On Sun, Jan 7, 2024 at 3:27 PM Mark Brown <broonie@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Sun, Jan 07, 2024 at 04:43:56PM +0000, Jonathan Cameron wrote: > > David Lechner <dlechner@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > This adds a new spi-rx-bus-channels property to the generic spi > > > peripheral property bindings. This property is used to describe > > > devices that have parallel data output channels. > > > > This property is different from spi-rx-bus-width in that the latter > > > means that we are reading multiple bits of a single word at one time > > > while the former means that we are reading single bits of multiple words > > > at the same time. > > > Mark, could you take a look at this SPI binding change when you have time? > > Please submit patches using subject lines reflecting the style for the > subsystem, this makes it easier for people to identify relevant patches. > Look at what existing commits in the area you're changing are doing and > make sure your subject lines visually resemble what they're doing. > There's no need to resubmit to fix this alone. Are you saying that `spi: dt-bindings:` should be preferred over `dt-bindings: spi:`? I thought I was doing it right since I was following the guidelines of [1] which says: > The preferred subject prefix for binding patches is: > "dt-bindings: <binding dir>: ..." [1]: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html//v6.7/devicetree/bindings/submitting-patches.html > > > I don't want to apply it without your view on whether this makes sense > > from a general SPI point of view as we all hate maintaining bindings > > if they turn out to not be sufficiently future looking etc and we need > > to deprecate them in favour of something else. > > This makes no sense to me without a corresponding change in the SPI core > and possibly controller support, though I guess you could do data > manging to rewrite from a normal parallel SPI to this for a pure > software implementation. I also see nothing in the driver that even > attempts to parse this so I can't see how it could possibly work. We currently don't have a controller that supports this. This is just an attempt to make a complete binding for a peripheral according to [2] which says: > DO attempt to make bindings complete even if a driver doesn't support some features [2]: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html//v6.7/devicetree/bindings/writing-bindings.html So, will DT maintainers accept an incomplete binding for the peripheral? Or will you reconsider this without SPI core support if I can explain it better? It doesn't seem like a reasonable request to expect us to spend time developing software that we don't need at this time just to get a complete DT binding accepted for a feature that isn't being used. In the SPI core, I would expect this property to correspond to new flags `SPI_RX_2_CH`, `SPI_RX_4_CH`, `SPI_RX_8_CH` and it would have checks similar to other flags to make sure controller supports the flag if the peripheral requires it. Likewise, struct spi_transfer would probably need a rx_n_ch field similar to rx_nbits to specify if individual xfers use the feature. But beyond that, yes I agree it would be difficult to say how it should work without implementing it on actual hardware.