On 9/3/24 6:09 PM, Alexis Lothoré wrote:
Hello everyone,
Hi,
On 8/29/24 02:44, Marek Vasut wrote:
Document compatible string for the WILC3000 chip. The chip is similar
to WILC1000, except that the register layout is slightly different and
it does not support WPA3/SAE.
Reviewed-by: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski@xxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Marek Vasut <marex@xxxxxxx>
[...]
.../bindings/net/wireless/microchip,wilc1000.yaml | 6 +++++-
1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/wireless/microchip,wilc1000.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/wireless/microchip,wilc1000.yaml
index 2460ccc082371..5d40f22765bb6 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/wireless/microchip,wilc1000.yaml
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/wireless/microchip,wilc1000.yaml
@@ -16,7 +16,11 @@ description:
properties:
compatible:
- const: microchip,wilc1000
+ oneOf:
+ - items:
+ - const: microchip,wilc3000
+ - const: microchip,wilc1000
+ - const: microchip,wilc1000
reg: true
Following this series first revision, I have been taking a look at how to
implement bluetooth feature for wilc3000 (the chip supports Bluetooth LE through
a separated UART, see [1]), and I am facing some constraints. I feel like the
possible solutions would conflict with this new binding, so even if I am a bit
late to the party, I would like to expose the issue before the binding is merged
in case we can find something which would allow to add bluetooth support without
too much pain after the wlan part.
Downstream driver currently does not implement bluetooth as a standard bluetooth
driver (module in drivers/bluetooth, registering a HCI device) but only performs
a minimal set of operations directly in the wlan part ([2]). Getting a version
valid for upstream would need the following points to be addressed:
1. despite being controlled from a serial port for nominal operations, the
bluetooth part also depends on the "wlan" bus (spi or sdio) for initialization
2. yet init steps are not performed on any kind of subsystem ops but through
writes to a custom chardev
3. the driver does not register itself a hci interface, it is expected to be
done by userspace (hciattach).
It is only after those 3 steps that the chip can be used with standard hci
commands over serial port. IMHO 1 is the biggest point, because it means that
**a bluetooth driver for wilc3000 needs access to the bus used by wlan part**
(so only describing the bluetooth part of the chip as a child node of an uart
controller is not enough). Aside from bus access, I also expect some
interactions between bluetooth and wifi (eg: power management, sleep/wakeup)
Just a quick idea -- what about having a phandle to the BT UART node in
the wilc3000 node ? Then the wilc driver can check if the phandle is
available and valid, and attach the BT part to the UART, while also
doing all the necessary power sequencing and bus accesses via SDIO/SPI.
Like this:
&uart10 {
status = "okay";
};
&mmc20 {
...
wifi@0 {
compatible = "microchip,wilc1000";
microchip,bt-uart = <&uart10>; // OPTIONAL
...
};
};