On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 06:19:24PM +0200, Michal Suchanek wrote: > On 29 July 2015 at 16:00, Mark Brown <broonie@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I can't tell from this commit message what the issue you're trying to > > fix is, sorry. Nodes without compatible strings are entirely normal and > > don't need compatible strings. It sounds like a bug in whatever other > > driver is becoming confused. > The driver that gets confused is ofpart. > The two-line patch to allow it to just ignore controller-data has been > rejected on the basis that s3c64xx should use a compatible string > because ofpart monopolizes all nodes without compatible which are > children of a mtd device. Devicetrees containing such nodes that are > not partitions are presumably invalid and should be rejected when > ofpart is compiled into the kernel. That seems like an extremely limited binding, the normal thing here would be to create a specifically named node to contain the collection of subnodes like many PMICs do for their regulators. As a fix I'd suggest just silently ignoring nodes it can't understand, or printing a warning if that's a serious issue. > >> + if (!of_get_property(data_np, "compatible", NULL) || > >> + strcmp(of_get_property(data_np, "compatible", NULL), > >> + "samsung,s3c-controller-data")) > >> + dev_err(&spi->dev, "child node 'controller-data' does not have correct compatible\n"); > > This will break all existing users which is not acceptable for > > mainline, we need to preserve compatibility with existing device trees. > It will not break anything. It will just spam dmesg. I'm confused - if all this change does is to spam dmesg then what's the point?
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