 +
.../soc/samsung/samsung,exynos-sysreg.yaml | 6 +
.../bindings/watchdog/samsung-wdt.yaml | 10 +-
MAINTAINERS | 10 +
arch/arm64/Kconfig.platforms | 6 +
arch/arm64/boot/dts/Makefile | 1 +
arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/Makefile | 4 +
arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/gs101-oriole.dts | 79 +
arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/gs101-pinctrl.dtsi | 1275 ++++++++++
arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/gs101-pinctrl.h | 32 +
arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/gs101.dtsi | 503 ++++
arch/arm64/configs/defconfig | 1 +
drivers/clk/samsung/Kconfig | 9 +
drivers/clk/samsung/Makefile | 2 +
drivers/clk/samsung/clk-gs101.c | 2164 +++++++++++++++++
drivers/clk/samsung/clk-pll.c | 9 +-
drivers/clk/samsung/clk-pll.h | 3 +
.../pinctrl/samsung/pinctrl-exynos-arm64.c | 163 ++
drivers/pinctrl/samsung/pinctrl-exynos.c | 84 +-
drivers/pinctrl/samsung/pinctrl-exynos.h | 41 +
drivers/pinctrl/samsung/pinctrl-samsung.c | 4 +
drivers/pinctrl/samsung/pinctrl-samsung.h | 24 +
drivers/tty/serial/samsung_tty.c | 12 +
drivers/watchdog/s3c2410_wdt.c | 104 +-
include/dt-bindings/clock/google,gs101.h | 232 ++
30 files changed, 4961 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/google.yaml
create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/google,gs101-clock.yaml
create mode 100644 arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/Makefile
create mode 100644 arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/gs101-oriole.dts
create mode 100644 arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/gs101-pinctrl.dtsi
create mode 100644 arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/gs101-pinctrl.h
create mode 100644 arch/arm64/boot/dts/google/gs101.dtsi
create mode 100644 drivers/clk/samsung/clk-gs101.c
create mode 100644 include/dt-bindings/clock/google,gs101.h
- Maksym