On 2019/11/26 6:02, Martin Blumenstingl wrote: > Hi Hanjie, > > On Mon, Nov 25, 2019 at 8:53 AM Hanjie Lin <hanjie.lin@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> >> >> On 2019/11/22 15:52, Martin Blumenstingl wrote: >>> Hello Hanjie, >>> >>> On Fri, Nov 22, 2019 at 7:55 AM Hanjie Lin <hanjie.lin@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> [...] >>>> dt-bindings: phy: Add Amlogic G12A USB2 PHY Bindings >>>> dt-bindings: usb: dwc3: Add the Amlogic A1 Family DWC3 Glue Bindings >>>> phy: amlogic: Add Amlogic A1 USB2 PHY Driver >>> drivers/phy/amlogic/phy-meson-g12a-usb2.c seems very similar to the A1 >>> USB2 PHY you are introducing here. >>> >>>> usb: dwc3: Add Amlogic A1 DWC3 glue >>> drivers/usb/dwc3/dwc3-meson-g12a.c is also very similar to the dwc3 glue. >>> >>> I have two questions: >>> - how is the PHY and the dwc3 glue different from G12A (or SM1)? >>> - why do we need a separate set of new drivers (instead of updating >>> the existing drivers)? >>> >>> We try to use one driver for the same IP block, even if there are >>> several revisions with small differences (for example the SAR ADC >>> driver supports all SoC generations from Meson8 to G12A/G12B/SM1, >>> because 80-90% of the code is shared across all revisions). >>> >>> >>> Martin >>> >>> . >>> >> >> Hi Martin, >> >> thanks for the comment. >> >> 1, G12A have usb2-phy0/usb2-phy1/usb3-phy0 three phys and an interrupt to support host/peripheral/otg modes. >> A1 has one usb2-phy0 phy and only support host mode. > dwc3-meson-g12a treats PHYs as optional > so if you only pass "usb2-phy0" and skip usb2-phy1/usb3-phy0 then it > will still work fine > (I didn't check whether the binding also reflects this) > >> 2, G12A glue/phy drivers are for G12A SoCs, there are some diffrences to A1. >> G12A glue driver have dr_mode and interrupts two attributes to support otg mode while A1 hasn't this requirement. > dwc3-meson-g12a ignores the interrupt for HOST-only mode > (I didn't check whether the IRQ is optional in the dt-binding) > >> G12A glue driver has a hard coding vbus regulator code to support otg mode while A1 hasn't this requirement. > my understanding is that whether a board has a VBUS regulator depends > on the board design. it has nothing to do with the SoC itself > >> G12A glue driver has a hard coding support phys while A1 only supports host mode. >> enum { >> USB2_HOST_PHY = 0, >> USB2_OTG_PHY, >> USB3_HOST_PHY, >> PHY_COUNT, >> }; > this goes together with comment #1 - you can skip USB2_OTG_PHY and > USB3_HOST_PHY and the driver should still work fine > >> G12A glue driver only supports one clock while A1 needs four clocks. > indeed, the dwc3-meson-g12a needs to be updated to support this > I don't think that I have used it myself yet but there's the > clk_bulk_data framework > it seems to fit this use-case pretty well: define an arbitrary number > of clocks for G12A/B an another set of clocks for A1 - then use the > clk_bulk_data framework to enable/disable them all at once > >> G12A and A1 phy drivers have different register configurations since hardware differences. > other drivers have similar requirements: (mostly) identical register > layout but different values per SoC > here are two examples (I'm not sure if they are good examples though): > Lantiq/Intel SoC [0] and Allwinner SoCs [1] > > I compared your driver with phy-meson-g12a-usb2 and only found four differences: > 1) PHY_CTRL_R18_MPLL_DCO_CLK_SEL is set for A1 > 2) PHY_CTRL_R13_UPDATE_PMA_SIGNALS is not set for A1 > 3) PHY_CTRL_R21 is updated twice for A1 (once for earlier gen SoCs) > 4) A1 doesn't reference the "xtal" clock > > Difference 4) seems to be a general problem because there seems to be > a PLL inside the PHY registers and that PLL must be fed by some input > clock > So I believe that there is some clock input (which is currently > missing from your A1 USB2 PHY driver) > >> 3, We have estimated these differences and we thought it's more clear and readable to have a dedicated glue/phy >> driver for A1 SoCs, so also dedicated dt-bindings. > I think we should separate the driver and dt-bindings > > Based on what I have seen so far my preference for the PHY is: > - use the existing dt-binding, because it seems to be the same IP > block with different register configuration > - use the existing driver because there are only three different > register values (to me it feels like a dedicated driver for these > means more overhead for little benefit) > > for the glue I think: > - extend the existing dt-bindings and make some of the PHYs and the > interrupt line optional. making the PHYs optional will be needed when > adding GXL/GXM/AXG support anyways > - use the existing driver and make the clock inputs depend on the SoC > - everything else should already work as is > > please let me know if I missed something: > comparing/reviewing the new and existing drivers is harder than just > copying the existing one and modifying that copy > (this is one of the reasons why I think that duplicating code makes > the drivers harder to maintain) > > I also thought about the negative consequences of extending the > existing driver(s). > modifying the existing code could break the driver for existing boards. > however, I think that is not a problem because BayLibre's Kernel CI > labs have good coverage for G12A, G12B and SM1. > so if you add some A1 boards there (or host your own lab with A1 > boards) any breakage will be found early (the Kernel CI bot even does > git bisect and sends emails) > > > Martin > > > [0] https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/d2912cb15bdda8ba4a5dd73396ad62641af2f520/drivers/phy/lantiq/phy-lantiq-rcu-usb2.c#L47 > [1] https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/c942fddf8793b2013be8c901b47d0a8dc02bf99f/drivers/phy/allwinner/phy-sun4i-usb.c#L862 > > . > Hi Martin: Okay. We will try to move A1 usb phy/ctrl driver into G12A driver and send a V2 patch later. Thanks.