On Thu, Oct 13, 2022 at 02:12:49PM -0500, Rob Herring wrote: > On Thu, Oct 13, 2022 at 08:26:47AM +0200, Dominic Rath wrote: > > From: Alexander Bahle <bahle@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > Add "cdns,tx-phy-latency-ps" and "cdns,rx-phy-latency-ps" DT bindings for > > setting the PCIe PHY latencies. > > The properties expect a list of uint32 PHY latencies in picoseconds for > > every supported speed starting at PCIe Gen1, e.g.: > > > > max-link-speed = <2>; > > tx-phy-latency-ps = <100000 200000>; /* Gen1: 100ns, Gen2: 200ns */ > > rx-phy-latency-ps = <150000 250000>; /* Gen1: 150ns, Gen2: 250ns */ > > These are a property of the PHY or PCI host? Sounds like PHY to me and > that should be in the PHY node. No reason the PCI driver can't go read > PHY node properties. I'm actually not sure if this a property of the PHY, the PCIe host, or of the combination of the two. We thought about adding this property to the PHY, too, but we didn't know how to handle cases where a single PCIe host is linked with multiple PHYs for multi-lane configurations (see TI's AM65x for example). Which PHYs latency would you use to configure this PCIe RC? Personally I don't have a very strong opinion either way - we just didn't know any better than to put this into the PCIe host that needs it. If you think this is better put into the PHY node we can of course send a new version of this patch. Is there any binding that specifies "generic" PCIe properties, similar to ethernet-phy.yaml? We couldn't find any. I guess in the AM64x case the "PHY" is serdes0_pcie_link below serdes0: &serdes0 { serdes0_pcie_link: phy@0 { ... This seems to be described by bindings/phy/phy-cadence-torrent.yaml. Should we add a generic (without cdns) tx/rx-phy-latency-ps property there? > If PTM is a standard PCIe thing, then I don't think these should be > Cadence specific. IOW, drop 'cdns'. Yes, it is a standard PCIe thing, but we haven't seen that many implementations yet, so we didn't want to pretend to know what this looks like in the generic case. We can of course drop 'cdns'. Best Regards, Dominic & Alexander