Hi, On Thursday 18 September 2014 03:55 PM, Heikki Krogerus wrote: > On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 03:35:08PM +0300, Heikki Krogerus wrote: >> On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 08:16:01PM +0530, Kishon Vijay Abraham I wrote: >>> Assume you have 2 phys in your system.. >>> static struct phy_lookup usb_lookup = { >>> .phy_name = "phy-usb.0", >>> .dev_id = "usb.0", >>> .con_id = "usb", >>> }; >>> >>> static struct phy_lookup sata_lookup = { >>> .phy_name = "sata-usb.1", >>> .dev_id = "sata.0", >>> .con_id = "sata", >>> }; >>> >>> First you do modprobe phy-usb, the probe of USB PHY driver gets invoked and it >>> creates the PHY. The phy-core will find a free id (now it will be 0) and then >>> name the phy as phy-usb.0. >>> Then with modprobe phy-sata, the phy-core will create phy-sata.1. >>> >>> This is an ideal case where the .phy_name in phy_lookup matches. >>> >>> Consider if the order is flipped and the user does modprobe phy-sata first. The >>> phy_names won't match anymore (the sata phy device name would be "sata-usb.0"). > > Actually, I don't think there would be this problem if we used the > name of the actual device which is the parent of phy devices, right? hmm.. but if the parent is a multi-phy phy provider (like pipe3 PHY driver), we might end up with the same problem. Thanks Kishon -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-usb" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html