On 08/11/2024 14:58, Rob Herring wrote: > On Fri, Nov 8, 2024 at 8:33 AM Steven Price <steven.price@xxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On 08/11/2024 14:04, Rob Herring wrote: >>> On Fri, Nov 8, 2024 at 7:26 AM Steven Price <steven.price@xxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>> On 08/11/2024 11:04, Marek Szyprowski wrote: >>>>> Hi Rob, >>>>> >>>>> On 06.11.2024 18:10, Rob Herring (Arm) wrote: >>>>>> While OpenFirmware originally allowed walking parent nodes and default >>>>>> root values for #address-cells and #size-cells, FDT has long required >>>>>> explicit values. It's been a warning in dtc for the root node since the >>>>>> beginning (2005) and for any parent node since 2007. Of course, not all >>>>>> FDT uses dtc, but that should be the majority by far. The various >>>>>> extracted OF devicetrees I have dating back to the 1990s (various >>>>>> PowerMac, OLPC, PASemi Nemo) all have explicit root node properties. The >>>>>> warning is disabled for Sparc as there are known systems relying on >>>>>> default root node values. >>>>>> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Rob Herring (Arm) <robh@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>>> --- >>>>>> v2: >>>>>> - Add a define for excluded platforms to help clarify the intent >>>>>> is to have an exclude list and make adding platforms easier. >>>>>> - Also warn when walking parent nodes. >>>>>> --- >>>>>> drivers/of/base.c | 28 ++++++++++++++++++++++------ >>>>>> drivers/of/fdt.c | 4 ++-- >>>>>> 2 files changed, 24 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) >>>>> >>>>> This patch landed in today's linux-next as commit 4b28a0dec185 ("of: >>>>> WARN on deprecated #address-cells/#size-cells handling"). In my tests I >>>>> found that it introduces warnings on almost all of my test systems. I >>>>> took a look at the first one I got in my logs (Samsung Exynos Rinato >>>>> board: arch/arm/boot/dts/samsung/exynos3250-rinato.dts): >>>> >>>> Just a "me too" for rk3288-firefly.dtb: >>>> >>>> [ 0.138735] WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 1 at drivers/of/base.c:106 of_bus_n_addr_cells+0x9c/0xd8 >>>> [ 0.138776] Missing '#address-cells' in /power-management@ff730000 >>>> >>>> I'm sure it's easy to fix up the DTB, but we shouldn't be breaking long existing DTBs. >>> >>> What broke? >> >> Nothing 'broke' as such (the board continued booting) but the WARN >> shouldn't be happening. My CI treats the WARN as a failure as these >> shouldn't occur unless there's a programming error. >> >>> The intent here is to exclude any platforms/arch which actually need >>> the deprecated behavior, not change DTBs. That's spelled out at the >>> WARN which I assume people would read before fixing "Missing >>> '#address-cells' in /power-management@ff730000". I tried to make the >>> warn message indicate that on v1 with: >>> >>> WARN_ONCE(!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_SPARC), "Only listed platforms should >>> rely on default '#address-cells'\n"); >> >> So one possibility is to include this platform in the exclusion list - >> but I'm not sure how to do that, I assume including CONFIG_ARM in the >> list would rather defeat the point of the patch. But my feeling is that >> it would involve a lot of playing whack-a-mole to identify individual >> platforms. > > Please see my posted fix in this thread. Things "broke" quite a bit > more widely than anticipated. Thanks for the pointer. Yes that fix seems to work for my board! Thanks, Steve >> One obvious idea would be to look at the DTBs in the kernel tree and see >> which are affected by this currently, that might be a good place to >> start with an exclusion list. > > It's been a dtc warning since 2007, so I can say all of the in tree > dts's are fine. The problem for these reported platforms is the > kernel, not the DT. > >> You could also downgrade the warning to a pr_warn() or similar. > > I find that pr_warn() may or may not get noticed, but WARN for sure > will which is what I want here. > > Rob