On 08/09/2021 01:24, Rob Herring wrote: > On Tue, Sep 7, 2021 at 11:57 AM Roger Quadros <rogerq@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Hi Miquel, >> >> On 07/09/2021 19:35, Miquel Raynal wrote: >>> Hi Grygorii, >>> >>>>> >>>>>> + >>>>>> + nand-bus-width: >>>>>> + description: >>>>>> + Bus width to the NAND chip >>>>>> + $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/uint32 >>>>>> + enum: [8, 16] >>>>>> + default: 8 >>>>> >>>>> This is part of nand-controller.yaml binding and should not be there. >>>>> >>>>>> + >>>>>> +allOf: >>>>>> + - $ref: "../memory-controllers/ti,gpmc-child.yaml" >>>>> >>>>> Maybe you need to reference the nand controller bindings as well >>>>> >>>> >>>> This will not work out of the box :( as nand-controller.yaml defines both >>>> nand controller and nand memory. It potentially might work if it will be possible to split >>>> nand memory definition (or nand memory properties) out of and-controller.yaml, similarly to >>>> ti,gpmc-child.yaml from this series. >>> >>> What you think would be the issue? >> >> The issue is that dt_binding checks will fail if I reference nand-controller.yaml >> as we currently represent the controller as follows >> >> memory-controller { /* GPMC controller */ >> memory-controller-props; >> nand-chip { >> /* @chip select 0 */ >> nand-controller-props; >> memory-controller-timing-props; >> chip-props; >> } >> nand-chip { >> /* @chip select 1 */ >> nand-controller-props; >> memory-controller-timing-props; >> chip-props; >> } >> nor-chip { >> /* @chip select 2 */ >> memory-controller-timing-props; >> chip-props; >> } >> } >> >> The NAND controller IO registers are at different addresses for different >> chip select regions. Also, this is one way we can specify GPMC settings/timings >> for different chip selects. >> >>> >>> I am not opposed to split nand-controller.yaml into >>> nand-controller.yaml and nand-chip.yaml if it simplifies the >>> description of controllers but I don't get why it would be needed. In >>> particular since we expect all drivers to support the >>> >>> nand-controller { >>> controller-props; >>> nand-chip { >>> chip-props; >>> } >>> } >> >> Changing to this format will cause a lot of churn in DT files, which I'm not sure >> if it gives enough benefit. >> TI platforms will never have 2 NAND chips in the same chip select region. > > Probably best to just leave this alone. Unless this is getting used in > new chips? If so, I'd say it's a separate change. > >>> organization which has been enforced since at least 2018. Having a >>> controller vs. chip representation is fundamentally right. But here I >>> see how "legacy" are these bindings with so much unneeded specific "ti," >>> properties... On one side it would be good to verify that the driver >>> supports this representation (which I believe is true) and on the other >>> side maybe it's time to advertise "better" bindings as well. >> >> Yes, I'm OK to mark ti specific properties deprecated and use standard NAND chip >> bindings. > > I don't think it's really worth it to go half way using common > properties but not the common structure. I agree. We will be having new chips that will use this driver but we will migrate to new common structure when adding support for those chips. So I will leave this patch as it is for now. cheers, -roger