On Mon, Aug 01, 2022 at 10:22:16AM +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Mon, Aug 1, 2022 at 3:52 AM Potin Lai <potin.lai.pt@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 7/31/22 20:09, Jonathan Cameron wrote: > > In our hardware board, we have "ti,hdc1080" as main source, and "silabs,si7020" > > for 2nd source. This two chip are locate at same bus and same slave address, > > and we want to use multiple compatibles to support both chips with single device > > node in device tree. > > > > Ex: > > compatible = "ti,hdc1099", "silabs,si7020"; > > This is simply broken DT, you must not put incompatible hardware on > the same compatible string. DT is by definition the description of a > certain platform. What you showed is a combination of incompatible > chips in a single DT. We were mistaken that this is the appropriate way to specify this behavior, partially because it works as long as the probe functions return an error the next matching driver from the compatible will probe. It does seem that specifying two different compatibles like this would violate the intention of the DT spec: The property value consists of a concatenated list of null terminated strings, from most specific to most general. They allow a device to express its compatibility with a family of similar devices, potentially allowing a single device driver to match against several devices. > > > In order to support this, I need to add ID checking mechanism into the current > > hdc100x driver, so the si7020 chip will fail to probe with hdc100x driver > > (because the ID checking is not failed), then success probe with si7020. > > > > Base on you explanation, it looks multiple compatibles is not suitable in this > > case? Would you mind advise us what would be the better approach for our case? > > If I may advise... fix your DT by dropping the wrong compatible item. This doesn't really give any helpful advice. The reality is that these two chips are pin compatible and function compatible but not driver compatible. Boards have been manufactured which are identical except for this chip replaced, due various to chip shortages. Making probe fail so that the next 'compatible' is chosen sounds like it isn't desired. I'm pretty sure you can't have two DT entries for the same i2c address, but with different 'compatible" properties, and even if we did you'd still need probe to fail on one of them. Are there any other suggestions for being able to inform the kernel that one of two chips might be present? -- Patrick Williams
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