The device tree graph bindings as used by V4L2 and documented in Documentation/device-tree/bindings/media/video-interfaces.txt contain generic parts that are not media specific but could be useful for any subsystem with data flow between multiple devices. This document describe the generic bindings. Signed-off-by: Philipp Zabel <p.zabel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/devicetree/bindings/graph.txt | 98 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 98 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/graph.txt diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/graph.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/graph.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..97c877e --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/graph.txt @@ -0,0 +1,98 @@ +Common bindings for device graphs + +General concept +--------------- + +The hierarchical organisation of the device tree is well suited to describe +control flow to devices, but data flow between devices that work together to +form a logical compound device can follow arbitrarily complex graphs. +The device tree graph bindings allow to describe data bus connections between +individual devices, that can not be inferred from device tree parent-child +relationships. The common bindings do not contain any information about the +direction or type of data flow, they just map connections. Specific properties +of the connections are described by specialized bindings depending on the type +of connection. To see how this binding applies to video pipelines, see for +example Documentation/device-tree/bindings/media/video-interfaces.txt. + +Devices can have multiple data interfaces, each of which can be connected to +the data interfaces of one or more remote devices via a data bus. +Data interfaces are described by the device nodes' child 'port' nodes. A port +node contains an 'endpoint' subnode for each remote device port connected to +this port via a bus. If a port is connected to more than one remote device on +the same bus, an 'endpoint' child node must be provided for each of them. If +more than one port is present in a device node or there is more than one +endpoint at a port, or port node needs to be associated with a selected +hardware interface, a common scheme using '#address-cells', '#size-cells' +and 'reg' properties is used. + +device { + ... + #address-cells = <1>; + #size-cells = <0>; + + port@0 { + ... + endpoint@0 { ... }; + endpoint@1 { ... }; + }; + + port@1 { ... }; +}; + +All 'port' nodes can be grouped under optional 'ports' node, which allows to +specify #address-cells, #size-cells properties independently for the 'port' +and 'endpoint' nodes and any child device nodes a device might have. + +device { + ... + ports { + #address-cells = <1>; + #size-cells = <0>; + + port@0 { + ... + endpoint@0 { ... }; + endpoint@1 { ... }; + }; + + port@1 { ... }; + }; +}; + +Each endpoint can contain a 'remote-endpoint' phandle property that points to +the corresponding endpoint in the port of the remote device. Two 'endpoint' +nodes are linked with each other through their 'remote-endpoint' phandles. + +device_1 { + port { + device_1_output: endpoint { + remote-endpoint = <&device_2_input>; + }; + }; +}; + +device_1 { + port { + device_2_input: endpoint { + remote-endpoint = <&device_1_output>; + }; + }; +}; + + +Required properties +------------------- + +If there is more than one 'port' or more than one 'endpoint' node or 'reg' +property is present in port and/or endpoint nodes the following properties +are required in a relevant parent node: + + - #address-cells : number of cells required to define port/endpoint + identifier, should be 1. + - #size-cells : should be zero. + +Optional endpoint properties +---------------------------- + +- remote-endpoint: phandle to an 'endpoint' subnode of a remote device node. + -- 1.8.5.3 -- 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