On Thu, Feb 11, 2021 at 2:45 PM Stephen Boyd <swboyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Quoting Matthias Kaehlcke (2021-02-11 12:36:35) > > Hi Stephen, > > > > On Thu, Feb 11, 2021 at 11:14:39AM -0800, Stephen Boyd wrote: > > > > > > Is it possible to use the graph binding to connect the USB controller on > > > the SoC to the port on the hub? Then the hub would be a standalone node > > > at the root of DT connected to the USB controller (or phy) and xhci code > > > could probe the firmware to see if there's a graph connection downstream > > > that is a powered hub like this. I didn't see this idea mentioned in the > > > previous discussions, but maybe I missed it. > > > > Thanks for bringing this up. I'm not sure I completely understand your > > suggestion, but in general it seems a direction that could be worth > > exploring. > > Cool. > > > > > I think something like the following should work even without requiring > > cooperation from the XHCI code: > > > > onboard-usb-hub { > > compatible = “realtek,rts5411”, “onboard_usb_hub”; > > #address-cells = <1>; > > #size-cells = <0>; > > > > vdd-supply = <&pp3300_hub>; > > > > port@0 { > > reg = <0>; > > > > rts5411_3_0: endpoint { > > // should not be needed > > remote-endpoint = <&usb_1_dwc3_port1>; > > }; > > }; > > > > port@1 { > > reg = <1>; > > > > rts5411_2_0: endpoint { > > // should not be needed > > remote-endpoint = <&usb_1_dwc3_port2>; > > }; > > }; > > }; > > > > &usb_1_dwc3 { > > dr_mode = "host"; > > #address-cells = <1>; > > #size-cells = <0>; > > > > port@1 { > > reg = <1>; > > > > usb_1_dwc3_port1: endpoint { > > remote-endpoint = <&rts5411_3_0>; > > }; > > }; > > > > port@2 { > > reg = <2>; > > > > usb_1_dwc3_port2: endpoint { > > remote-endpoint = <&rts5411_2_0>; > > }; > > }; > > }; > > > > That looks like an actual description of the hardware, without multiple DT > > nodes for the hub. > > > > The USB part of the onboard_hub driver could determine the platform device > > from the remote endpoint and register the USB device with it. > > Yeah you got it, this is what I'm suggesting. I'd like to go even > further and also describe the ports on "the other side" or "downstream > facing side" of the USB hub that go to things like type-c ports or > type-a ports. This would allow us to describe the USB topology and how > it is physically connected to ports on the device that humans see. But > that's mostly a job for the type-c subsystem, so it's a parallel > discussion that's only related because of the graph binding. I'd like to see a complete case that includes connectors. I really need someone to worry about USB bindings with a view on the big picture. The piecemeal additions don't result in the best design. Rob