On 17-10-2019 17:31, Thierry Reding wrote: > On Thu, Oct 17, 2019 at 03:48:52PM +0800, JC Kuo wrote: >> Hi Thierry, Hi Rob, Hi Kishon, >> Please let me know your thoughts of the below implementation. >> >> 1. Add a "bool disable_gen2" to "phy->attrs" structure. >> 2. In _of_phy_get() of phy-core.c to add the follow to parse a generic property. >> >> phy->attrs.disable_gen2 = of_property_read_bool(args.np, >> "usb-disable-gen2"); > > Regarding this, I'm not sure how Rob imagined the generic properties to > work. Perhaps he was thinking about something like the max-link-speed > property found in the PCI bindings. > > We could have something like this: > > - max-link-speed: > If present this property specifies the USB generation supported on > the PHY/port. Must be: > 1: for USB 3.1 Gen 1 (a.k.a. USB 3.0) > 2: for USB 3.1 Gen 2 > > I'm not sure if we need to consider anything prior to USB 3.0. I suppose > we could do a similar mapping to what I proposed for the PHY ->set_mode > callback: > > - max-link-speed: > If present this property specifies the USB generation supported on > the PHY/port. Must be: > 0x0100: for USB 1.0 (Low-Speed) > 0x0101: for USB 1.1 (Full-Speed) > 0x0200: for USB 2.0 (Hi-Speed) > 0x0300: for USB 3.0 (SuperSpeed) (a.k.a. USB 3.1 Gen 1) > 0x0301: for USB 3.1 (SuperSpeed 10 Gbit/s) (a.k.a. USB 3.1 Gen 2) > 0x0302: for USB 3.2 (SuperSpeed 20 Gbit/s) (a.k.a. USB 3.2 Gen 2 x 2) > ... > > Or those could just be sequentially enumerated, like in the above > example. > > Rob, any thoughts? > > Thierry > "Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/generic.txt" file already has dt-property named maximum-speed, which fulfills current requirement. So to disable gen2 feature simply add below entry to corresponding usb3 port entry. padctl@3520000 { status = "okay"; ports { usb3-3 { maximum-speed = "super-speed"; }; }; Read the property using API usb_get_maximum_speed. Thanks, Nagarjuna >> 3. In individual phy driver, to add SOC/PHY specific programming accordingly. >> >> Thanks, >> JC >> >> On 10/14/19 9:40 PM, Rob Herring wrote: >>> On Mon, Oct 14, 2019 at 8:17 AM Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>> On Wed, Oct 09, 2019 at 06:39:00PM -0500, Rob Herring wrote: >>>>> On Wed, Oct 09, 2019 at 10:43:41AM +0800, JC Kuo wrote: >>>>>> Extend the bindings to cover the set of features found in Tegra194. >>>>>> Note that, technically, there are four more supplies connected to the >>>>>> XUSB pad controller (DVDD_PEX, DVDD_PEX_PLL, HVDD_PEX and HVDD_PEX_PLL) >>>>>> , but the power sequencing requirements of Tegra194 require these to be >>>>>> under the control of the PMIC. >>>>>> >>>>>> Tegra194 XUSB PADCTL supports up to USB 3.1 Gen 2 speed, however, it is >>>>>> possible for some platforms have long signal trace that could not >>>>>> provide sufficient electrical environment for Gen 2 speed. To deal with >>>>>> this, a new device node property "nvidia,disable-gen2" was added to >>>>>> Tegra194 that be used to specifically disable Gen 2 speed for a >>>>>> particular USB 3.0 port so that the port can be limited to Gen 1 speed >>>>>> and avoid the instability. >>>>> >>>>> I suspect this may be a common issue and we should have a common >>>>> property. Typically, this kind of property is in the controller though >>>>> and supports multiple speed limits. See PCI bindings for inspiration. >>>> >>>> Given that support for gen 2 speeds is dependent on signal trace length, >>>> it doesn't really make sense to restrict the whole controller to a given >>>> speed if only the signal trace for a single port exceeds the limit for >>>> which gen 2 would work. >>>> >>>> Also, the USB PHYs are in a different hardware block than the USB >>>> controller, so this really is a property of the PHY block, not the USB >>>> controller. >>> >>> Okay, but still should be common for USB PHYs IMO. >>> >>> Rob >>>