On Wed, Feb 14, 2024 at 05:17:04PM -0800, Guenter Roeck wrote: > On 2/14/24 11:55, Conor Dooley wrote: > [ ... ] > > > > Why "vout0" if there's only one output? Is it called that in the > > > > documentation? I had a quick check but only saw it called "vout". > > > > Are there other related devices that would have multiple regulators > > > > that might end up sharing the binding? > > > > > > > > > > Primarily because that is what the PMBus core generates for the driver > > > because no one including me was aware that this is unacceptable > > > for single-output drivers. > > > > Is it unacceptable? If you're implying that I am saying it is, that's > > not what I was doing here - I'm just wondering why it was chosen. > > Numbering when there's only one seems odd, so I was just looking for the > > rationale. > > > > Given the tendency of corporate speak (aka "this was a good attempt" for > a complete screwup), and since this did come up before, I did interpret > it along that line. My apologies if that was not the idea. I'm not gonna go and decree that "vout0" is unacceptable, if it was called that in documentation that I had missed or was convention, I was just gonna say "okay, that sounds reasonable to me". > Still, I really don't know how to resolve this for existing PMBus drivers > which do register "vout0" even if there is only a single output regulator. I had a quick look at that series, none of the devices that I checked out there seem to have documented regulators at all. Some of the devices were only documented in trivial-devices.yaml. Relying on the naming of undocumented child nodes is a bug in those drivers & I guess nobody cares about dtbs_check complaints for those platforms. The example that was linked in the other thread doesn't even use a valid compatible :( https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed/aspeed-bmc-delta-ahe50dc.dts?id=8d3dea210042f54b952b481838c1e7dfc4ec751d#n21 I guess it uses the i2c device ids to probe on that platform, or have I missed something there? Cheers, Conor.
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