On 02/09/2013 01:32 AM, Stephen Warren wrote:
On 02/08/2013 05:05 PM, Sylwester Nawrocki wrote:
On 02/09/2013 12:21 AM, Stephen Warren wrote:
On 02/08/2013 04:16 PM, Sylwester Nawrocki wrote:
On 02/07/2013 12:40 AM, Stephen Warren wrote:
diff --git
a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/soc/samsung-fimc.txt
b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/soc/samsung-fimc.txt
+Samsung S5P/EXYNOS SoC Camera Subsystem (FIMC)
+----------------------------------------------
...
+For every fimc node a numbered alias should be present in the
aliases node.
+Aliases are of the form fimc<n>, where<n> is an integer (0...N)
specifying
+the IP's instance index.
Why? Isn't it up to the DT author whether they care if each fimc
node is
assigned a specific identification v.s. whether identification is
assigned automatically?
There are at least three different kinds of IPs that come in multiple
instances in an SoC. To activate data links between them each instance
needs to be clearly identified. There are also differences between
instances of same device. Hence it's important these aliases don't have
random values.
Some more details about the SoC can be found at [1]. The aliases are
also already used in the Exynos5 GScaler bindings [2] in a similar way.
Hmmm. I'd expect explicit DT properties to represent the
instance-specific "configuration", or even different compatible values.
Relying on the alias ID seems rather indirect; what if in e.g.
Exynos6/... the mapping from instance/alias ID to feature set changes.
With explicit DT properties, that'd just be a .dts change, whereas by
requiring alias IDs now, you'd need a driver change to support this.
In the initial version of this patch series I used cell-index property,
but then Grant pointed out in some other mail thread it should be
avoided. Hence I used the node aliases.
To me, using cell-index is semantically equivalent to using the alias ID.
I can't see significant difference either. I just switched to what
seemed to be used for similar purpose.
Different compatible values might not work, when for example there
are 3 IPs out of 4 of one type and the fourth one of another type.
It wouldn't even by really different types, just quirks/little
differences between them, e.g. no data path routed to one of other IPs.
I was thinking of using feature-/quirk-oriented properties. For example,
if there's a port on 3 of the 4 devices to connect to some other IP
block, simply include a boolean property to indicate whether that port
is present. It would be in 3 of the nodes but not the 4th.
Yes, I could add several properties corresponding to all members of this
[3] data structure. But still it is needed to clearly identify the IP
block in a set of the hardware instances.
Then to connect e.g. MIPI-CSIS.0 to FIMC.2 at run time an index of the
MIPI-CSIS needs to be written to the FIMC.2 data input control register.
Even though MIPI-CSIS.N are same in terms of hardware structure they still
need to be distinguished as separate instances.
Oh, so you're using the alias ID as the value to write into the FIMC.2
register for that. I'm not 100% familiar with aliases, but they seem
like a more user-oriented naming thing to me, whereas values for hooking
up intra-SoC routing are an unrelated namespace semantically, even if
the values happen to line up right now. Perhaps rather than a Boolean
property I mentioned above, use a custom property to indicate the ID
that the FIMC.2 object knows the MIPI-CSIS.0 object as? While this seems
That could be 'reg' property in the MIPI-CSIS.0 'port' subnode that
links it to the image sensor node ([4], line 165). Because MIPI-CSIS IP
blocks are immutably connected to the SoC camera physical MIPI CSI-2
interfaces, and the physical camera ports have fixed assignment to the
MIPI-CSIS devices.. This way we could drop alias ID for the MIPI-CSIS
nodes. And their instance index that is required for the top level
driver which exposes topology and the routing capabilities to user space
could be restored from the reg property value by subtracting a fixed
offset.
Similarly an instance index of FIMC-LITE could be derived from the value
of reg property in a port node that links it to FIMC-IS ISP. I have been
omitting these port/endpoint nodes because it seemed unnecessary to model
explicitly those data paths. However it feels a bit overkill to add them
just for the sake of identifying the IP block instance
Still I can't really see a possibility to drop indexes for the FIMC nodes.
similar to using cell-index, my *guess* is that Grant's objection to
using cell-index was more based on re-using cell-index for something
other than its intended purpose than pushing you to use an alias ID
rather than a property.
The comments to a patch for some other driver I was referring to can be
found at [1]. My first patch series appeared significantly later [2].
I confused things a bit, sorry about that.
I can see aliases used in bindings of multiple devices: uart, spi, sound
interfaces, gpio, ... And all bindings seem to impose some rules on how
their aliases are created.
After all, what happens in some later SoC where you have two different
types of module that feed into the common module, such that type A
sources have IDs 0..3 in the common module, and type B sources have IDs
4..7 in the common module - you wouldn't want to require alias ISs 4..7
for the type B DT nodes.
There is no need to write alias ID directly into registers, and actually
it doesn't really happen. But we need to know that, for example camera A
is connected to physical MIPI CSI-2 channel 0 and to capture video with
DMA engine of FIMC.2 we need to set FIMC.2 input register to link it to
MIPI-CSIS 0.
The system registers, where a sort of camera/display glue logic is
configured also refer to FIMC devices explicitly by ID. So the driver
as a client of the system registers block/glue logic interface needs
to pass an information which FIMC H/W instance it wants to be e.g.
attached/detached to/from some data pipeline.
I still need to design some API for the camera system registers (glue
logic) block. This would be shared by the V4L2 and the DRM FIMC driver.
I thought about a couple of function calls specific to Exynos platform
that would be called directly by related drivers.
[1]
https://lists.ozlabs.org/pipermail/devicetree-discuss/2012-January/012128.html
[2] http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-media/msg48341.html
[3]
http://lxr.linux.no/#linux+v3.7.6/drivers/media/platform/s5p-fimc/fimc-core.h#L365
[4] http://tinyurl.com/arczzuo
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html