On Fri, 8 Mar 2024 at 17:19, Kalle Valo <kvalo@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Dmitry Baryshkov <dmitry.baryshkov@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > >> To be on the safe side using 'qcom-rb1' makes sense but on the other > >> hand that means we need to update linux-firmware (basically add a new > >> symlink) everytime a new product is added. But are there going to be > >> that many new ath10k based products? > >> > >> Using 'qcm2290' is easier because for a new product then there only > >> needs to be a change in DTS and no need to change anything > >> linux-firmware. But here the risk is that if there's actually two > >> different ath10k firmware branches for 'qcm2290'. If that ever happens > >> (I hope not) I guess we could solve that by adding new 'qcm2290-foo' > >> directory? > >> > >> But I don't really know, thoughts? > > > > After some thought, I'd suggest to follow approach taken by the rest > > of qcom firmware: > > Can you provide pointers to those cases? https://gitlab.com/kernel-firmware/linux-firmware/-/tree/main/qcom/sc8280xp/LENOVO/21BX > > > put a default (accepted by non-secured hardware) firmware to SoC dir > > and then put a vendor-specific firmware into subdir. If any of such > > vendors appear, we might even implement structural fallback: first > > look into sdm845/Google/blueline, then in sdm845/Google, sdm845/ and > > finally just under hw1.0. > > Honestly that looks quite compilicated compared to having just one > sub-directory. How will ath10k find the directory names (or I vendor and > model names) like 'Google' or 'blueline' in this example? I was thinking about the firmware-name = "sdm845/Google/blueline". But this can be really simpler, firmware-name = "blueline" or "sdm845/blueline" with no need for fallbacks. My point is that the firmware-name provides the possibility to handle that in different ways. -- With best wishes Dmitry