(non-html) > Am 06.12.2023 um 17:15 schrieb Andrew Davis <afd@xxxxxx>: > > On 12/6/23 10:02 AM, Conor Dooley wrote: >> On Tue, Dec 05, 2023 at 07:04:05PM +0100, H. Nikolaus Schaller wrote: >>>> Am 05.12.2023 um 18:33 schrieb Andrew Davis <afd@xxxxxx>: >>>> >>>> On 12/5/23 2:17 AM, H. Nikolaus Schaller wrote: >>>>>> + - enum: >>>>>> + - ti,omap3430-gpu # Rev 121 >>>>>> + - ti,omap3630-gpu # Rev 125 >>>>> Is the "Rev 121" and "Rev 125" a property of the SoC integration (clock/reset/power >>>>> hookup etc.) or of the integrated SGX core? >>>> >>>> The Rev is a property of the SGX core, not the SoC integration. >>> >>> Then, it should belong there and not be a comment of the ti,omap*-gpu record. >>> In this way it does not seem to be a proper hardware description. >>> >>> BTW: there are examples where the revision is part of the compatible string, even >>> if the (Linux) driver makes no use of it: >>> >>> drivers/net/ethernet/xilinx/xilinx_emaclite.c >> AFAICT these Xilinx devices that put the revisions in the compatible are >> a different case - they're "soft" IP intended for use in the fabric of >> an FPGA, and assigning a device specific compatible there does not make >> sense. >> In this case it appears that the revision is completely known once you >> see "ti,omap3630-gpu", so encoding the extra "121" into the compatible >> string is not required. >>> >>>> But it seems that >>>> compatible string is being used to define both (as we see being debated in the other >>>> thread on this series). >>>> >>>>> In my understanding the Revs are different variants of the SGX core (errata >>>>> fixes, instruction set, pipeline size etc.). And therefore the current driver code >>>>> has to be configured by some macros to handle such cases. >>>>> So the Rev should IMHO be part of the next line: >>>>>> + - const: img,powervr-sgx530 >>>>> + - enum: >>>>> + - img,powervr-sgx530-121 >>>>> + - img,powervr-sgx530-125 >>>>> We have a similar definition in the openpvrsgx code. >>>>> Example: compatible = "ti,omap3-sgx530-121", "img,sgx530-121", "img,sgx530"; >>>>> (I don't mind about the powervr- prefix). >>>>> This would allow a generic and universal sgx driver (loaded through just matching >>>>> "img,sgx530") to handle the errata and revision specifics at runtime based on the >>>>> compatible entry ("img,sgx530-121") and know about SoC integration ("ti,omap3-sgx530-121"). >> The "raw" sgx530 compatible does not seem helpful if the sgx530-121 or >> sgx530-125 compatibles are also required to be present for the driver to >> actually function. The revision specific compatibles I would not object >> to, but everything in here has different revisions anyway - does the >> same revision actually appear in multiple devices? If it doesn't then I >> don't see any value in the suffixed compatibles either. > > Everything here has different revisions because any device that uses > the same revision can also use the same base compatible string. For > instance AM335x SoCs use the SGX530 revision 125, same as OMAP3630, > so I simply reuse that compatible in their DT as you can see in > patch [5/10]. I didn't see the need for a new compatible string > for identical (i.e. "compatible") IP and integration. Ok, this is a point. As long as there is no SoC which can come with different SGX revisions the SoC compatible is enough for everything. I never looked it that way. > > The first device to use that IP/revision combo gets the named > compatible, all others re-use the same compatible where possible. Hm. If we take this rule, we can even completely leave out all + - const: img,powervr-sgx530 + - const: img,powervr-sgx540 + - const: img,powervr-sgx544 and just have a list of allsgx compatible SoC: + - items: + - enum: + - ti,am62-gpu # IMG AXE GPU model/revision is fully discoverable + - ti,omap3430-gpu # sgx530 Rev 121 + - ti,omap3630-gpu # sgx530 Rev 125 + - ingenic,jz4780-gpu # sgx540 Rev 130 + - ti,omap4430-gpu # sgx540 Rev 120 + - allwinner,sun6i-a31-gpu # sgx544 MP2 Rev 115 + - ti,omap4470-gpu # sgx544 MP1 Rev 112 + - ti,omap5432-gpu # sgx544 MP2 Rev 105 + - ti,am5728-gpu # sgx544 MP2 Rev 116 + - ti,am6548-gpu # sgx544 MP1 Rev 117 + - more to come > > Andrew > >>>>> And user-space can be made to load the right firmware variant based on "img,sgx530-121" >>>>> I don't know if there is some register which allows to discover the revision long >>>>> before the SGX subsystem is initialized and the firmware is up and running. >>>>> What I know is that it is possible to read out the revision after starting the firmware >>>>> but it may just echo the version number of the firmware binary provided from user-space. >>>> >>>> We should be able to read out the revision (register EUR_CR_CORE_REVISION), the problem is >>>> today the driver is built for a given revision at compile time. >>> >>> Yes, that is something we had planned to get rid of for a long time by using different compatible >>> strings and some variant specific struct like many others drivers are doing it. >>> But it was a to big task so nobody did start with it. >>> >>>> That is a software issue, >>>> not something that we need to encode in DT. While the core ID (SGX5xx) can be also detected >>>> (EUR_CR_CORE_ID), the location of that register changes, and so it does need encoded in >>>> DT compatible. >>> >>> Ok, I didn't know about such registers as there is not much public information available. >>> Fair enough, there are some error reports about in different forums. >>> >>> On the other hand we then must read out this register in more or less early initialization >>> stages. Even if we know this information to be static and it could be as simple as a list >>> of compatible strings in the driver. >>> >>>> The string "ti,omap3430-gpu" tells us the revision if we cannot detect it (as in the current >>>> driver), and the SoC integration is generic anyway (just a reg and interrupt). >>> >>> It of course tells, but may need a translation table that needs to be maintained in a >>> different format. Basically the same what the comments show in a non-machine readable >>> format. >>> >>> I just wonder why the specific version can or should not become simply part of the DTS >>> and needs this indirection. >>> >>> Basically it is a matter of openness for future (driver) development and why it needs >>> careful decisions. >>> >>> So in other words: I would prefer to see the comments about versions encoded in the device >>> tree binary to make it machine readable. >> It's already machine readable if it is invariant on an SoC given the >> patch had SoC-specific compatibles. >