On Thu, 12 Jul 2018 06:41:15 +0200 Peter Rosin <peda@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > [tried to send something like this yesterday, but it appears to have been > lost, sorry for any duplicate] > > On 2018-07-11 19:12, Boris Brezillon wrote: > > On Wed, 11 Jul 2018 17:39:56 +0200 > > Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> On Wed, Jul 11, 2018 at 4:41 PM, Boris Brezillon > >> <boris.brezillon@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> On Wed, 11 Jul 2018 16:01:56 +0200 Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>> - the bus element is a separate object and is not implicitly described > >>>>> by the master (as done in I2C). The reason is that I want to be able > >>>>> to handle multiple master connected to the same bus and visible to > >>>>> Linux. > >>>>> In this situation, we should only have one instance of the device and > >>>>> not one per master, and sharing the bus object would be part of the > >>>>> solution to gracefully handle this case. > >>>>> I'm not sure we will ever need to deal with multiple masters > >>>>> controlling the same bus and exposed under Linux, but separating the > >>>>> bus and master concept is pretty easy, hence the decision to do it > >>>>> like that. > >>>>> The other benefit of separating the bus and master concepts is that > >>>>> master devices appear under the bus directory in sysfs. > >>>> > >>>> I'm not following here at all, sorry for missing prior discussion if this > >>>> was already explained. What is the "multiple master" case? Do you > >>>> mean multiple devices that are controlled by Linux and that each talk > >>>> to other devices on the same bus, multiple operating systems that > >>>> have talk to are able to own the bus with the kernel being one of > >>>> them, a controller that controls multiple independent buses, > >>>> or something else? > >>> > >>> I mean several masters connected to the same bus and all exposed to the > >>> same Linux instance. In this case, the question is, should we have X > >>> I3C buses exposed (X being the number of masters) or should we only > >>> have one? > >>> > >>> Having a bus represented as a separate object allows us to switch to > >>> the "one bus : X masters" representation if we need too. > >> ... > >>>> > >>>> This feels a bit odd: so you have bus_type that can contain devices > >>>> of three (?) different device types: i3c_device_type, i3c_master_type > >>>> and i3c_busdev_type. > >>>> > >>>> Generally speaking, we don't have a lot of subsystems that even > >>>> use device_types. I assume that the i3c_device_type for a > >>>> device that corresponds to an endpoint on the bus, but I'm > >>>> still confused about the other two, and why they are part of > >>>> the same bus_type. > >>> > >>> i3c_busdev is just a virtual device representing the bus itself. > >>> i3c_master is representing the I3C master driving the bus. The reason > >>> for having a different type here is to avoid attaching this device to a > >>> driver but still being able to see the master controller as a device on > >>> the bus. And finally, i3c_device are all remote devices that can be > >>> accessed through a given i3c_master. > >>> > >>> This all comes from the design choice I made to represent the bus as a > >>> separate object in order to be able to share it between different > >>> master controllers exposed through the same Linux instance. Since > >>> master controllers are also remote devices for other controllers, we > >>> need to represent them. > >> > >> Ok, so I think this is the most important question to resolve: do we > >> actually need to control multiple masters on a single bus from one OS > >> or not? > >> > >> The problem that I see is that it breaks the tree abstraction that > >> we use in the dtb interface, in the driver model and in sysfs. > >> If we need to deal with a hardware bus structure like > >> > >> cpu > >> / \ > >> / \ > >> platdev platdev > >> | | > >> i3c-master i3c-master > >> \ / > >> \ / > >> i3c-bus > >> / \ > >> device device > >> > >> then that abstraction no longer holds. Clearly you could build > >> a system like that, and if we have to support it, the i3c infrastructure > >> should be prepared for it, since we wouldn't be able to retrofit > >> it later. > > > > Exactly. For the DT representation I thought we could have the primary > > master hold the device nodes, and then have secondary masters reference > > the main master with a phandle (i3c-bus = <&main_i3c_master>;). For the > > sysfs representation, it would be the same. Only one of the master > > would create the i3c_bus object and the other masters would just > > reference it. > > > >> > >> What would be the point of building such a system though? > > > > This, I don't know. But as you said, if we go for a "one bus per > > master" representation, going back will be difficult. > > > >> Is this for performance, failover, or something else? > > > > No, I don't think so, especially since the mastership handover > > operation is not free. So keeping the same master in control is > > probably better in term of perfs. > > > > One case I can think of is when the primary master does not have enough > > resources to address all devices on the bus, and let the secondary > > master handle all transactions targeting those devices. > > > >> IOW, what feature would we lose if we were to declare that > >> setup above invalid (and ensure you cannot represent it in DT)? > > > > That's exactly the sort of discussion I wanted to trigger. Maybe we > > shouldn't care and expose this use case as if it was X different I3C > > buses (with all devices present on the bus being exposed X times to the > > system). > > For I2C, this multiple masters for one bus case was retrofitted in > the i2c-demux-pinctrl driver. It's a huge kludge with a number of > undesirable quirks. I don't know if the circumstances for adding > this I2C driver also applies for I3C, It's hard to guess now. > but it might be an argument > in favor of the proposed extra bus object... I know that Wolfram was in favor of this separate bus <-> master representation, probably because of his experience with this particular driver. -- 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