On Thu, Oct 27, 2016 at 11:22 AM, Imran Khan <kimran@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The SoC info driver provides information such as Chip ID, > Chip family, serial number and other such details about > Qualcomm SoCs. > > Signed-off-by: Imran Khan <kimran@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> I like this patch. It is good to know stuff about the hardware. (...) > +++ b/drivers/soc/qcom/socinfo.c (...) > +#include <linux/export.h> > +#include <linux/module.h> > +#include <linux/err.h> > +#include <linux/of.h> > +#include <linux/platform_device.h> > +#include <linux/sys_soc.h> Uses <linux/sys_soc.h> so you should definately get Lee Jones to review this. > +/* > + * Qcom SoC IDs > + */ > +enum qcom_cpu_id { > + MSM_UNKNOWN_ID, > + MSM_8960_ID = 87, > + APQ_8064_ID = 109, > + MSM_8660A_ID = 122, > + MSM_8260A_ID, > + APQ_8060A_ID, > + MSM_8974_ID = 126, > + MPQ_8064_ID = 130, > + MSM_8960AB_ID = 138, > + APQ_8060AB_ID, > + MSM_8260AB_ID, > + MSM_8660AB_ID, > + APQ_8084_ID = 178, > + APQ_8074_ID = 184, > + MSM_8274_ID, > + MSM_8674_ID, > + MSM_8974PRO_ID = 194, > + MSM_8916_ID = 206, > + APQ_8074_AA_ID = 208, > + APQ_8074_AB_ID, > + APQ_8074PRO_ID, > + MSM_8274_AA_ID, > + MSM_8274_AB_ID, > + MSM_8274PRO_ID, > + MSM_8674_AA_ID, > + MSM_8674_AB_ID, > + MSM_8674PRO_ID, > + MSM_8974_AA_ID, > + MSM_8974_AB_ID, > + MSM_8996_ID = 246, > + APQ_8016_ID, > + MSM_8216_ID, > + MSM_8116_ID, > + MSM_8616_ID, > + APQ8096_ID = 291, > + MSM_8996SG_ID = 305, > + MSM_8996AU_ID = 310, > + APQ_8096AU_ID, > + APQ_8096SG_ID > +}; Seems to support everything and its dog. Good job! Now I guess I first have to support smem on my pet peeves (MSM8660 and APQ8060) for this to work. > +enum hw_platform_type { > + HW_PLATFORM_UNKNOWN, > + HW_PLATFORM_SURF, > + HW_PLATFORM_FFA, > + HW_PLATFORM_FLUID, > + HW_PLATFORM_SVLTE_FFA, > + HW_PLATFORM_SVLTE_SURF, > + HW_PLATFORM_MTP_MDM = 7, > + HW_PLATFORM_MTP, > + HW_PLATFORM_LIQUID, > + /* Dragonboard platform id is assigned as 10 in CDT */ > + HW_PLATFORM_DRAGON, I guess that is not "my" dragonboard generation 1 with the APQ8060 but rather the APQ8074 Dragonboard? Is mine just a variant of SURF then... I dunno. Will be interesting to see what number it has in its hardware. > +#ifdef CONFIG_SOC_BUS Why not just select that in Kconfig and get rid of this #ifdef? > +int qcom_socinfo_init(void *info) > +{ > + socinfo = info; > + > + socinfo_select_format(); > + > + WARN(!socinfo_get_id(), "Unknown SOC ID!\n"); > + > + WARN(socinfo_get_id() >= ARRAY_SIZE(cpu_of_id), > + "New IDs added! ID => CPU mapping needs an update.\n"); > + > + socinfo_print(); > + > + socinfo_init_sysfs(); > + > + return 0; > +} > +EXPORT_SYMBOL(qcom_socinfo_init); So something I've been adding to drivers that handle any kind of device-unique numbers is: #include <linux/random.h> /* Toss the unique data into the entropy pool */ add_device_randomness(buf, sizeof(buf)); Can you do this here in init() with the register that are *device unique* because I guess not all of them are? Yours, Linus Walleij -- 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