Le Tue, 19 Apr 2022 08:43:47 -0500, Rob Herring <robh@xxxxxxxxxx> a écrit : > > + clocks: > > + items: > > + - description: MII reference clock > > + - description: RGMII reference clock > > + - description: RMII reference clock > > + - description: AHB clock used for the MII converter register interface > > + > > + renesas,miic-cfg-mode: > > + description: MII mux configuration mode. This value should use one of the > > + value defined in dt-bindings/net/pcs-rzn1-miic.h. > > Describe possible values here as constraints. At present, I don't see > the point of this property if there is only 1 possible value and it is > required. The ethernet subsystem contains a number of internal muxes that allows to configure ethernet routing. This configuration option allows to set the register that configure these muxes. After talking with Andrew, I considered moving to something like this: eth-miic@44030000 { compatible = "renesas,rzn1-miic"; mii_conv1: mii-conv-1 { renesas,miic-input = <MIIC_GMAC1_PORT>; port = <1>; }; mii_conv2: mii-conv-2 { renesas,miic-input = <MIIC_SWITCHD_PORT>; port = <2>; }; ... }; Which would allow embedding the configuration inside the port sub-nodes. Moreover, it allows a better validation of the values using the schema validation directly since only a limited number of values are allowed for each port. > > > + $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/uint32 > > + > > +patternProperties: > > + "^mii-conv@[0-4]$": > > + type: object > > additionalProperties: false > > > + description: MII converter port > > + > > + properties: > > + reg: > > + maxItems: 1 > > Why do you need sub-nodes? They don't have any properties. A simple mask > property could tell you which ports are present/active/enabled if that's > what you are tracking. Or the SoC specific compatibles you need to add > can imply the ports if they are SoC specific. The MACs are using phandles to these sub-nodes to query a specific MII converter port PCS: switch@44050000 { compatible = "renesas,rzn1-a5psw"; ports { port@0 { reg = <0>; label = "lan0"; phy-handle = <&switch0phy3>; pcs-handle = <&mii_conv4>; }; }; }; According to Andrew, this is not a good idea to represent the PCS as a bus since it is indeed not a bus. I could also switch to something like pcs-handle = <ð_mii 4> but i'm not sure what you'd prefer. We could also remove this from the device-tree and consider each driver to request the MII ouput to be configured using something like this for instance: miic_request_pcs(pcs_np, miic_port_nr, MIIC_SWITCHD_PORT); But I'm not really fan of this because it requires the drivers to assume some specificities of the MII converter (port number are not in the same order of the switch for instance) and thus I would prefer this to be in the device-tree. Let me know if you can think of something that would suit you better but keep in mind that I need to correctly match a switch/MAC port with a PCS port and that I also need to configure MII internal muxes. For more information, you can look at section 8 of the manual at [1]. Thanks, [1] https://www.renesas.com/us/en/document/mah/rzn1d-group-rzn1s-group-rzn1l-group-users-manual-system-introduction-multiplexing-electrical-and -- Clément Léger, Embedded Linux and Kernel engineer at Bootlin https://bootlin.com