Am 2020-06-09 16:42, schrieb Mark Brown:
On Tue, Jun 09, 2020 at 04:38:31PM +0200, Michael Walle wrote:
mfd-device@10 {
compatible = "simple-regmap", "simple-mfd";
reg = <10>;
regmap,reg-bits = <8>;
regmap,val-bits = <8>;
sub-device@0 {
compatible = "vendor,sub-device0";
reg = <0>;
};
A DT binding like this is not a good idea, encoding the details of the
register map into the DT binding makes it an ABI which is begging for
trouble. I'd also suggest that any device using a generic driver like
this should have a specific compatible string for the device so we can
go back and add quirks later if we need them.
Like in the spidev case, yes. But OTOH if I _just_ encode the parameters
for the regmap a MFD, Lee don't agree because its just a shim. So either
way I seem to be stuck here.
Where should I put the code to create an i2c driver, init a regmap and
populate its childen?
-michael
...
};
Or if you just want the regmap:
&soc {
regmap: regmap@fff0000 {
compatible = "simple-regmap";
reg = <0xfff0000>;
regmap,reg-bits = <16>;
regmap,val-bits = <32>;
};
enet-which-needs-syscon-too@1000000 {
vendor,ctrl-regmap = <®map>;
};
};
Similar to the current syscon (which is MMIO only..).
-michael
>
> I can't think of any reasons why not, off the top of my head.
>
> Does Regmap only deal with shared accesses from multiple devices
> accessing a single register map, or can it also handle multiple
> devices communicating over a single I2C channel?
>
> One for Mark perhaps.
>
> > > The issues I wish to resolve using 'simple-mfd' are when sub-devices
> > > register maps overlap and intertwine.
>
> [...]
>
> > > > > > What do these bits configure?
> > > >
> > > > - hardware strappings which have to be there before the board powers
> > > > up,
> > > > like clocking mode for different SerDes settings
> > > > - "keep-in-reset" bits for onboard peripherals if you want to save
> > > > power
> > > > - disable watchdog bits (there is a watchdog which is active right
> > > > from
> > > > the start and supervises the bootloader start and switches to
> > > > failsafe
> > > > mode if it wasn't successfully started)
> > > > - special boot modes, like eMMC, etc.
> > > >
> > > > Think of it as a 16bit configuration word.
> > >
> > > And you wish for users to be able to view these at run-time?
> >
> > And esp. change them.
> >
> > > Can they adapt any of them on-the-fly or will the be RO?
> >
> > They are R/W but only will only affect the board behavior after a
> > reset.
>
> I see. Makes sense. This is board controller territory. Perhaps
> suitable for inclusion into drivers/soc or drivers/platform.
--
-michael