2012-11-10 00:49:01

by Stepan Moskovchenko

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available

Use the cell-index property to construct names for platform
devices, falling back on the existing scheme of using the
device register address if cell-index is not specified.

The cell-index property is a more useful device identifier,
especially in systems containing several numbered instances
of a particular hardware block, since it more easily
illustrates how devices relate to each other.

Additionally, userspace software may rely on the classic
<name>.<id> naming scheme to access device attributes in
sysfs, without having to know the physical addresses of
that device on every platform the userspace software may
support. Using cell-index for device naming allows the
device addresses to be hidden from userspace and to be
exposed by logical device number without having to rely on
auxdata to perform name overrides. This allows userspace to
make assumptions about which sysfs nodes map to which
logical instance of a specific hardware block.

Signed-off-by: Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]>
---
I had also considered using something like the linux,label property to allow
custom names for platform devices without resorting to auxdata, but the
cell-index approach seems more in line with what cell-index was intended for
and with what the pre-DT platform device naming scheme used to be. Please let
me know if you think there is a better way to accomplish this.

This is just being sent out as an RFC for now. If there are no objections, I
will send this out as an official patch, along with (or combined with) a patch
to fix up the device names in things like clock tables of any affected
platforms.

drivers/of/platform.c | 13 ++++++++++++-
1 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/of/platform.c b/drivers/of/platform.c
index 343ad29..472e374 100644
--- a/drivers/of/platform.c
+++ b/drivers/of/platform.c
@@ -77,8 +77,9 @@ void of_device_make_bus_id(struct device *dev)
static atomic_t bus_no_reg_magic;
struct device_node *node = dev->of_node;
const u32 *reg;
+ u32 cell_index;
u64 addr;
- int magic;
+ int magic, ret;

#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_DCR
/*
@@ -101,6 +102,16 @@ void of_device_make_bus_id(struct device *dev)
#endif /* CONFIG_PPC_DCR */

/*
+ * For devices with a specified cell-index, use the traditional
+ * naming scheme of <name>.<id>
+ */
+ ret = of_property_read_u32(node, "cell-index", &cell_index);
+ if (ret == 0) {
+ dev_set_name(dev, "%s.%d", node->name, cell_index);
+ return;
+ }
+
+ /*
* For MMIO, get the physical address
*/
reg = of_get_property(node, "reg", NULL);
--
The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum,
hosted by The Linux Foundation


2012-11-11 02:33:00

by Rob Herring

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available

On 11/09/2012 06:48 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
> Use the cell-index property to construct names for platform
> devices, falling back on the existing scheme of using the
> device register address if cell-index is not specified.
>
> The cell-index property is a more useful device identifier,
> especially in systems containing several numbered instances
> of a particular hardware block, since it more easily
> illustrates how devices relate to each other.
>
> Additionally, userspace software may rely on the classic
> <name>.<id> naming scheme to access device attributes in
> sysfs, without having to know the physical addresses of
> that device on every platform the userspace software may
> support. Using cell-index for device naming allows the
> device addresses to be hidden from userspace and to be
> exposed by logical device number without having to rely on
> auxdata to perform name overrides. This allows userspace to
> make assumptions about which sysfs nodes map to which
> logical instance of a specific hardware block.
>
> Signed-off-by: Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]>
> ---
> I had also considered using something like the linux,label property to allow
> custom names for platform devices without resorting to auxdata, but the
> cell-index approach seems more in line with what cell-index was intended for
> and with what the pre-DT platform device naming scheme used to be. Please let
> me know if you think there is a better way to accomplish this.
>
> This is just being sent out as an RFC for now. If there are no objections, I
> will send this out as an official patch, along with (or combined with) a patch
> to fix up the device names in things like clock tables of any affected
> platforms.

cell-index is basically deprecated. This has been discussed multiple
times in the past. You can use auxdata if you really need to have the
old name.

Rob

>
> drivers/of/platform.c | 13 ++++++++++++-
> 1 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/of/platform.c b/drivers/of/platform.c
> index 343ad29..472e374 100644
> --- a/drivers/of/platform.c
> +++ b/drivers/of/platform.c
> @@ -77,8 +77,9 @@ void of_device_make_bus_id(struct device *dev)
> static atomic_t bus_no_reg_magic;
> struct device_node *node = dev->of_node;
> const u32 *reg;
> + u32 cell_index;
> u64 addr;
> - int magic;
> + int magic, ret;
>
> #ifdef CONFIG_PPC_DCR
> /*
> @@ -101,6 +102,16 @@ void of_device_make_bus_id(struct device *dev)
> #endif /* CONFIG_PPC_DCR */
>
> /*
> + * For devices with a specified cell-index, use the traditional
> + * naming scheme of <name>.<id>
> + */
> + ret = of_property_read_u32(node, "cell-index", &cell_index);
> + if (ret == 0) {
> + dev_set_name(dev, "%s.%d", node->name, cell_index);
> + return;
> + }
> +
> + /*
> * For MMIO, get the physical address
> */
> reg = of_get_property(node, "reg", NULL);
> --
> The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum,
> hosted by The Linux Foundation
>

2012-11-11 17:50:19

by Grant Likely

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available

On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 2:32 AM, Rob Herring <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 11/09/2012 06:48 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
>> Use the cell-index property to construct names for platform
>> devices, falling back on the existing scheme of using the
>> device register address if cell-index is not specified.
>>
>> The cell-index property is a more useful device identifier,
>> especially in systems containing several numbered instances
>> of a particular hardware block, since it more easily
>> illustrates how devices relate to each other.
>>
>> Additionally, userspace software may rely on the classic
>> <name>.<id> naming scheme to access device attributes in
>> sysfs, without having to know the physical addresses of
>> that device on every platform the userspace software may
>> support. Using cell-index for device naming allows the
>> device addresses to be hidden from userspace and to be
>> exposed by logical device number without having to rely on
>> auxdata to perform name overrides. This allows userspace to
>> make assumptions about which sysfs nodes map to which
>> logical instance of a specific hardware block.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]>
>> ---
>> I had also considered using something like the linux,label property to allow
>> custom names for platform devices without resorting to auxdata, but the
>> cell-index approach seems more in line with what cell-index was intended for
>> and with what the pre-DT platform device naming scheme used to be. Please let
>> me know if you think there is a better way to accomplish this.
>>
>> This is just being sent out as an RFC for now. If there are no objections, I
>> will send this out as an official patch, along with (or combined with) a patch
>> to fix up the device names in things like clock tables of any affected
>> platforms.
>
> cell-index is basically deprecated. This has been discussed multiple
> times in the past. You can use auxdata if you really need to have the
> old name.

Actually, I think it would be fine to use an /aliases entry to set the
device name. That's the place to put global namespace information.

g.

2012-11-12 01:45:06

by Stepan Moskovchenko

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available


> On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 2:32 AM, Rob Herring <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>> On 11/09/2012 06:48 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
>>> Use the cell-index property to construct names for platform
>>> devices, falling back on the existing scheme of using the
>>> device register address if cell-index is not specified.
>>>
>>> The cell-index property is a more useful device identifier,
>>> especially in systems containing several numbered instances
>>> of a particular hardware block, since it more easily
>>> illustrates how devices relate to each other.
>>>
>>> Additionally, userspace software may rely on the classic
>>> <name>.<id> naming scheme to access device attributes in
>>> sysfs, without having to know the physical addresses of
>>> that device on every platform the userspace software may
>>> support. Using cell-index for device naming allows the
>>> device addresses to be hidden from userspace and to be
>>> exposed by logical device number without having to rely on
>>> auxdata to perform name overrides. This allows userspace to
>>> make assumptions about which sysfs nodes map to which
>>> logical instance of a specific hardware block.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]>
>>> ---
>>> I had also considered using something like the linux,label property to
>>> allow
>>> custom names for platform devices without resorting to auxdata, but the
>>> cell-index approach seems more in line with what cell-index was
>>> intended for
>>> and with what the pre-DT platform device naming scheme used to be.
>>> Please let
>>> me know if you think there is a better way to accomplish this.
>>>
>>> This is just being sent out as an RFC for now. If there are no
>>> objections, I
>>> will send this out as an official patch, along with (or combined with)
>>> a patch
>>> to fix up the device names in things like clock tables of any affected
>>> platforms.
>>
>> cell-index is basically deprecated. This has been discussed multiple
>> times in the past. You can use auxdata if you really need to have the
>> old name.
>
> Actually, I think it would be fine to use an /aliases entry to set the
> device name. That's the place to put global namespace information.
>
> g.
>

Ah, thank you. I would prefer to stay away from auxdata, since it involves
placing more platform-specific data into the kernel, and it is my
understanding that auxdata is intended as a temporary measure. The
/aliases approach looks interesting, and I'll see what I can do with it -
hopefully I can have an RFC / patch soon. It looks like we would want an
"inverse" alias lookup- that is, we would need to know which alias
corresponds to a given node. Is it possible for a node to have multiple
aliases? If so, which shall we use to create the device name? Anyway, I
will further look into how these aliases work.

Steve

2012-11-13 02:49:15

by Stepan Moskovchenko

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available

On 11/11/2012 5:45 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
>
>> On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 2:32 AM, Rob Herring <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>> On 11/09/2012 06:48 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
>>>> Use the cell-index property to construct names for platform
>>>> devices, falling back on the existing scheme of using the
>>>> device register address if cell-index is not specified.
>>>>
>>>> The cell-index property is a more useful device identifier,
>>>> especially in systems containing several numbered instances
>>>> of a particular hardware block, since it more easily
>>>> illustrates how devices relate to each other.
>>>>
>>>> Additionally, userspace software may rely on the classic
>>>> <name>.<id> naming scheme to access device attributes in
>>>> sysfs, without having to know the physical addresses of
>>>> that device on every platform the userspace software may
>>>> support. Using cell-index for device naming allows the
>>>> device addresses to be hidden from userspace and to be
>>>> exposed by logical device number without having to rely on
>>>> auxdata to perform name overrides. This allows userspace to
>>>> make assumptions about which sysfs nodes map to which
>>>> logical instance of a specific hardware block.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]>
>>>> ---
>>>> I had also considered using something like the linux,label property to
>>>> allow
>>>> custom names for platform devices without resorting to auxdata, but the
>>>> cell-index approach seems more in line with what cell-index was
>>>> intended for
>>>> and with what the pre-DT platform device naming scheme used to be.
>>>> Please let
>>>> me know if you think there is a better way to accomplish this.
>>>>
>>>> This is just being sent out as an RFC for now. If there are no
>>>> objections, I
>>>> will send this out as an official patch, along with (or combined with)
>>>> a patch
>>>> to fix up the device names in things like clock tables of any affected
>>>> platforms.
>>>
>>> cell-index is basically deprecated. This has been discussed multiple
>>> times in the past. You can use auxdata if you really need to have the
>>> old name.
>>
>> Actually, I think it would be fine to use an /aliases entry to set the
>> device name. That's the place to put global namespace information.
>>
>> g.
>>
>
> Ah, thank you. I would prefer to stay away from auxdata, since it involves
> placing more platform-specific data into the kernel, and it is my
> understanding that auxdata is intended as a temporary measure. The
> /aliases approach looks interesting, and I'll see what I can do with it -
> hopefully I can have an RFC / patch soon. It looks like we would want an
> "inverse" alias lookup- that is, we would need to know which alias
> corresponds to a given node. Is it possible for a node to have multiple
> aliases? If so, which shall we use to create the device name? Anyway, I
> will further look into how these aliases work.
>
> Steve

Hi Grant,

Looking through the alias code, I see that the stem and the alias ID are
stored and parsed separately. For the current way of using aliases, this
makes sense. However, can you please clarify what you meant by using an
/aliases entry to set the device name?

The first and most straightforward approach would be to use the entire
alias name as the device name, making no distinction between the alias
stem and ID. However, since it is possible to have multiple aliases to
the same device, which of the aliases shall we use to construct the
device name? Additionally, this may cause possible problems for legacy
software that expects names in the format of <name>.<ID>, since '.' is
not a valid character for alias names as defined by the DT spec,
although strictly speaking this approach would successfully solve the
problem of giving devices predictable and controllable names.

Another way an /aliases entry could be used to set the device name is to
have a <name>.<ID> naming scheme, where the name comes from node->name
(as is done in of_device_make_bus_id) and the ID gets queried using
of_alias_get_id(). We would need to create a new alias stem for this
purpose, and suppose that something like "platform" would work. The
name-setting code would then roughly look as follows:

+ alias_id = of_alias_get_id(node, "platform");
+ if (alias_id != -ENODEV) {
+ dev_set_name(dev, "%s.%d", node->name, alias_id);
+ return;
+ }

The downside to this approach is that it imposes the restriction that
device ID numbers now have to be unique throughout the system, whereas
before only the <name>.<ID> combinations had to be unique. This is the
result of only the ID number being present in the alias table, with each
such ID number having the "platform" stem, and the restriction that node
properties shall have unique names.

A third possible solution is to use an alias stem prefix for defining
the device name. That is, the alias to set the device name would have
some prefix (such as "platform-" for example) and the aliases would look
something like platform-<name><ID>. The code to assign device names
would find the matching alias containing the "platform-" prefix, strip
the prefix, and use the resulting name and ID to construct the device
name. This approach would make it more obvious as to which of several
aliases is used to set the device name, but it imposes additional
structure on the stem names and causes any aliases starting with
"platform-" to become magical, which bothers me slightly.

Do any of these describe what you intended when you suggested using the
/aliases node to set device names, or is there another approach that I
have missed? Can you please elaborate further?

Thank you
Steve


--
The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum,
hosted by The Linux Foundation

2012-11-15 16:10:26

by Grant Likely

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available

On Mon, 12 Nov 2012 18:48:43 -0800, Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 11/11/2012 5:45 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
> >
> >> On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 2:32 AM, Rob Herring <[email protected]>
> >> wrote:
> >>> On 11/09/2012 06:48 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
> >>>> Use the cell-index property to construct names for platform
> >>>> devices, falling back on the existing scheme of using the
> >>>> device register address if cell-index is not specified.
> >>>>
> >>>> The cell-index property is a more useful device identifier,
> >>>> especially in systems containing several numbered instances
> >>>> of a particular hardware block, since it more easily
> >>>> illustrates how devices relate to each other.
> >>>>
> >>>> Additionally, userspace software may rely on the classic
> >>>> <name>.<id> naming scheme to access device attributes in
> >>>> sysfs, without having to know the physical addresses of
> >>>> that device on every platform the userspace software may
> >>>> support. Using cell-index for device naming allows the
> >>>> device addresses to be hidden from userspace and to be
> >>>> exposed by logical device number without having to rely on
> >>>> auxdata to perform name overrides. This allows userspace to
> >>>> make assumptions about which sysfs nodes map to which
> >>>> logical instance of a specific hardware block.
> >>>>
> >>>> Signed-off-by: Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]>
> >>>> ---
> >>>> I had also considered using something like the linux,label property to
> >>>> allow
> >>>> custom names for platform devices without resorting to auxdata, but the
> >>>> cell-index approach seems more in line with what cell-index was
> >>>> intended for
> >>>> and with what the pre-DT platform device naming scheme used to be.
> >>>> Please let
> >>>> me know if you think there is a better way to accomplish this.
> >>>>
> >>>> This is just being sent out as an RFC for now. If there are no
> >>>> objections, I
> >>>> will send this out as an official patch, along with (or combined with)
> >>>> a patch
> >>>> to fix up the device names in things like clock tables of any affected
> >>>> platforms.
> >>>
> >>> cell-index is basically deprecated. This has been discussed multiple
> >>> times in the past. You can use auxdata if you really need to have the
> >>> old name.
> >>
> >> Actually, I think it would be fine to use an /aliases entry to set the
> >> device name. That's the place to put global namespace information.
> >>
> >> g.
> >>
> >
> > Ah, thank you. I would prefer to stay away from auxdata, since it involves
> > placing more platform-specific data into the kernel, and it is my
> > understanding that auxdata is intended as a temporary measure. The
> > /aliases approach looks interesting, and I'll see what I can do with it -
> > hopefully I can have an RFC / patch soon. It looks like we would want an
> > "inverse" alias lookup- that is, we would need to know which alias
> > corresponds to a given node. Is it possible for a node to have multiple
> > aliases?

yes

> > If so, which shall we use to create the device name? Anyway, I
> > will further look into how these aliases work.

Well, why exactly do you want to control the names of devices? Is it so
that devices match up with what they are, or is it to make things match
up with things like clocks and regulators. If it is the latter, then no,
don't do this. Use auxdata. When the kernel requires a specific name for
a device it is very much a kernel *internal* detail. It does not make
sense to encode that into the device tree when it isn't something part
of the binding.


> >
> > Steve
>
> Hi Grant,
>
> Looking through the alias code, I see that the stem and the alias ID are
> stored and parsed separately. For the current way of using aliases, this
> makes sense. However, can you please clarify what you meant by using an
> /aliases entry to set the device name?
>
> The first and most straightforward approach would be to use the entire
> alias name as the device name, making no distinction between the alias
> stem and ID. However, since it is possible to have multiple aliases to
> the same device, which of the aliases shall we use to construct the
> device name? Additionally, this may cause possible problems for legacy
> software that expects names in the format of <name>.<ID>, since '.' is
> not a valid character for alias names as defined by the DT spec,
> although strictly speaking this approach would successfully solve the
> problem of giving devices predictable and controllable names.
>
> Another way an /aliases entry could be used to set the device name is to
> have a <name>.<ID> naming scheme, where the name comes from node->name
> (as is done in of_device_make_bus_id) and the ID gets queried using
> of_alias_get_id(). We would need to create a new alias stem for this
> purpose, and suppose that something like "platform" would work. The
> name-setting code would then roughly look as follows:
>
> + alias_id = of_alias_get_id(node, "platform");
> + if (alias_id != -ENODEV) {
> + dev_set_name(dev, "%s.%d", node->name, alias_id);
> + return;
> + }
>
> The downside to this approach is that it imposes the restriction that
> device ID numbers now have to be unique throughout the system, whereas
> before only the <name>.<ID> combinations had to be unique. This is the
> result of only the ID number being present in the alias table, with each
> such ID number having the "platform" stem, and the restriction that node
> properties shall have unique names.

Again, this all looks like trying to manipulate names to keep the kernel
happy. Since the kernel has the restrictions on naming, that is where
the fixups should be made. Either by devres or by changing the expected
name in the clk/regulator tables.

> A third possible solution is to use an alias stem prefix for defining
> the device name. That is, the alias to set the device name would have
> some prefix (such as "platform-" for example) and the aliases would look
> something like platform-<name><ID>. The code to assign device names
> would find the matching alias containing the "platform-" prefix, strip
> the prefix, and use the resulting name and ID to construct the device
> name. This approach would make it more obvious as to which of several
> aliases is used to set the device name, but it imposes additional
> structure on the stem names and causes any aliases starting with
> "platform-" to become magical, which bothers me slightly.

And specific to the current Linux implementation details.

> Do any of these describe what you intended when you suggested using the
> /aliases node to set device names, or is there another approach that I
> have missed? Can you please elaborate further?

Really, all I was thinking about was allowing the device that has an
alias "eth0" to be given a name with 'eth0' in it somewhere. Since names
like that are a global namespace, /aliases is the place to get them
because there is no chance of colision with that approach.

g.

2012-11-16 02:46:08

by Stepan Moskovchenko

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available

On 11/15/2012 8:10 AM, Grant Likely wrote:
> On Mon, 12 Nov 2012 18:48:43 -0800, Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On 11/11/2012 5:45 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 2:32 AM, Rob Herring <[email protected]>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>> On 11/09/2012 06:48 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
>>>>>> Use the cell-index property to construct names for platform
>>>>>> devices, falling back on the existing scheme of using the
>>>>>> device register address if cell-index is not specified.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The cell-index property is a more useful device identifier,
>>>>>> especially in systems containing several numbered instances
>>>>>> of a particular hardware block, since it more easily
>>>>>> illustrates how devices relate to each other.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Additionally, userspace software may rely on the classic
>>>>>> <name>.<id> naming scheme to access device attributes in
>>>>>> sysfs, without having to know the physical addresses of
>>>>>> that device on every platform the userspace software may
>>>>>> support. Using cell-index for device naming allows the
>>>>>> device addresses to be hidden from userspace and to be
>>>>>> exposed by logical device number without having to rely on
>>>>>> auxdata to perform name overrides. This allows userspace to
>>>>>> make assumptions about which sysfs nodes map to which
>>>>>> logical instance of a specific hardware block.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]>
>>>>>> ---
>>>>>> I had also considered using something like the linux,label property to
>>>>>> allow
>>>>>> custom names for platform devices without resorting to auxdata, but the
>>>>>> cell-index approach seems more in line with what cell-index was
>>>>>> intended for
>>>>>> and with what the pre-DT platform device naming scheme used to be.
>>>>>> Please let
>>>>>> me know if you think there is a better way to accomplish this.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This is just being sent out as an RFC for now. If there are no
>>>>>> objections, I
>>>>>> will send this out as an official patch, along with (or combined with)
>>>>>> a patch
>>>>>> to fix up the device names in things like clock tables of any affected
>>>>>> platforms.
>>>>>
>>>>> cell-index is basically deprecated. This has been discussed multiple
>>>>> times in the past. You can use auxdata if you really need to have the
>>>>> old name.
>>>>
>>>> Actually, I think it would be fine to use an /aliases entry to set the
>>>> device name. That's the place to put global namespace information.
>>>>
>>>> g.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Ah, thank you. I would prefer to stay away from auxdata, since it involves
>>> placing more platform-specific data into the kernel, and it is my
>>> understanding that auxdata is intended as a temporary measure. The
>>> /aliases approach looks interesting, and I'll see what I can do with it -
>>> hopefully I can have an RFC / patch soon. It looks like we would want an
>>> "inverse" alias lookup- that is, we would need to know which alias
>>> corresponds to a given node. Is it possible for a node to have multiple
>>> aliases?
>
> yes
>
>>> If so, which shall we use to create the device name? Anyway, I
>>> will further look into how these aliases work.
>
> Well, why exactly do you want to control the names of devices? Is it so
> that devices match up with what they are, or is it to make things match
> up with things like clocks and regulators. If it is the latter, then no,
> don't do this. Use auxdata. When the kernel requires a specific name for
> a device it is very much a kernel *internal* detail. It does not make
> sense to encode that into the device tree when it isn't something part
> of the binding.
>
>
>>>
>>> Steve
>>
>> Hi Grant,
>>
>> Looking through the alias code, I see that the stem and the alias ID are
>> stored and parsed separately. For the current way of using aliases, this
>> makes sense. However, can you please clarify what you meant by using an
>> /aliases entry to set the device name?
>>
>> The first and most straightforward approach would be to use the entire
>> alias name as the device name, making no distinction between the alias
>> stem and ID. However, since it is possible to have multiple aliases to
>> the same device, which of the aliases shall we use to construct the
>> device name? Additionally, this may cause possible problems for legacy
>> software that expects names in the format of <name>.<ID>, since '.' is
>> not a valid character for alias names as defined by the DT spec,
>> although strictly speaking this approach would successfully solve the
>> problem of giving devices predictable and controllable names.
>>
>> Another way an /aliases entry could be used to set the device name is to
>> have a <name>.<ID> naming scheme, where the name comes from node->name
>> (as is done in of_device_make_bus_id) and the ID gets queried using
>> of_alias_get_id(). We would need to create a new alias stem for this
>> purpose, and suppose that something like "platform" would work. The
>> name-setting code would then roughly look as follows:
>>
>> + alias_id = of_alias_get_id(node, "platform");
>> + if (alias_id != -ENODEV) {
>> + dev_set_name(dev, "%s.%d", node->name, alias_id);
>> + return;
>> + }
>>
>> The downside to this approach is that it imposes the restriction that
>> device ID numbers now have to be unique throughout the system, whereas
>> before only the <name>.<ID> combinations had to be unique. This is the
>> result of only the ID number being present in the alias table, with each
>> such ID number having the "platform" stem, and the restriction that node
>> properties shall have unique names.
>
> Again, this all looks like trying to manipulate names to keep the kernel
> happy. Since the kernel has the restrictions on naming, that is where
> the fixups should be made. Either by devres or by changing the expected
> name in the clk/regulator tables.
>
>> A third possible solution is to use an alias stem prefix for defining
>> the device name. That is, the alias to set the device name would have
>> some prefix (such as "platform-" for example) and the aliases would look
>> something like platform-<name><ID>. The code to assign device names
>> would find the matching alias containing the "platform-" prefix, strip
>> the prefix, and use the resulting name and ID to construct the device
>> name. This approach would make it more obvious as to which of several
>> aliases is used to set the device name, but it imposes additional
>> structure on the stem names and causes any aliases starting with
>> "platform-" to become magical, which bothers me slightly.
>
> And specific to the current Linux implementation details.
>
>> Do any of these describe what you intended when you suggested using the
>> /aliases node to set device names, or is there another approach that I
>> have missed? Can you please elaborate further?
>
> Really, all I was thinking about was allowing the device that has an
> alias "eth0" to be given a name with 'eth0' in it somewhere. Since names
> like that are a global namespace, /aliases is the place to get them
> because there is no chance of colision with that approach.
>
> g.
>

Hi Grant,
I realize that auxdata is the correct thing to use for keeping the
kernel happy (for things like clocks and regulator consumers) but this
is not the problem I am trying to solve. My goal is to try to keep
userspace happy by trying to create common and predictable names for
functionally equivalent devices across different hardware platforms.
For instance, two similar SoCs may have an SDCC controller which may be
logically referred to as "the first SDCC device", though the physical
address of this device may be different on the two SoCs. And, due to the
<reg>.<name> naming convention, the sysfs entries associated with a
particular device will be a dependent on the physical address of the device.

If userspace wants to touch the sysfs entries of what can logically be
described as "the first SDCC device", then userspace needs to know the
physical address of this device on each SoC variant it may be running
on, since the path to the sysfs entries for this device will be based on
the physical address of the device. By using a device naming scheme that
replaces the physical address with a logical device number, the
userspace-facing interface for each device (such as sysfs entries) could
be kept common across SoC variants even when device physical addresses
can move around but devices still have the same logical assignments.

I realize that this problem can be solved by using auxdata to set the
device name, but in this case the only purpose of the auxdata would be
to keep userspace happy, since all the other in-kernel relationships
(for things like clocks and regulators) can already work without having
to rely on auxdata. So, introducing auxdata just for consistency of
userspace-facing names seems silly and, I am trying to come up with a
more appropriate solution.

What do you think?

Steve




--
The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum,
hosted by The Linux Foundation

2012-11-17 03:29:28

by Stepan Moskovchenko

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available

On 11/15/2012 8:10 AM, Grant Likely wrote:
> On Mon, 12 Nov 2012 18:48:43 -0800, Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On 11/11/2012 5:45 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 2:32 AM, Rob Herring <[email protected]>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>> On 11/09/2012 06:48 PM, Stepan Moskovchenko wrote:
>>>>>> Use the cell-index property to construct names for platform
>>>>>> devices, falling back on the existing scheme of using the
>>>>>> device register address if cell-index is not specified.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The cell-index property is a more useful device identifier,
>>>>>> especially in systems containing several numbered instances
>>>>>> of a particular hardware block, since it more easily
>>>>>> illustrates how devices relate to each other.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Additionally, userspace software may rely on the classic
>>>>>> <name>.<id> naming scheme to access device attributes in
>>>>>> sysfs, without having to know the physical addresses of
>>>>>> that device on every platform the userspace software may
>>>>>> support. Using cell-index for device naming allows the
>>>>>> device addresses to be hidden from userspace and to be
>>>>>> exposed by logical device number without having to rely on
>>>>>> auxdata to perform name overrides. This allows userspace to
>>>>>> make assumptions about which sysfs nodes map to which
>>>>>> logical instance of a specific hardware block.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]>
>>>>>> ---
>>>>>> I had also considered using something like the linux,label property to
>>>>>> allow
>>>>>> custom names for platform devices without resorting to auxdata, but the
>>>>>> cell-index approach seems more in line with what cell-index was
>>>>>> intended for
>>>>>> and with what the pre-DT platform device naming scheme used to be.
>>>>>> Please let
>>>>>> me know if you think there is a better way to accomplish this.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This is just being sent out as an RFC for now. If there are no
>>>>>> objections, I
>>>>>> will send this out as an official patch, along with (or combined with)
>>>>>> a patch
>>>>>> to fix up the device names in things like clock tables of any affected
>>>>>> platforms.
>>>>>
>>>>> cell-index is basically deprecated. This has been discussed multiple
>>>>> times in the past. You can use auxdata if you really need to have the
>>>>> old name.
>>>>
>>>> Actually, I think it would be fine to use an /aliases entry to set the
>>>> device name. That's the place to put global namespace information.
>>>>
>>>> g.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Ah, thank you. I would prefer to stay away from auxdata, since it involves
>>> placing more platform-specific data into the kernel, and it is my
>>> understanding that auxdata is intended as a temporary measure. The
>>> /aliases approach looks interesting, and I'll see what I can do with it -
>>> hopefully I can have an RFC / patch soon. It looks like we would want an
>>> "inverse" alias lookup- that is, we would need to know which alias
>>> corresponds to a given node. Is it possible for a node to have multiple
>>> aliases?
>
> yes
>
>>> If so, which shall we use to create the device name? Anyway, I
>>> will further look into how these aliases work.
>
> Well, why exactly do you want to control the names of devices? Is it so
> that devices match up with what they are, or is it to make things match
> up with things like clocks and regulators. If it is the latter, then no,
> don't do this. Use auxdata. When the kernel requires a specific name for
> a device it is very much a kernel *internal* detail. It does not make
> sense to encode that into the device tree when it isn't something part
> of the binding.
>
>
>>>
>>> Steve
>>
>> Hi Grant,
>>
>> Looking through the alias code, I see that the stem and the alias ID are
>> stored and parsed separately. For the current way of using aliases, this
>> makes sense. However, can you please clarify what you meant by using an
>> /aliases entry to set the device name?
>>
>> The first and most straightforward approach would be to use the entire
>> alias name as the device name, making no distinction between the alias
>> stem and ID. However, since it is possible to have multiple aliases to
>> the same device, which of the aliases shall we use to construct the
>> device name? Additionally, this may cause possible problems for legacy
>> software that expects names in the format of <name>.<ID>, since '.' is
>> not a valid character for alias names as defined by the DT spec,
>> although strictly speaking this approach would successfully solve the
>> problem of giving devices predictable and controllable names.
>>
>> Another way an /aliases entry could be used to set the device name is to
>> have a <name>.<ID> naming scheme, where the name comes from node->name
>> (as is done in of_device_make_bus_id) and the ID gets queried using
>> of_alias_get_id(). We would need to create a new alias stem for this
>> purpose, and suppose that something like "platform" would work. The
>> name-setting code would then roughly look as follows:
>>
>> + alias_id = of_alias_get_id(node, "platform");
>> + if (alias_id != -ENODEV) {
>> + dev_set_name(dev, "%s.%d", node->name, alias_id);
>> + return;
>> + }
>>
>> The downside to this approach is that it imposes the restriction that
>> device ID numbers now have to be unique throughout the system, whereas
>> before only the <name>.<ID> combinations had to be unique. This is the
>> result of only the ID number being present in the alias table, with each
>> such ID number having the "platform" stem, and the restriction that node
>> properties shall have unique names.
>
> Again, this all looks like trying to manipulate names to keep the kernel
> happy. Since the kernel has the restrictions on naming, that is where
> the fixups should be made. Either by devres or by changing the expected
> name in the clk/regulator tables.
>
>> A third possible solution is to use an alias stem prefix for defining
>> the device name. That is, the alias to set the device name would have
>> some prefix (such as "platform-" for example) and the aliases would look
>> something like platform-<name><ID>. The code to assign device names
>> would find the matching alias containing the "platform-" prefix, strip
>> the prefix, and use the resulting name and ID to construct the device
>> name. This approach would make it more obvious as to which of several
>> aliases is used to set the device name, but it imposes additional
>> structure on the stem names and causes any aliases starting with
>> "platform-" to become magical, which bothers me slightly.
>
> And specific to the current Linux implementation details.
>
>> Do any of these describe what you intended when you suggested using the
>> /aliases node to set device names, or is there another approach that I
>> have missed? Can you please elaborate further?
>
> Really, all I was thinking about was allowing the device that has an
> alias "eth0" to be given a name with 'eth0' in it somewhere. Since names
> like that are a global namespace, /aliases is the place to get them
> because there is no chance of colision with that approach.
>
> g.
>

[I seem to have forgotten to add the CCed recipients in my last reply.
Adding them now.]

Hi Grant,
I realize that auxdata is the correct thing to use for keeping the
kernel happy (for things like clocks and regulator consumers) but this
is not the problem I am trying to solve. My goal is to try to keep
userspace happy by trying to create common and predictable names for
functionally equivalent devices across different hardware platforms.
For instance, two similar SoCs may have an SDCC controller which may be
logically referred to as "the first SDCC device", though the physical
address of this device may be different on the two SoCs. And, due to the
<reg>.<name> naming convention, the sysfs entries associated with a
particular device will be a dependent on the physical address of the device.

If userspace wants to touch the sysfs entries of what can logically be
described as "the first SDCC device", then userspace needs to know the
physical address of this device on each SoC variant it may be running
on, since the path to the sysfs entries for this device will be based on
the physical address of the device. By using a device naming scheme that
replaces the physical address with a logical device number, the
userspace-facing interface for each device (such as sysfs entries) could
be kept common across SoC variants even when device physical addresses
can move around but devices still have the same logical assignments.

I realize that this problem can be solved by using auxdata to set the
device name, but in this case the only purpose of the auxdata would be
to keep userspace happy, since all the other in-kernel relationships
(for things like clocks and regulators) can already work without having
to rely on auxdata. So, introducing auxdata just for consistency of
userspace-facing names seems silly and, I am trying to come up with a
more appropriate solution.

What do you think?

Steve

--
The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum,
hosted by The Linux Foundation

2012-11-20 16:20:05

by Grant Likely

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [RFC] dt/platform: Use cell-index for device naming if available

On Fri, 16 Nov 2012 19:29:09 -0800, Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 11/15/2012 8:10 AM, Grant Likely wrote:
> > On Mon, 12 Nov 2012 18:48:43 -0800, Stepan Moskovchenko <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Well, why exactly do you want to control the names of devices? Is it so
> > that devices match up with what they are, or is it to make things match
> > up with things like clocks and regulators. If it is the latter, then no,
> > don't do this. Use auxdata. When the kernel requires a specific name for
> > a device it is very much a kernel *internal* detail. It does not make
> > sense to encode that into the device tree when it isn't something part
> > of the binding.
>
> Hi Grant,
> I realize that auxdata is the correct thing to use for keeping the
> kernel happy (for things like clocks and regulator consumers) but this
> is not the problem I am trying to solve. My goal is to try to keep
> userspace happy by trying to create common and predictable names for
> functionally equivalent devices across different hardware platforms.
> For instance, two similar SoCs may have an SDCC controller which may be
> logically referred to as "the first SDCC device", though the physical
> address of this device may be different on the two SoCs. And, due to the
> <reg>.<name> naming convention, the sysfs entries associated with a
> particular device will be a dependent on the physical address of the device.
>
> If userspace wants to touch the sysfs entries of what can logically be
> described as "the first SDCC device", then userspace needs to know the
> physical address of this device on each SoC variant it may be running
> on, since the path to the sysfs entries for this device will be based on
> the physical address of the device. By using a device naming scheme that
> replaces the physical address with a logical device number, the
> userspace-facing interface for each device (such as sysfs entries) could
> be kept common across SoC variants even when device physical addresses
> can move around but devices still have the same logical assignments.

Okay, so the thinking is that if the generated name of a device can be
manipulated, say as 'serial0', then userspace can easily find the
device. Correct? If so, then be careful. Userspace is not supposed to
ever rely on a particular path to a device. Instead, userspace is
supposed to wait for a uevent to announce a device's existence, and then
use the data in the uevent attribute.

We /could/ use a device tree alias to manipulate the name of the device,
but as several people have pointed out there can be more than one alias
to a node. Which one do we use? I know I suggested using aliases a
couple of weeks ago, but I now think it is a bad idea after mulling it
over a bit.

What if instead we added something like OF_ALIASES to the uevent
attribute? Then userspace would have access to all the aliases for a
device. Heck, even a shell script can parse the uevent attribute. There
is also precedence for exporting OF data using a uevent. This is from
the versatile device tree support:

# cat /sys/devices/amba.0/uevent
OF_NAME=amba
OF_FULLNAME=/amba
OF_COMPATIBLE_0=arm,amba-bus
OF_COMPATIBLE_N=1
MODALIAS=of:NambaT<NULL>Carm,amba-bus


> I realize that this problem can be solved by using auxdata to set the
> device name, but in this case the only purpose of the auxdata would be
> to keep userspace happy, since all the other in-kernel relationships
> (for things like clocks and regulators) can already work without having
> to rely on auxdata. So, introducing auxdata just for consistency of
> userspace-facing names seems silly and, I am trying to come up with a
> more appropriate solution.

Yeah, auxdata is completely inappropriate for this.

>
> What do you think?
>
> Steve
>
> --
> The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum,
> hosted by The Linux Foundation

--
Grant Likely, B.Sc, P.Eng.
Secret Lab Technologies, Ltd.