> And I would like to ask you about another issue raised by Vladimir [1]. > These phy chips become SoC with all these built-in PHYs, PCSs, clocks, > interrupt controllers, etc. Should we address this now? Or should we go with > the proposed solution for now and postpone modeling of other peripherals > until we get a real hardware, as Andrew suggested? > > I'm asking because it looks like we have got a real hardware. Luo currently > trying to push QCA8084 (multi-phy/switch chip) support, and this chip > exactly contains a huge clock/reset controller [2,3]. Ideally the reset controller is modelled as a Linux reset controller. The clock part of it is modelled using the common clock framework. When done correctly, the PHY should not really care. All it does is ask for its clock to be enabled, and its reset to be disabled. Also, given how difficult it is proving to be to make any progress at all, i want to get one little part correctly described, the pure PHY. Once we have that, we can start on the next little part. So long as we keep to the Linux architecture of blocks or hardware with standard Linux drivers, and DT to glue them together, a small step by step approach should work out. Andrew