On Mon, 14 Jun 2021 at 14:33, Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, Jun 14, 2021 at 12:23 PM Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 10-06-21, 15:22, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > > Can you give an example of how this would be hooked up to other drivers > > > using those gpios. Can you give an example of how using the "gpio-keys" or > > > "gpio-leds" drivers in combination with virtio-gpio looks like in the DT? > > > > > > Would qemu simply add the required DT properties to the device node that > > > corresponds to the virtio device in this case? > > > > > > From what I can tell, both the mmio and pci variants of virtio can have their > > > dev->of_node populated, but I don't see the logic in register_virtio_device() > > > that looks up the of_node of the virtio_device that the of_gpio code then > > > tries to refer to. > > > > To be honest, I haven't tried this yet and I was expecting it to be > > already taken care of. I was relying on the DTB automatically > > generated by Qemu to get the driver probed and didn't have a look at > > it as well. > > > > I now understand that it won't be that straight forward. The same must > > be true for adding an i2c device to an i2c bus over virtio (The way I > > tested that earlier was by using the sysfs file to add a device to a > > bus). > > Yes, correct, we had the same discussion about i2c. Again, this is > relatively straightforward when the controller and the device attached > to it (i2c controller/client or gpio controller/function) are both emulated > by qemu, but a lot harder when the controller and device are > implemented in different programs. > > > This may be something lacking generally for virtio-pci thing, not > > sure though. > > I think most importantly we need a DT binding to describe what device > nodes are supposed to look like underneath a virtio-mmio or > virtio-pci device in order for a hypervisor to pass down the > information to a guest OS in a generic way. We can probably borrow > the USB naming, and replace compatible="usbVID,PID" with > compatible="virtioDID", with the device ID in hexadecimal digits, > such as "virtio22" for I2C (virtio device ID 34 == 0x22) if we decide > to have a sub-node under the device, or we just point dev->of_node > of the virtio device to the platform/pci device that is its parent > in Linux. > > Adding the Linux guest code to the virtio layer should be fairly > straightforward, and I suppose it could be mostly copied from the > corresponding code that added this for mmc in commit 25185f3f31c9 > ("mmc: Add SDIO function devicetree subnode parsing") and for USB > in commit 69bec7259853 ("USB: core: let USB device know device > node") and 1a7e3948cb9f ("USB: add device-tree support for > interfaces"). And something similar is also done with SCMI protocols which are defined in a SCMI node. A typical example: cpu@0 { ... clocks = <&scmi_dvfs 0>; ... }; deviceX: deviceX@YYYYYYY { ... clocks = <&scmi_clk 0>; ... }; scmi: scmi { compatible = "arm,scmi-virtio"; #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; scmi_devpd: protocol@11 { reg = <0x11>; #power-domain-cells = <1>; }; scmi_clk: protocol@14 { reg = <0x14>; #clock-cells = <1>; }; scmi_sensors: protocol@15 { reg = <0x15>; #thermal-sensor-cells = <1>; }; scmi_dvfs: protocol@13 { reg = <0x13>; #clock-cells = <1>; }; }; > > Arnd