Hi Andrew, On 19/03/24 17:55, Andrew Lunn wrote:
The device tree defines the SPI controller associated with mikroBUS SPI pins. The driver on match queries and takes a reference to the SPI controller but does nothing with it. Once a mikroBUS add-on board is detected (by passing manifest using sysfs or reading from 1-wire EEPROM), the driver parses the manifest, and if it detects an SPI device in manifest, it registers SPI device along with setting properties such as `chip_select`, `max_speed_hz`, `mode`, etc.,How complex can the description of the hardware be in the manifest? Could i describe an SPI to I2C converter? And then a few temperature sensors, a fan controller, and a GPIO controller on that I2C bus? And the GPIO controller is then used for LEDs and a push button? DT overlays could describe that. Can the manifest?
No, it cannot describe such complex hardware, it can only describe simple devices (sensors/displays .etc) on a standard mikroBUS add-on board, we did a analysis on what mikroBUS add-on boards have driver support in Linux and then noticed that most devices does not need this kind of complex description to work:
https://elinux.org/MikroEClicks_with_Linux_SupportThe greybus manifest already is being used in the greybus susbystem for describing an interface and there are already greybus controllers (SPI/I2C .etc) being created according to the manifest contents, all this driver does is to extend that format to be able to instantiate devices on these buses. The primary goals for introducing the driver for mikroBUS add-on boards are:
1) A way to isolate platform specific information from add-on board specific information - so that each permutation of connecting the add-on board on different ports on different board does not require a new overlay. 2) A way to instantiate add-on boards on greybus created virtual mikroBUS ports.
3) Both 1 and 2 should use the same add-on board description format.Standard device tree overlays did not help to achieve this and that is why the standard interface discovery mechanism in greybus, the manifest was extended even though it is not the most optimal way to describe hardware.
The greybus manifest extensions were made with the following things in mind and three new descriptor were introduced:
1) mikrobus descriptor - pinmux/port state2) device descriptor - contains information which is a superset of struct i2c_board_info , struct spi_board_info .etc 3) property descriptor - to describe named properties of the types defined under https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/include/linux/property.h#n22
With these we were able to test around 150 add-on boards with corresponding drivers in Linux : https://github.com/MikroElektronika/click_id/tree/main/manifests
The mechanism is not as robust a device tree and should not be compared, the intent was not to create a new hardware description format, but extend the existing greybus manifest format to be able to instantiate devices on the greybus SPI/I2C/GPIO/ (mikroBUS)
Thanks and Regards, Vaishnav
Andrew
_______________________________________________ greybus-dev mailing list -- greybus-dev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to greybus-dev-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx