On Wed, Feb 2, 2022 at 7:14 PM Verdun, Jean-Marie <verdun@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > This is far too big for a single patch. It needs to be broken into > > functional chunks that can be reviewed individually. Each driver and > > each device tree change along with it's accompanying code need to be > > done in individual patches. The way it is it can't be reviewed in any > > sane manner. > > > -corey > > Thanks for your feedback. We are getting a little bit lost here, as our plan was to submit initial > > - bindings > - dts for SoC and 1 board > - initial platform init code > > Then drivers code avoiding to send many dts updates which might complexify the > review. We wanted to send all drivers code to relevant reviewers by tomorrow. > > So, what you are asking ( do not worry I am not trying to negotiate, I just want > to avoid English misunderstandings as I am French) is to send per driver > > - binding > - dts update > - driver code > > For each driver through different submission (with each of them containing the > 3 associated parts) ? > > What shall be the initial one in our case as we are introducing a platform ? > An empty dts infrastructure and then we make it grow one step at a time ? Ideally, what I prefer to see is a series of patches for all "essential" drivers and the platform code that includes: - one patch for each new binding - one patch for each new driver - one patch that hooks up arch/arm/mach-hpe/, MAINTAINERS and any other changes to arch/arm/ other than dts - one patch that adds the initial .dts and .dtsi files, with all the devices added that have a valid binding, no need to split this up any further This should include everything you need to boot into an initramfs shell, typically cpu, serial, timer, clk, pinctrl, gpio, irqchip. We will merge these as a git branch in the soc tree. In parallel, you can work with subsystem maintainers for the "non-essential" drivers to review any other driver and binding, e.g. drm/kms, network, i2c, pci, usb, etc. The patches for the corresponding .dts additions also go through the soc tree, but to make things simpler, you can send those in for a later release. Arnd