Return-Path: Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S1752795AbcLEVnT (ORCPT ); Mon, 5 Dec 2016 16:43:19 -0500 Received: from mail-wm0-f68.google.com ([74.125.82.68]:34898 "EHLO mail-wm0-f68.google.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1751485AbcLEVnQ (ORCPT ); Mon, 5 Dec 2016 16:43:16 -0500 Subject: Re: [PATCH 39/39] mtd: nand: denali_dt: add compatible strings for UniPhier SoC variants To: Dinh Nguyen References: <1480183585-592-1-git-send-email-yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> <1480183585-592-40-git-send-email-yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> <20161201160511.ahlibszokg547wxk@rob-hp-laptop> <563ec35c-0964-b696-0f5b-79ec38d4620b@gmail.com> <19bc0efe-bf1f-8251-7ff2-4dc5a5b61fce@gmail.com> Cc: Masahiro Yamada , Rob Herring , "linux-mtd@lists.infradead.org" , "devicetree@vger.kernel.org" , Linux Kernel Mailing List , Boris Brezillon , Brian Norris , Richard Weinberger , David Woodhouse , Cyrille Pitchen , Mark Rutland , Dinh Nguyen , Alan Tull , Chin Liang See , Dinh Nguyen From: Marek Vasut Message-ID: <9f9750d6-206d-1e8e-88db-ffe6e95e5dbb@gmail.com> Date: Mon, 5 Dec 2016 22:29:10 +0100 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:45.0) Gecko/20100101 Icedove/45.4.0 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Content-Length: 6288 Lines: 151 On 12/05/2016 09:51 PM, Dinh Nguyen wrote: > On Sun, Dec 4, 2016 at 10:22 PM, Marek Vasut wrote: >> On 12/05/2016 05:10 AM, Masahiro Yamada wrote: >>> Hi Marek, >>> >>> >>> 2016-12-05 12:44 GMT+09:00 Marek Vasut : >>>> On 12/05/2016 04:30 AM, Masahiro Yamada wrote: >>>>> Hi Dinh, >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> 2016-12-04 7:08 GMT+09:00 Dinh Nguyen : >>>>>> Hi, >>>>>> >>>>>> On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 8:49 PM, Marek Vasut wrote: >>>>>>> On 12/03/2016 03:41 AM, Masahiro Yamada wrote: >>>>>>>> Hi Rob, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi! >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> 2016-12-03 1:26 GMT+09:00 Rob Herring : >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> (Plan A) >>>>>>>>>> "denali,socfpga-nand" (for Altera SOCFPGA variant) >>>>>>>>>> "denali,uniphier-nand-v1" (for old Socionext UniPhier family variant) >>>>>>>>>> "denali,uniphier-nand-v2" (for new Socionext UniPhier family variant) >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> (Plan B) >>>>>>>>>> "altera,denali-nand" (for Altera SOCFPGA variant) >>>>>>>>>> "socionext,denali-nand-v5a" (for old Socionext UniPhier family variant) >>>>>>>>>> "socionext,denali-nand-v5b" (for new Socionext UniPhier family variant) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Let the Altera folks worry about their stuff. At least for soft IP in >>>>>>>>> FPGA, it's a bit of a special case. The old string can remain as bad >>>>>>>>> as it is. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Hmm, I am not sure if this IP would fit in FPGA >>>>>>>> (to use it along with NIOS-II?) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> (even if it happened, nothing of this IP would be customizable on users' side. >>>>>>>> When buying the IP, SoC vendors submit a list of desired features. >>>>>>>> Denali (now Cadence) generates the RTL according to the configuration sheet. >>>>>>>> The function is fixed at this point. So, generic compatible would be >>>>>>>> useless anyway.) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> If we are talking about SOCFPGA, >>>>>>>> SOCFPGA is not only FPGA. Rather "SOC" + "FPGA". >>>>>>>> It consists of two parts: >>>>>>>> [1] SOC part (Cortex-A9 + various hard-wired peripherals such UART, >>>>>>>> USB, SD, NAND, ...) >>>>>>>> [2] FPGA part (User design logic) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> The Denali NAND controller is included in [1]. >>>>>>>> So, as far as we talk about the Denali on SOCFPGA, >>>>>>>> it is as hard-wired as Intel, Socionext's ones. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> That's correct, the Denali NAND IP in altera socfpga is a hardware >>>>>>> block. You can make it available to the fabric too, but by default >>>>>>> it's used by the ARM part of the chip, so for this discussion, you >>>>>>> can forget that the FPGA part exists altogether. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I would be in favor of plan B, since it seems to be the more often >>>>>>> taken approach. A nice example is ci-hdrc: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> $ git grep compatible drivers/usb/chipidea/ >>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I simply would do "socionext,uniphier-v5b-nand" (and v5a). >>>>>>>>> The fact that it is denali is part of the documentation. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Let me think about this. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Socionext bought two version of Denali IP, >>>>>>>> and we are now re-using the newer one (v5b) for several SoCs. >>>>>>>> Socionext has some more product lines other than Uniphier SoC family, >>>>>>>> perhaps wider re-use might happen in the future. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> At first, I included "uniphier" in compatible, but I am still wondering >>>>>>>> if such a specific string is good or not. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Also, comments from Altera engineers are appreciated. >>>>>> >>>>>> Sorry, it's taken me a while to add comments. My altera email is very spotty now >>>>>> that the Intel merge is completed. Please use dinguyen@kernel.org for any future >>>>>> communications. >>>>>> >>>>>> Yes, everything that is said so far for the NAND controller on the >>>>>> SoCFPGA is correct. I added the binding for the controller a while >>>>>> back, but unfortunately, we never added the NAND interface to the >>>>>> devkit, so we did not do much in terms of enabling it. >>>>>> >>>>>> I think the only SoCFPGA board I know that has the NAND interface active is >>>>>> the TRCom board, but I have never seen that board. >>>>>> >>>>>> I don't have any strong opinions on this matter, just as long as the >>>>>> original binding >>>>>> "denali,denali-nand-dt" is kept, and I think Rob was ok with keeping >>>>>> that binding. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I am proposing to add "altera,denali-nand" for Altera. >>>>> For what, do you need the generic compatible? >>>>> This IP has no default for it to fallback to. >>>> >>>> IMO just for compatibility reasons with old DTs . >>> >>> We generally contribute for >>> a "working driver" (at least, should be functional to some extent) >>> and "DT binding" bundled together. >>> >>> However, Altera upstreamed the DT binding first >>> (then some parts of the DT binding turned out wrong), >>> but they did not upstream needed driver changes in the end. >>> >>> So, the mainline driver has never worked on SOCFPGA, right? >> >> Most likely it never worked, yes. >> > > Right, looking through our downstream support, we may need to upstream a > few changes to make upstream driver work on SoCFPGA. > >>> Removing "denali,denali-nand-dt" is not breakage at all, >>> so I do not owe anything to them, right? >> >> I don't think I'm really qualified to answer this one. But, there is >> drivers/mtd/nand/denali_dt.c , which handles this compatible string >> and it's documented in >> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/denali-nand.txt, so doesn't that >> make it part of the ABI ? I think we should >> at least keep it as a fallback, that should be pretty harmless. >> > > I would like to propose "altr,denali-nand" as the binding we use to support the > driver going forward on SoCFPGA hardware. It's pretty much the same as > "altera,denali-nand", just with the correct vendor prefix. Ah right, altr is the right prefix, thanks for pointing that out. Still, wouldn't altr,socfpga-denali-nand be better ? I know it's long, but it encodes the chip type , like ie. fsl,imx6q-usb . > If we can please keep, "denali,denali-nand-dt" only because SoCFPGA is using > this binding downstream, but I know that is a weak argument. -- Best regards, Marek Vasut