> Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2023 11:58:28 +0900 > From: Hector Martin <marcan@xxxxxxxxx> > > On 24/02/2023 20.08, Sven Peter wrote: > > Hi, > > > > > > On Fri, Feb 24, 2023, at 12:04, Sasha Finkelstein wrote: > >> On Fri, 24 Feb 2023 at 11:55, Mark Kettenis <mark.kettenis@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >>> What is the motivation for including the firmware name in the device > >>> tree rather than constructing it in the driver like what is done for > >>> the broadcom wireless? > >> There is no way to identify the device subtype before the firmware is > >> uploaded, and so i need some way of figuring out which firmware to use. > > > > Some Broadcom bluetooth boards use the compatible of the root node (see > > btbcm_get_board_name in drivers/bluetooth/btbcm.c) which would be "apple,jXXX" > > for Apple Silicon. I believe the Broadcom WiFi driver has similar logic as well > > which marcan had to extend to instead of "brcm,board-type" because different > > WiFi boards can me matched to different Apple Silicon boards. I don't think > > that's the case for this touchscreen though. > > The reason why the brcmfmac stuff needs to construct the firmware name > itself is that parts of it come from the OTP contents, so there is no > way to know from the bootloader what the right firmware is. The name of the "nvram" file is constructed as well, and that uses the compatible of the machine (the root of the device tree). I suppose what is special in that case is that several files are tried so a single 'firmware-name" property wouldn't cut it. > That is not the case here, so it makes perfect sense to specify the > firmware with `firmware-name` (which is a standard DT property). It certainly provides the flexibility to cater for all potential nonsense names Apple comes up with for future hardware. > As for the layout, both bare names and paths are in common use: > > qcom/sm8450-qrd.dts: firmware-name = "qcom/sm8450/slpi.mbn"; > ti/k3-am64-main.dtsi: firmware-name = "am64-main-r5f0_0-fw"; > > ... but the bare names in particular, judging by some Google searches, > are *actually* mapped to bare files in /lib/firmware anyway. So the > firmware-name property contains the firmware path in the linux-firmware > standard hierarchy, in every case. Well, I think the device tree should not be tied to a particular OS and therefore not be tied to things like linux-firmware. > I already did the same thing for the touchpad on M2s (which requires > analogous Z2 firmware passed to it, just in a different format): > > dts/apple/t8112-j413.dts: firmware-name = "apple/tpmtfw-j413.bin"; > > Why is having a directory a problem for OpenBSD? Regardless of how > firmware is handled behind the scenes, it seems logical to organize it > by vendor somehow. It seems to me that gratuitously diverging from the > standard firmware hierarchy is only going to cause trouble for OpenBSD. > Obviously it's fine to store it somewhere other than /lib/firmware or > use a completely unrelated mechanism other than files, but why does the > *organization* of the firmware have to diverge? There can only be one DT > binding, so we need to agree on a way of specifying firmwares that works > cross-OS, and I don't see why "apple/foo.bin" couldn't be made to work > for everyone in some way or another. We organize the firmware by driver. And driver names in *BSD differ from Linux since there are different constraints. The firmware is organized by driver because we have separate firmware packages for each driver that get installed as-needed by a tool that matches on the driver name. Rather than have the device tree dictate the layout of the firmware files, I think it would be better to have the OS driver prepend the directory to match the convention of the OS in question. This is what we typically do in OpenBSD. Now I did indeed forget about the "dockchannel" touchpad firmware that I already handle in OpenBSD. That means I could handle the touchbar firmware in the same way. But that is mostly because these firmwares are non-distributable, so we don't have firmware packages for them. Instead we rely on the Asahi installer to make the firmware available on the EFI partition and the OpenBSD installer to move the firmware in place on the root filesystem. So this isn't a big issue. Cheers, Mark