On Fri, Oct 23, 2020 at 12:56:20PM +0200, Oleksij Rempel wrote:
> - The upcoming CAN SIC and CAN SIC XL PHYs use a different interface to
> the CAN controller. This means the controller needs to know which type
> of PHY is attached to configure the interface in the correct mode. Use
> PHY link for that, too.
Is this dynamic in some form?
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On 10/23/20 1:45 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux admin wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 23, 2020 at 12:56:20PM +0200, Oleksij Rempel wrote:
>> - The upcoming CAN SIC and CAN SIC XL PHYs use a different interface to
>> the CAN controller. This means the controller needs to know which type
>> of PHY is attached to configure the interface in the correct mode. Use
>> PHY link for that, too.
>
> Is this dynamic in some form?
There isn't any CAN SIC transceivers out there yet. I suspect there will be no
auto detection possible, so we would describe the type of the attached
transceiver via device tree.
In the future I can think of some devices that have a MUX and use the a classic
transceiver (CAN high-speed) for legacy deployments and CAN SIC transceivers if
connected to a "modern" CAN bus.
Someone (i.e. the user or the system integrator) has to configure the MUX to
select the correct transceiver.
Marc
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On Fri, Oct 23, 2020 at 02:14:09PM +0200, Marc Kleine-Budde wrote:
> On 10/23/20 1:45 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux admin wrote:
> > On Fri, Oct 23, 2020 at 12:56:20PM +0200, Oleksij Rempel wrote:
> >> - The upcoming CAN SIC and CAN SIC XL PHYs use a different interface to
> >> the CAN controller. This means the controller needs to know which type
> >> of PHY is attached to configure the interface in the correct mode. Use
> >> PHY link for that, too.
> >
> > Is this dynamic in some form?
>
> There isn't any CAN SIC transceivers out there yet. I suspect there will be no
> auto detection possible, so we would describe the type of the attached
> transceiver via device tree.
>
> In the future I can think of some devices that have a MUX and use the a classic
> transceiver (CAN high-speed) for legacy deployments and CAN SIC transceivers if
> connected to a "modern" CAN bus.
>
> Someone (i.e. the user or the system integrator) has to configure the MUX to
> select the correct transceiver.
Hmm. So it's static, and described in firmware. So, that brings me to
the obvious question: why use phylink for this rather than the phylib
APIs?
phylink isn't obsoleting phylib in any way, and phylib does support
the ability for the PHY to change its MAC side interface (if it didn't
then PHYs such as 88x3310 and similar wouldn't be usable.)
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