Re: [PATCH 3/3] arm64: dts: Add dts files for Hisilicon Hi6220 SoC

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On Fri, Feb 06, 2015 at 08:42:22AM +0000, Brent Wang wrote:
> Hello Mark,
> 
> 2015-02-06 3:30 GMT+08:00 Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@xxxxxxx>:
> > On Thu, Feb 05, 2015 at 09:24:37AM +0000, Bintian Wang wrote:
> >> Add initial dtsi file to support Hisilicon Hi6220 SoC with
> >> support of Octal core CPUs in two clusters and each cluster
> >> has quard Cortex-A53.
> >>
> >> We now use the "spin-table" method for SMP, and it will be
> >> changed to PSCI later.
> >
> > If that's the case, please don't place the enable-method and related
> > properties in this file. Get your bootloader to add the appropriate
> > properties for its boot protocol.
> >
> > When is PSCI likely to appear?
> PSCI is under development.

Sure. Do you have an estimate as to when it will appear?

What are you using for your PSCI implementation? The ARM Trusted
Firmware?

How are you testing it?

> > Are we certain of the split between components the PSCI implementation
> > must touch and those the kernel must touch?
> >
> >> Also add dts file to support HiKey development board which
> >> based on Hi6220 SoC and document the devicetree bindings.
> >>
> >> These dts files will be changed later and more nodes will be
> >> added to describe other devices.
> >
> > How is this going to be changed other than the addition of nodes?
> >
> > Will this DTB continue to work in future? Or do you intend to make
> > changes that will break support?
> My original idea is: use spin-table for SMP now, when firmware is OK to
> support PSCI, we submit another patch to replace the spin-table with PSCI.

For any users who have not updated their FW, this will break booting.

This is why I suggest having hte bootloader/FW fill this in as it should
know what enable-method the FW supports.

> If DTB should continue to work in the future, we really need to remove
> the spin-table
> from current dts file, how about just enable one core now?
> 
> Which one do you favor or any other suggestion?

If spin-table is just for testing while you await PSCI, drop spin-table
from the dts for now.

[...]

> >> +     timer {
> >> +             compatible = "arm,armv8-timer";
> >> +             interrupt-parent = <&gic>;
> >> +             interrupts = <1 13 0xff08>,
> >> +                          <1 14 0xff08>,
> >> +                          <1 11 0xff08>,
> >> +                          <1 10 0xff08>;
> >> +             clock-frequency = <1200000>;
> >> +     };
> >
> > NAK. Fix your firmware to configure CNTFRQ, on all CPUs.
> Fix in next version, maybe it will take some time to change firmware.

Thanks. This _must_ be fixed.

[...]

> >> +             pm_ctrl: pm_ctrl {
> >> +                     compatible = "hisilicon,pmctrl", "syscon";
> >> +                     #address-cells = <1>;
> >> +                     #size-cells = <1>;
> >> +                     reg = <0x0 0xf7032000 0x0 0x1000>;
> >> +                     ranges = <0 0x0 0xf7032000 0x1000>;
> >> +
> >> +                     clock_power: clock3@0 {
> >> +                             compatible = "hisilicon,hi6220-clock-power";
> >> +                             reg = <0 0x1000>;
> >> +                             #clock-cells = <1>;
> >> +                     };
> >> +             };
> >
> > I really doesn't see the point in having a sub-device that covers the
> > entirely of the register space of the containing node, and that being
> > the case I am extremely concerned that the containers are marked as
> > syscon compatible.
> The SoC clocks are designed and placed under different system controllers,
> so I define corresponding nodes under different controllers for clock operation.

What I'm concerned wit hhere is that the pm_ctrl node and the clock3@0
sub-node have the _exact_ same register space.

Given this should mean that the clock3@0 node owns that register space,
having the container node export this as syscon does not make sense. And
the split between pm_ctrl and clock3@) doesn't seem to make sense given
they cover the same space.

As I asked before, why is pm_ctrl marked as a syscon, and what's the
point of the separate sub-node?

Thanks,
Mark.
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