On 13.01.2016 13:07, Laxman Dewangan wrote: > > On Wednesday 13 January 2016 05:36 AM, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: >> On 12.01.2016 18:17, Laxman Dewangan wrote: >>> Maxim Semiconductor's PMIC MAX77620, MAX77686, MAX20024 have >>> same RTC IP on these PMICs. >>> >>> Add generic MAX77xxxx series RTC driver which can be used as >>> RTC driver for these PMIC and avoids duplication of RTC driver >>> for each PMICs. Their MFD driver can be different here. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Laxman Dewangan <ldewangan@xxxxxxxxxx> >>> --- >>> Changes from V1: >>> - Rename the file to rtc-max77xxx.c and make the generic implementation. >>> - Direct regmap apis are used for the register access. >>> - Decouped from max77620 driver. >>> - Taken care of cleanup comments form V1 version. >>> >>> drivers/rtc/Kconfig | 10 + >>> drivers/rtc/Makefile | 1 + >>> drivers/rtc/rtc-max77xxx.c | 500 >>> +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >>> 3 files changed, 511 insertions(+) >>> create mode 100644 drivers/rtc/rtc-max77xxx.c >>> >>> diff --git a/drivers/rtc/Kconfig b/drivers/rtc/Kconfig >>> index 376322f..4972dd5 100644 >>> --- a/drivers/rtc/Kconfig >>> +++ b/drivers/rtc/Kconfig >>> @@ -315,6 +315,16 @@ config RTC_DRV_MAX8997 >>> This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module >>> will be called rtc-max8997. >>> +config RTC_DRV_MAX77XXX >>> + tristate "Maxim MAX77XXX series generic RTC driver" >>> + help >>> + If you say yes here you will get support for the generic RTC >>> driver >>> + for Maxim Semiconductor MAX77XXX series of PMIC like MAX77620. >>> + This also supports the RTC driver for Maxim PMIC MaX20024 which >>> + is almost same as MAX77620. >>> + This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module >>> + will be called rtc-max77xxx. >>> + >> That was not the consensus... You still added a new driver - but now >> with different name. >> >> That is useless duplication >> >> Please work with existing code. Use existing maxim RTC drivers: either >> max77686 or max77802. >> >> There is no need for new one. > > If we modify the existing one then that work will be outside of this > series to make it independent. And that is the problem? The series evolve. The ultimate goal is to support max77686, max77802, max77620 and max20024. > > However, the file name does not suggest common in older file. This is not a sensible argument. The name does not matter. But if really needed we can rename it... > Also this > will require mfd and rtc driver changes to decouple it. Yes, decouple everything! I like it! :) Make it robust, generic, readable, fix bugs etc. :) > > Here is my approach: > - Let's have common driver in implementation and file name. This will be > independent of the mfd driver on all sense. > - Once it is merged, move the max77686 and max77802 to use this driver, > this will need the modification on the mfd driver, related defconfig > file and if specific stuff needed in the rtc then addition of that. Nope, because *the second part won't happen*. Never. After merging you will be happy and another duplicated stuff ends in the kernel. Fix things before merging. Not after. > > Per your approach: > - Modify rtc max77686 and mfd driver max77686 to decouple and proper > registration. > - Add support of max77620 on the max77686 driver if any specific is > required. That is the way we usually extend the drivers for new devices. > > That is also fine to me but still I am not comfortable with the config > name and driver file name as this does not suggest the common. The name does not matter. Really. We have a lot of drivers with a specific device-like name and supporting different devices. To point that your argument is invalid - your initial name of driver "rtc-max77620.c" supported totally different "names": the max77620 and max20024. It also wasn't suggesting something "common"... With my approach we are not developing common think neither. We just want to extend/re-use existing max77686 (or max77802) driver for new devices. Just like everywhere else. Best regards, Krzysztof -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-gpio" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html