On Thu, 14 Feb 2013, Magnus Damm wrote: > On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:59 AM, Simon Horman <horms@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 10:42:21AM +0900, Magnus Damm wrote: > >> On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 12:59 AM, Guennadi Liakhovetski > >> <g.liakhovetski@xxxxxx> wrote: > >> > On Thu, 7 Feb 2013, Simon Horman wrote: > >> > > >> >> On Wed, Feb 06, 2013 at 10:24:20PM +0000, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > >> >> > On Wednesday 06 February 2013, Guennadi Liakhovetski wrote: > >> >> > > +* Toshiba Mobile IO SD/MMC controller > >> >> > > + > >> >> > > +The tmio-mmc driver doesn't probe its devices actively, instead its binding to > >> >> > > +devices is managed by either MFD drivers or by the sh_mobile_sdhi platform > >> >> > > +driver. Those drivers supply the tmio-mmc driver with platform data, that either > >> >> > > +describe hardware capabilities, known to them, or are obtained by them from > >> >> > > +their own platform data or from their DT information. In the latter case all > >> >> > > +compulsory and any optional properties, common to all SD/MMC drivers, as > >> >> > > +described in mmc.txt, should or can be used. Additionally the following optional > >> >> > > +bindings can be used. They set respective TMIO_MMC_* flags. > >> >> > > + > >> >> > > +Optional properties: > >> >> > > +- toshiba,mmc-wrprotect-disable : set TMIO_MMC_WRPROTECT_DISABLE flag > >> >> > > +- toshiba,mmc-blksz-2bytes : set TMIO_MMC_BLKSZ_2BYTES > >> >> > > +- toshiba,mmc-has-idle-wait : set TMIO_MMC_HAS_IDLE_WAIT > >> >> > > >> >> > Please write the binding in a way that does not refer to a specific > >> >> > implementation in Linux: The binding should describe the hardware > >> >> > independent of details in the driver. In particular, I think you > >> >> > should not refer to the TMIO_MMC_BLKSZ_2BYTES etc macros but describe > >> >> > in text what the flags are about. > >> >> > > >> >> > Regarding the toshiba,mmc-wrprotect-disable property, would it be > >> >> > enough to just check the presence of the wp-gpios property? No, normally WP would be implemented, using the native dedicated SDHI WP pin. So, toshiba,mmc-wrprotect-disable is used when no such pin is available on this interface, or it's not routed to the socket and no GPIO is used for that either. So, this flag is the only way to know, whether a WP pin is used, if no wp-gpios is used. > >> >> > TMIO_MMC_BLKSZ_2BYTES seems to be set unconditionally in > >> >> > sh_mobile_sdhi_probe and nowhere else, so I'd assume we don't > >> >> > actually need to provide this here, but can keep that knowledge > >> >> > implicit based on whether we're talking to sh_mobile_sdhi > >> >> > or another tmio_mmc variant. > >> > > >> > Can do that, yes. > >> > > >> >> > For the other last one, is that actually board specific, or just > >> >> > a feature of a given chip? If we can tell by the SoC, then I'd > >> >> > suggest using separate "compatible" properties instead, and > >> >> > put a bitmask of features into the .data field of the of match > >> >> > table. For all I can tell, SH7372 does not set it, while SH73A0, > >> >> > R8A7740 and R8A7779 always do. > >> >> > >> >> My understanding is that TMIO_MMC_HAS_IDLE_WAIT can be set based > >> >> on the SoC in use. > >> > > >> > So far TMIO_MMC_HAS_IDLE_WAIT is set on > >> > > >> > board-kzm9g.c (sh73a0 / AG5) > >> > board-ag5evm.c (sh73a0 / AG5) > >> > board-armadillo800eva.c (r8a7740 / A1) > >> > board-kota2.c (sh73a0 / AG5) > >> > board-marzen.c (r8a7779 / H1) > >> > > >> > and isn't set on > >> > > >> > board-ap4evb.c (sh7372 / ap4) > >> > board-bonito.c (r8a7740 / a1, SDHI isn't used) > >> > board-mackerel.c (sh7372 / ap4) > >> > > >> > So, shall we use a compatible property for this and drop this property? We > >> > can add later at any time, if needed, which is better, than defining > >> > something redundant. OTOH I seem to remember, that using SoC-version from > >> > the "compatible" property was considered by someone inappropriate. Magnus, > >> > what do you think? > >> > >> I prefer you to use a hardware-block version compatible suffix instead > >> of SoC suffix. > >> > >> This since we have more SoCs than actual hardware block > >> configurations. Using the list above, how many configurations would we > >> have? > >> > >> Actually, forcing the drivers to be updated for each new SoC sounds > >> like a pretty terrible idea. Wouldn't that be against one of the > >> merits of using DT? Also, don't you have enough interesting work piled > >> up already? =) > >> > >> Basically, I can't see any point in adding an extra unnecessary need > >> for updating the drivers when there is no real functional change. > > > > My understanding is that the discussion is about the details of > > bindings that are required for SDHI to function when brought > > up using DT on a variety of boards. Not exciting new work. > > > > In particular how to set TMIO_MMC_HAS_IDLE_WAIT via DT. > > No, not exciting new work. More describing certain versions of the > SDHI hardware. This is a SDHI-specific configuration which may end up > being used on a certain SoC. There are also some board specific > details that need to be taken into consideration. I believe it is > important to understand the difference between hardware-block > configuration (SDHI in this particular case), SoC and board. > > So the way I see it we have 3 ways to deal with it: > > 1) Use the "toshiba,mmc-has-idle-wait" property proposed by Guennadi > or > 2) Use a SoC suffix in the compatible string and deal with > TMIO_MMC_HAS_IDLE_WAIT in the driver > or > 3) Use a SDHI-specific version suffix in the compatible string and > deal with TMIO_MMC_HAS_IDLE_WAIT in the driver > > I am fine with 1) or 3) but I don't want to go down the route of 2) > because it will just lead to more pointless driver changes than are > actually needed. And the TMIO_MMC_HAS_IDLE_WAIT flag is not > SoC-specific so using a SoC suffix seems incorrect to me. My take on this is the following: having N optionally available on different IP-versions features, I'd rather have N DT properties, than up to 2^N abstract vX versions. Yes, I realise, that in practice we'll never have 2^N, rather just a bit more than N, still, my main problem with those versions, is that they are purely abstracted. I'd be happy if that was a real hardware revision string, that you could look up in a datasheet. But if you have to look in some text file... That just seems much less user-friendly to me, than selecting single properties. Just imagine, what would you prefer, either specifying feature-A; feature-B; in your .dts or going through a list of v1: has no features v2: feature A only v3: feature B only v4: features A and B ... Thanks Guennadi --- Guennadi Liakhovetski, Ph.D. Freelance Open-Source Software Developer http://www.open-technology.de/ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-mmc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html