On Mon, 08 Mar 2021 20:38:41 +0000,
Rob Herring <robh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Fri, Mar 05, 2021 at 06:38:41AM +0900, Hector Martin wrote:
Not all platforms provide the same set of timers/interrupts, and Linux
only needs one (plus kvm/guest ones); some platforms are working around
this by using dummy fake interrupts. Implementing interrupt-names allows
the devicetree to specify an arbitrary set of available interrupts, so
the timer code can pick the right one.
This also adds the hyp-virt timer/interrupt, which was previously not
expressed in the fixed 4-interrupt form.
Signed-off-by: Hector Martin <marcan@xxxxxxxxx>
---
.../devicetree/bindings/timer/arm,arch_timer.yaml | 14 ++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 14 insertions(+)
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/timer/arm,arch_timer.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/timer/arm,arch_timer.yaml
index 2c75105c1398..ebe9b0bebe41 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/timer/arm,arch_timer.yaml
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/timer/arm,arch_timer.yaml
@@ -34,11 +34,25 @@ properties:
- arm,armv8-timer
interrupts:
+ minItems: 1
+ maxItems: 5
items:
- description: secure timer irq
- description: non-secure timer irq
- description: virtual timer irq
- description: hypervisor timer irq
+ - description: hypervisor virtual timer irq
+
+ interrupt-names:
+ minItems: 1
+ maxItems: 5
+ items:
+ enum:
+ - phys-secure
+ - phys
+ - virt
+ - hyp-phys
+ - hyp-virt
phys-secure and hyp-phys is not very consistent. secure-phys or sec-phys
instead?
This allows any order which is not ideal (unfortunately json-schema
doesn't have a way to define order with optional entries in the middle).
How many possible combinations are there which make sense? If that's a
reasonable number, I'd rather see them listed out.
The available of interrupts are a function of the number of security
states, privileged exception levels and architecture revisions, as
described in D11.1.1:
<quote>
- An EL1 physical timer.
- A Non-secure EL2 physical timer.
- An EL3 physical timer.
- An EL1 virtual timer.
- A Non-secure EL2 virtual timer.
- A Secure EL2 virtual timer.
- A Secure EL2 physical timer.
</quote>
* Single security state, EL1 only, ARMv7 & ARMv8.0+ (assumed NS):
- physical, virtual
* Single security state, EL1 + EL2, ARMv7 & ARMv8.0 (assumed NS)
- physical, virtual, hyp physical
* Single security state, EL1 + EL2, ARMv8.1+ (assumed NS)
- physical, virtual, hyp physical, hyp virtual
* Two security states, EL1 + EL3, ARMv7 & ARMv8.0+:
- secure physical, physical, virtual
* Two security states, EL1 + EL2 + EL3, ARMv7 & ARMv8.0
- secure physical, physical, virtual, hyp physical
* Two security states, EL1 + EL2 + EL3, ARMv8.1+
- secure physical, physical, virtual, hyp physical, hyp virtual
* Two security states, EL1 + EL2 + S-EL2 + EL3, ARMv8.4+
- secure physical, physical, virtual, hyp physical, hyp virtual,
secure hyp physical, secure hyp virtual
Nobody has seen the last combination in the wild (that is, outside of
a SW model).
I'm really not convinced we want to express this kind of complexity in
the binding (each of the 7 cases), specially given that we don't
encode the underlying HW architecture level or number of exception
levels anywhere, and have ho way to validate such information.