On 06/27/2014 05:15 AM, Thierry Reding wrote: > On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 01:07:04PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: >> On Thursday 26 June 2014 22:49:44 Thierry Reding wrote: >>> +static const struct tegra_mc_client tegra124_mc_clients[] = { >>> + { >>> + .id = 0x01, >>> + .name = "display0a", >>> + .swgroup = TEGRA_SWGROUP_DC, >>> + .smmu = { >>> + .reg = 0x228, >>> + .bit = 1, >>> + }, >>> + .latency = { >>> + .reg = 0x2e8, >>> + .shift = 0, >>> + .mask = 0xff, >>> + .def = 0xc2, >>> + }, >>> + }, { >> >> This is a rather long table that I assume would need to get duplicated >> and modified for each specific SoC. Have you considered to put the information >> into DT instead, as auxiliary data in the iommu specifier as provided by >> the device? > > Most of this data really is register information and I don't think that > belongs in DT. I agree. I think it's quite inappropriate to put information into DT that could simply be put into a table in the driver. If the information is put into DT, you have to define a fixed binding for it, munge the table and data representation to fit DT's much less flexible (than C structs/arrays) syntax, write a whole bunch of code to parse it back out (at probably not do a good job with error-checking), all only to end up with exactly the same C structs in the driver at the end of the process. Oh, and if multiple SoCs use the same data values, you have to duplicate those tables into at least the DTBs if not in the .dts files, whereas with C you can just point at the same struct. SoCs come out much less frequently than new boards (perhaps ignoring the fact that we support a small subset of boards in mainline, so the frequency isn't too dissimilar there). It makes good sense to put board-to-board differences in DT, but I see little point in putting static SoC information into DT.
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