Hi, On 05/22/2014 12:23 PM, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote: > Hi, > > On Thu, May 22, 2014 at 5:49 PM, Hans de Goede <hdegoede@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Hi All, >> >> Arend asked me to test these 2 patches for adding devicetree support to brcmfmac sdio devices: >> "dt: bindings: add bindings for Broadcom bcm43xx sdio devices" >> "brcmfmac: add device tree support for SDIO devices" >> https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/linux-sunxi/Zph6zDTnAcw/_-wOO-gnIuQJ >> >> Getting this to do anything at all meant also adding this patch: >> >> "mmc: Add SDIO function devicetree subnode parsing" >> https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/4/3/522 >> >> So that the card / sdio-func devices would actually get their of_node >> pointer set to the child node under the mmc controller describing >> the sdio wifi module. >> >> But that does not solve the entire problem. Listing the oob-interrupt info >> in the child node works fine. But listing the brcm,wlan-supply gpio does >> not. Since these sdio wifi modules are typically soldered onto the >> board, there mmc controller device tree node has non-removable; set, >> so the mmc subsystem will try to initialize the sdio device as soon >> as the mmc driver loads, and if that fails will never look at it again. >> >> So we need to have the brcm,wlan-supply gpio driven high *before* the mmc >> host driver initializes. In case of the brcm,wlan-supply property, this >> is actually a problem which we've already solved in a number of dts files >> for allwinner boards, simply create a fixed-regulator with an enable/disable >> gpio, and set that as vmmc-supply for the mmc-host for the sdio wifi. >> >> However the "brcmfmac: add device tree support for SDIO devices" patch >> also adds support for 2 devicetree controlled clocks. Assuming these need >> to be ungated before the sdio module will respond to mmc commands, we have >> the same problem. > > Olof posted an RFC series on this very matter: > > http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-mmc/msg24411.html > > There was a lengthy discussion, however I don't think the matter was settled. Phew that was a long read. Indeed it seems that the matter was not entirely settled. It seems that the discussion did gravitate towards this information belonging in child nodes under the host controller node to represent the device. I think we need to do this step by step: 1) Right now, for my use case, I really only care about oob interrupts. If we can agree that we for additional info for sdio devices we will be using a child node under the mmc host with #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; and reg == function number, iow go with Sacha's patch to attach an of node to sdio device functions, then that use case is covered. I think this will cover quite a few use-cases already. and it should not get in the way of adding fancier stuff, up to doing the entire device instantation statically based on the child node, later. 2) Note that my proposal for the clks is very much like Olof's proposal in that it tries to keep things KISS, but instead of adding the info to the mmc-host node it adds it to the sdio-func child nodes. We could ask someone who has an actual use case where power-sequencing with clks and/or resets is needed to first implement things along Olof's proposal, but then with the clks and resets using standardized properties inside the child nodes. This would keep things KISS, again without getting in the way of getting fancier later. 3) If someone has a usecase where 2 does not work or become ugly, we can then ask that someone to come up with a proposal for something better. Regards, Hans > > CC-ed everyone from that discussion. > >> I've been thinking a bit about this, and it is a non trivial problem since >> sdio devices are normally instantiated when probed, unlike ie spi devices >> which are instantiated from devicetree. >> >> Adding device tree instantiation of sdio devices seems like a bad idea, as >> then we get 2 vastly different device instantiation paths. Still we need some >> way to get power and clks setup before the mmc host initializes. >> >> Therefor I would like to suggest to add a number of standard properties to >> mmc-bus child nodes. Making the dts for an mmc host with an sdio device which >> needs clks setup before it will work look like this: >> >> mmc3: mmc@01c12000 { >> #address-cells = <1>; >> #size-cells = <0>; >> pinctrl-names = "default"; >> pinctrl-0 = <&mmc3_pins_a>; >> vmmc-supply = <®_vmmc3>; >> bus-width = <4>; >> non-removable; >> status = "okay"; >> >> brcmf: bcrmf@0 { >> reg = <0>; >> compatible = "brcm,bcm43xx-fmac"; >> clocks = <&clk_out_a>, <&clk_out_b>; >> clock-frequency = <32768>, <26000000>; >> interrupt-parent = <&pio>; >> interrupts = <10 4>; /* PH10 / EINT10 */ >> interrupt-names = "host-wake"; >> status = "okay"; >> }; >> }; >> >> Where the "clocks" and "clock-frequency" attributes would be something >> which we standardize in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mmc/mmc-bus.txt >> >> These standard properties would *not* be used by the driver for the >> childnode device, so as to avoid the chicken and egg problem of that driver >> needing to enable clks, and it only getting bound to the device after >> the device has been discovered which requires those clocks. >> >> Instead these properties would be parsed by mmc_of_parse, and we will >> get enabled automatically by mmc_add_host before doing any probing. >> >> If the optional clock-frequency property is also set, then mmc_add_host >> will not only enable the clks but also set them to the specified >> frequency. >> >> Note I've no boards which actually need the clocks, all 3 boards with >> sdio wifi which I've use a 26MHz crystal directly attached to the module, >> so once I get the oob interrupt working (this needs some work on >> the allwinner side) we can merge Arend's patches with the clock bits >> dropped for now. >> >> Still I want to get a discussion going on this, so that when the time >> comes that we do need it we know how to deal with this, or ideally >> already have code in place to deal with it. > > > Cheers > ChenYu > -- 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