On Tue, 16 Apr 2013 15:48:07 +0530, Kishon Vijay Abraham I <kishon@xxxxxx> wrote: > On Tuesday 16 April 2013 01:20 AM, Grant Likely wrote: > > On Mon, 15 Apr 2013 17:56:10 +0530, Kishon Vijay Abraham I <kishon@xxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Monday 15 April 2013 05:04 PM, Grant Likely wrote: > >>> On Wed, 20 Mar 2013 14:42:00 +0530, Kishon Vijay Abraham I <kishon@xxxxxx> wrote: > >> We have decided not to implement the PHY layer as a separate bus layer. > >> The PHY provider can be part of any other bus. Making the PHY layer as a > >> bus will make the PHY provider to be part of multiple buses which will > >> lead to bad design. All we are trying to do here is keep the pool of PHY > >> devices under PHY class in this layer and help any controller that wants > >> to use the PHY to get it. > > > > If you're using a class, then you already have your list of registered > > phy devices! :-) No need to create another global list that you need to > > manage. > > right. We already use _class_dev_iter_ for finding the phy device. > . > . > +static struct phy *of_phy_lookup(struct device *dev, struct device_node > *node) > +{ > + struct phy *phy; > + struct class_dev_iter iter; > + > + class_dev_iter_init(&iter, phy_class, NULL, NULL); > + while ((dev = class_dev_iter_next(&iter))) { > + phy = container_of(dev, struct phy, dev); > + if (node != phy->of_node) > + continue; > + > + class_dev_iter_exit(&iter); > + return phy; > + } > + > + class_dev_iter_exit(&iter); > + return ERR_PTR(-EPROBE_DEFER); > +} > . > . > > however we can't get rid of the other list (phy_bind_list) where we > maintain the phy binding information. It's used for the non-dt boot case. Why? If you're using a class, then it is always there. Why would non-DT and DT be different in this regard? (more below) > >>> Since there is at most a 1:N relationship between host controllers and > >>> PHYs, there shouldn't be any need for a separate structure to describe > >>> binding. Put the inding data into the struct phy itself. Each host > >>> controller can have a list of phys that it is bound to. > >> > >> No. Having the host controller to have a list of phys wont be a good > >> idea IMHO. The host controller is just an IP and the PHY to which it > >> will be connected can vary from board to board, platform to platform. So > >> ideally this binding should come from platform initialization code/dt data. > > > > That is not what I mean. I mean the host controller instance should > > contain a list of all the PHYs that are attached to it. There should not > > Doesn't sound correct IMO. The host controller instance need not know > anything about the PHY instances that is connected to it. Think of it > similar to regulator, the controller wouldn't know which regulator it is > connected to, all it has to know is it just has a regulator connected to > it. It's up-to the regulator framework to give the controller the > correct regulator. It's similar here. It makes sense for me to keep a > list in the PHY framework in order for it to return the correct PHY (but > note that this list is not needed for dt boot). With regulators and clocks it makes sense to have a global registration place becase both implement an interconnected network independent of the device that use them. (clocks depend on other clocks; regulators depend on other regulators). Phys are different. There is a 1:N relationship between host controllers and phys, and you don't get a interconnected network of PHYs. Its a bad idea to keep the binding data separate from the actual host controller when there is nothing else that actually needs to use the data. It creates a new set of data structures that need housekeeping to keep them in sync with the actual device structures. It really is just a bad idea and it becomes more difficult (in the non-DT case) to determine what data is associated with a given host controller. You can't tell by looking at the struct device. Instead, for the non-DT case, do what we've always done for describing connections. Put the phy reference into the host controllers platform_data structure. That is what it is there for. That completely eliminates the need to housekeep a new set of data structures. g. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html