On Wed, 25 Sep 2024 17:28:30 +0200 Guillaume Stols <gstols@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 9/24/24 16:59, Conor Dooley wrote: > > On Tue, Sep 24, 2024 at 04:41:50PM +0200, Guillaume Stols wrote: > >> On 9/21/24 23:55, Conor Dooley wrote: > >>> On Fri, Sep 20, 2024 at 05:33:22PM +0000, Guillaume Stols wrote: > >>>> The SPI conditions are not always required, because there is also a > >>>> parallel interface. The way used to detect that the SPI interface is > >>>> used is to check if the reg value is between 0 and 256. > >>> And, yaknow, not that the bus you're on is a spi bus? I don't think this > >>> comment is relevant to the binding, especially given you have a property > >>> for it. > >> Apologies, I missed to change the commit message, it will be fixed in the > >> next series. > >> > >> Since Jonathan did not like very much inferring the interface with the reg's > >> value that I used i the previous verison, I introduced this flag. > >> > >> However this is only intended to be use in bindings, to determine whether or > >> not spi properties should be added. > > To be honest, if it is not needed by software to understand what bus the > > device is on, it shouldn't be in the bindings at all. What was Jonathan > > opposed to? Doing an if reg < 1000: do y, otherwise do x? > > I'd not bother with any of that, and just make cpha (or w/e it was) > > optional with a description explaining the circumstances in which is it > > needed. > OK, it will be removed from the series and sent as a side patch because > it anyways does not really belong to this series. I can't remember the original thread (or immediately find it). So I may have this totally wrong. - I don't want checks on reg value to change how the binding works as that is a wieird corner and in theory this device could be at a small address anyway. - Fine to do as Conor suggests and just add a comment for this corner case rather than making it required. Jonathan > >> In the driver side of things, the bus interface is inferred by the parent's > >> node (SPI driver is an module_spi_driver while parallel driver is > >> module_platform_driver).