Hi, I am working on a thermal driver which needs to be able to read a temperature threshold from a device tree property. The hardware supports thresholds in the range -204.8 to +204.7 C in 0.1 C steps. I have found, as I am sure others have as well, that dtc treats a '-' before an integer in a dtsi file as a syntax error. Therefore, I need some artificial way to represent negative numbers in device tree. Here are the possibilities that I have thought of so far: 1. Use a second integer to specify the sign of the threshold: 20000 mC --> <0 20000> -20000 mC --> <1 20000> 2. Use a string instead of an integer to specify the threshold and then convert it to an integer in the driver software: 20000 mC --> "20000" -20000 mC --> "-20000" 3. Use units of millikelvin instead of millicelcius. 0 mC == 273150 mK 20000 mC --> <293150> -20000 mC --> <253150> 4. Use an arbitrary offset e.g. 0 mC == 1000000 20000 mC --> <1020000> -20000 mC --> <980000> 5. Use the unsigned 32-bit representation for 2’s-compliment signed 32-bit integer 20000 mC --> <20000> -20000 mC --> <0xffffb1e0> or <4294947296> Which of these options would you recommend using? Is there any better way to handle negative values that I haven’t listed? What is the best general case solution for specifying negative numbers in device tree? Thanks, David -- The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, hosted by The Linux Foundation -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arm-msm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html