Hi, On Tue, Feb 13, 2024 at 10:45:11AM +0200, Tony Lindgren wrote: > We can now add hardware based addressing for serial ports. Starting with > commit 84a9582fd203 ("serial: core: Start managing serial controllers to > enable runtime PM"), and all the related fixes to this commit, the serial > core now knows to which serial port controller the ports are connected. > > The serial ports can be addressed with DEVNAME:0.0 style naming. The names > are something like 00:04:0.0 for a serial port on qemu, and something like > 2800000.serial:0.0 on platform device using systems like ARM64 for example. > > The DEVNAME is the unique serial port hardware controller device name, AKA > the name for port->dev. The 0.0 are the serial core controller id and port > id. > > Typically 0.0 are used for each controller and port instance unless the > serial port hardware controller has multiple controllers or ports. > > Using DEVNAME:0.0 style naming actually solves two long term issues for > addressing the serial ports: > > 1. According to Andy Shevchenko, using DEVNAME:0.0 style naming fixes an > issue where depending on the BIOS settings, the kernel serial port ttyS > instance number may change if HSUART is enabled > > 2. Device tree using architectures no longer necessarily need to specify > aliases to find a specific serial port, and we can just allocate the > ttyS instance numbers dynamically in whatever probe order > > To do this, let's match the hardware addressing style console name to > the character device name used, and add a preferred console using the > character device name. > > Note that when using console=DEVNAME:0.0 style kernel command line, the > 8250 serial console gets enabled later compared to using console=ttyS > naming for ISA ports. This is because the serial port DEVNAME to character > device mapping is not known until the serial driver probe time. If used > together with earlycon, this issue is avoided. > > Signed-off-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@xxxxxxxxxxx> > --- I would expect an update to the console= section in [0] somewhere in this series. [0] Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt Greetings, -- Sebastian