On 10/14/2013 08:00 AM, Thierry Reding wrote: > On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 08:58:34AM +0300, Terje Bergström wrote: >> On 12.10.2013 01:43, Stephen Warren wrote: >>> On 10/07/2013 02:34 AM, Thierry Reding wrote: >>>> The gr2d hardware in Tegra114 is compatible with that of >>>> Tegra20 and Tegra30. No functionaly changes are required. >>> Similarly here, if the HW is 100% backwards-compatible, there's >>> no need to add compatible values to the driver. >> >> We've used this mechanism for attaching a per-hw-version data >> structure in match table to accomodate differences in how the >> hardware is power gated, reset, booted, some per-soc performance >> related changes etc. It's also used in staging features for new >> chips, such as disabling power features when they're not >> working/verified yet. >> >> Upstream driver is not yet in a state where that is relevant. >> >> With this, would we still be able to do that with match table? It >> sounds like we could, because we can still (even with multiple >> compatible properties) add separate entries in match table and I >> guess the compatible properties matched in order. > > Yes, as long as the device tree files includes the most specific > value in the compatible this should still be possible. So we'd have > this: > > gr2d@54140000 { compatible = "nvida,tegra114-gr2d", > "nvidia,tegra20-gr2d"; ... }; > > and the driver will match on "nvidia,tegra20-gr2d" if the more > specific "nvidia,tegra114-gr2d" is not there. When the driver is > updated to support Tegra114 specific functionality, then a more > specific entry can be added to the compatible table to handle it. True, but the DT fragment above is also only accurate /if/ a driver that only knows about "nvidia,tegra20-gr2d" can operate 100% of the features in Tegra20 HW on Tegra114 HW forever. _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel