On Mon, May 12, 2025 at 10:32:24AM -0500, Rob Herring wrote: > On Tue, May 06, 2025 at 08:23:39PM -0700, Ricardo Neri wrote: > > On Tue, May 06, 2025 at 09:10:22AM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > > > On Mon, May 05, 2025 at 10:16:10PM GMT, Ricardo Neri wrote: > > > > > If this is a device, then compatibles specific to devices. You do not > > > > > get different rules than all other bindings... or this does not have > > > > > to > > > > > be binding at all. Why standard reserved-memory does not work for > > > > > here? > > > > > > > > > > Why do you need compatible in the first place? > > > > > > > > Are you suggesting something like this? > > > > > > > > reserved-memory { > > > > # address-cells = <2>; > > > > # size-cells = <1>; > > > > > > > > wakeup_mailbox: wakeupmb@fff000 { > > > > reg = < 0x0 0xfff000 0x1000> > > > > } > > > > > > > > and then reference to the reserved memory using the wakeup_mailbox > > > > phandle? > > > > > > Yes just like every other, typical reserved memory block. > > > > Thanks! I will take this approach and drop this patch. > > If there is nothing else to this other than the reserved region, then > don't do this. Keep it like you had. There's no need for 2 nodes.
Thank you for your feedback! I was planning to use one reserved-memory node and inside of it a child node to with a `reg` property to specify the location and size of the mailbox. I would reference to that subnode from the kernel code. IIUC, the reserved-memory node is only the container and the actual memory regions are expressed as child nodes. I had it like that before, but with a `compatible` property that I did not need. Am I missing anything? Thanks and BR, Ricardo