On 18/11/2021 20:59, Sam Protsenko wrote: > On Tue, 16 Nov 2021 at 11:32, Krzysztof Kozlowski > <krzysztof.kozlowski@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On 16/11/2021 02:12, Chanho Park wrote: >>>> With this patch the Exynos850 HSI2C becomes functional. The only nit-pick >>>> from my side (just a food for thought): do we want to configure USI >>>> related config inside of particular drivers (SPI, I2C, UART)? Or it would >>>> be better design to implement some platform driver for that, so we can >>>> choose USI configuration (SPI/I2C/UART) in device tree? I think this >>>> series is good to be merged as is, but we should probably consider all >>>> upsides and downsides of each option, for the future work. >>> >>> I'm also considering how to support this USI configuration gracefully. >>> Current version of USI is v2 which means there is a v1 version as well. It might be a non-upstream SoC so we don't need to consider it so far. >>> But, there is a possibility that the USI hw version can be bumped for future SoCs. >>> >>> As you probably know, earlier version of the product kernel has a USI SoC driver[1] and it was designed to be configured the USI settings by device tree. >>> >>> Option1) Make a USI driver under soc/samsung/ like [1]. >>> Option2) Use more generic driver such as "reset driver"? This might be required to extend the reset core driver. >>> Option3) Each USI driver(uart/i2c/spi) has its own USI configurations respectively and expose some configurations which can be variable as device tree. >>> >>> [1]: https://github.com/ianmacd/d2s/blob/master/drivers/soc/samsung/usi_v2.c >> >> I don't have user manuals, so all my knowledge here is based on >> Exynos9825 vendor source code, therefore it is quite limited. In >> devicetree the USI devices have their own nodes - but does it mean it's >> separate SFR range dedicated to USI? Looks like that, especially that >> address space is just for one register (4 bytes). >> >> In such case having separate dedicated driver makes sense and you would >> only have to care about driver ordering (e.g. via device links or phandles). >> >> Option 2 looks interesting - reusing reset framework to set proper USI >> mode, however this looks more like a hack. As you said Chanho, if there >> is a USI version 3, this reset framework might not be sufficient. >> >> In option 3 each driver (UART/I2C/SPI) would need to receive second IO >> range and toggle some registers, which could be done via shared >> function. If USI v3 is coming, all such drivers could get more complicated. >> >> I think option 1 is the cleanest and extendable in future. It's easy to >> add usi-v3 or whatever without modifying the UART/I2C/SPI drivers. It >> also nicely encapsulates USI-related stuff in separate driver. Probe >> ordering should not be a problem now. >> >> But as I said, I don't have even the big picture here, so I rely on your >> opinions more. >> > > Hi Krzysztof, > > Can you please let me know if you're going to apply this series as is, > or if you want me to submit USIv2 driver first, and then rework this > patch on top of it? I'm working on some HSI2C related patches right > now, and thus it'd nice to know about your decision on this series > beforehand, as some of my patches (like bindings doc patches) might > depend on it. Basically I'd like to base my patches on the proper > baseline, so we don't have to rebase those later. This set won't go via my tree anyway, but I am against it. David pointed out that his USIv1 is a little bit different and embedding in each of I2C/UART/SPI drivers the logic of controlling USIv1 and USIv2 looks too big. The solution with a dedicated driver looks to me more flexible and encapsulated/cleaner. Therefore after the discussions I am against this solution, so a soft-NAK from my side. Best regards, Krzysztof