On Wed, 26 Aug 2015, Fu Wei wrote: > >> /* Initialize per-processor generic timer */ > >> -static int __init arch_timer_acpi_init(struct acpi_table_header *table) > >> +void __init arch_timer_acpi_init(void) > >> { > > > > And how is that supposed to work when we have next generation CPUs > > which implement a different timer? You break multisystem kernels that > > way. > > yes, you are right, If there is a next generation CPUs which > implement a different timer, (maybe) this driver can not work. > we may need a new timer driver. > > But, > (1) for now, aarch64 core always has the arch timer(this timer is > part of aarch64 architecture). > and the existing code make ARM64 kernel "select ARM_ARCH_TIMER " > (2) GTDT is designed for generic timer, so in this call " > arch_timer_acpi_init" we parse the gtdt info. > (3) once we have a ARM64 CPUs which implement a different timer, we > may need to select a right timer in the config stage. > and this timer may not be described in GTDT. So we can implement > another arch_timer_acpi_init by that time in new timer driver.. > if the new time still uses GTDT(or new version GTDT), we may need to > update gtdt.c for new timer by that time. That's simply wrong. You want to build kernels which run on both cpus and the selection of the timer happens at runtime depending on the ACPI info. We do the same thing with device tree. > but before we really have this new timer, I think this code is OK to use. I don't think so, but I leave this decision to the ARM64 maintainers. Thanks, tglx -- 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