Hi Felipe, On Tue, Jan 21, 2014 at 08:47:25AM -0600, Felipe Balbi wrote: > On Tue, Jan 21, 2014 at 03:41:38PM +0530, Kishon Vijay Abraham I wrote: > > Since PHYs for dwc3 is optional (not all SoCs that have DWC3 use PHYs), > > do not return from probe if the USB PHY library returns -ENODEV as that > > this isn't correct, they all have PHYs, some of them might not be > controllable. > > > indicates the platform does not have PHY. > > not really, that indicates the current platform tried to grab a PHY and > the PHY doesn't exist. If there's anybody with a non-controllable PHY > and someone gives me a really good reason for not using the generic > no-op PHY, then we should add a flag and we could: > > if (!likely(dwc->flags & DWC3_USB2PHY_DRIVER_NOT_NEEDED)) > dwc3_grab_phys(dwc); Why would you need to know if the PHY drivers are needed or not explicitly in your controller driver? > But I really want to see the argument against using no-op. As far as I > could see, everybody needs a PHY driver one way or another, some > platforms just haven't sent any PHY driver upstream and have their own > hacked up solution to avoid using the PHY layer. Not true in our case. Platforms using Intel's SoCs and chip sets may or may not have controllable USB PHY. Quite often they don't. The Baytrails have usually ULPI PHY for USB2, but that does not mean they provide any vendor specific functions or any need for a driver in any case. Are we talking about the old USB PHY library or the new PHY framework with the no-op PHY driver? Well, in any case, I don't understand what is the purpose of the no-op PHY driver. What are you drying to achieve with that? Thanks, -- heikki -- 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