On 10/07/2023, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > On 06/10/2023 18:33, William McVicker wrote: > > On 10/06/2023, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > >> On Fri, Oct 6, 2023, at 08:06, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > >>> On 06/10/2023 01:19, William McVicker wrote: > >>>> On 10/05/2023, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > >>>>> On 05/10/2023 21:23, Greg KH wrote: > >>>> > >>>> Being able to include SERIAL_SAMSUNG and SERIAL_MSM without all the vendor> specific drivers that ARCH_EXYNOS and ARCH_QCOM select is very > >>> valuable for > >>>> debugging early boot issues. > >>> > >>> Really? How related? The drivers are independent. You describe some > >>> out-of-tree development process which we never needed for upstream work. > >>> And we did here quite a lot of upstream, specially if you look at ARCH_QCOM. > >> > >> Right: in general, all drivers are independent of the platform > >> besides the typical 'depends on ARCH_FOO || COMPILE_TEST' dependency, > >> but I think it's worth mentioning the known exceptions, so Greg and > >> Will can take that fight to the respective places rather than > >> discussing it in the platform submission: > >> > >> - Some subsystems are considered 'special' and the maintainers > >> prefer the drivers to be automatically selected based on the > >> ARCH_* settings instead of having user-visible options. This is > >> traditionally true for large chunks of drivers/irqchip, > >> drivers/clocksource and drivers/pinctrl, though it has gotten > >> better over time on all of them. > >> > >> - Some older 32-bit platforms are still not as modular as we'd > >> like them to be, especially the StrongARM (ARMv4) platforms that > >> require a custom kernel build, and some of ARMv4T and ARMv5 > >> boards that are still missing DT support. These tend to require > >> drivers they directly link to from board code, so disabling > >> the drivers would cause a link failure until this gets > >> cleaned up. > >> > >> - A couple of drivers are force-enabled based on the ARCH_* > >> options because booting without these drivers would risk > >> permanent damage to hardware, e.g. in overtemp or overcurrent > >> scenarios. > >> > >> - ACPI based platforms require the PCI host bridge driver to > >> be built-in rather than a loadable module because ACPI > >> needs to probe PCI devices during early boot. > >> > >> - Some subsystems (notably drivers/gpu/, but others as well) > >> have an excessive number of 'select' statements, so you > >> end up surprise-enabling a number of additional drivers > >> and subsystems by enabling certain less important platform > >> specific drivers. > >> > >> Arnd > > > > So if the argument is that the existing upstream Exynos platforms are required > > to have these drivers built-in to the kernel to boot: > > COMMON_CLK_SAMSUNG > > CLKSRC_EXYNOS_MCT > > EXYNOS_PM_DOMAINS if PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS > > EXYNOS_PMU > > PINCTRL > > PINCTRL_EXYNOS > > PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS if PM > > SOC_SAMSUNG > > > > ...then that is understandable and we can work to fix that. > > > > My last question then is -- why do we need a new ARCH_GOOGLE_TENSOR config in > > the platform Kconfig? For example, I don't really like this: > > > > diff --git a/drivers/clk/samsung/Kconfig b/drivers/clk/samsung/Kconfig > > index 76a494e95027..4c8f173c4dec 100644 > > --- a/drivers/clk/samsung/Kconfig > > +++ b/drivers/clk/samsung/Kconfig > > @@ -13,6 +13,7 @@ config COMMON_CLK_SAMSUNG > > select EXYNOS_5420_COMMON_CLK if ARM && SOC_EXYNOS5420 > > select EXYNOS_ARM64_COMMON_CLK if ARM64 && ARCH_EXYNOS > > select TESLA_FSD_COMMON_CLK if ARM64 && ARCH_TESLA_FSD > > + select GOOGLE_GS101_COMMON_CLK if ARM64 && ARCH_GOOGLE_TENSOR > > > > What happens when we have GOOGLE_GS101_COMMON_CLK, GOOGLE_GS201_COMMON_CLK, and > > so on? > > Nothing happens... or happens anything you wish. Did you read the > motivation why this was created like this? > > > > How are we going to pick the right driver when e have a generic > > ARCH_GOOGLE_TENSOR config? > Okay, we can figure that out the gs201 specifics when the time comes. > You do not have to pick. You select ARCH_GOOGLE_TENSOR and proper pick > is done by you. Nothing to do more. > > > Ideally, we should have one Exynos clock driver that > > can detect what hardware is running (using the DT) to determine what it needs > > It's already like this. We're done. > > > to do. If you really want to compile out the other vendor's clock drivers using > > some configs, then we should do that with SOC_GS101, SOC_GS201, SOC_TESLA_FSD > > Whether you call it SOC or ARCH it is the same. We organized it as ARCH. > > > configs (not ideal though). With that approach, we could drop the platform > > ARCH_GOOGLE_TENSOR config and create an SOC_GS101 config that can be used for > > things like the COMMON_CLK_SAMSUNG driver (for now) and building the GS101 dtb. > > There is no need for this. ARCH does exactly the same. Okay, sounds good. Thanks for the responses. Regards, Will > > Best regards, > Krzysztof >