On 07/23/2013 11:55 AM, Ian Campbell wrote: > On Tue, 2013-07-23 at 13:44 -0500, Rob Herring wrote: >> On 07/23/2013 01:09 PM, Ian Campbell wrote: >>> On Tue, 2013-07-23 at 10:59 -0700, Stephen Warren wrote: >>> >>>> I think the solution is to introduce some new shared/common location for >>>> shared/common *.dtsi files, into the kernel tree, in the interim. >>>> >>>> When *.dts move out of the kernel, this common location can simply be >>>> consumed as part of the DT tree re-organization. >>>> >>>> Or perhaps, we could move *.dts around in the kernel to match the >>>> proposed DT tree structure before that point in time? >>> >>> FWIW I can easily handle any transformation as part of the automated >>> extraction into the device-tree.git. If it can expressed as a sed script >>> then so much the better, e.g. the current rules are >>> http://xenbits.xen.org/gitweb/?p=people/ianc/device-tree-rebasing.git;a=blob;f=scripts/rewrite-paths.sed;h=f7a157d1b486bac058f50e42cf7bedc8630e54ff;hb=HEAD. >>> If it gets too complicated for sed I can always switch to something >>> else. >>> >>> I'm already pending a complete rebuild of the export to add in the >>> Documentation/devicetree/bindings sub tree but since it takes an age to >>> run I was waiting for the output of this conversation before kicking >>> that off. >> >> I'd doubt we could completely script this with a generic rule without a >> bunch of manual transformations. > > Right. The advantage of scripting, even if that script is just a big > long list of manual rules, is that we can preserve the history from > linux.git in device-tree.git, so git annotate etc say something useful. > > But if I'm going to write a big long list of such rules I'd like to only > do the bulk of the work once, so we need to decide on the layout first. > >> So I think either restructuring in the >> kernel or when we move them out of the kernel makes more sense. We know >> the problem is coming, but it is not yet a major, pressing issue. >> >> OTOH, you could see how far you get by putting dts files in directories >> by their board level compatible string vendor and put any include files >> where ever they are included from. Of course, that is just my proposed >> layout. I haven't heard any opinions on that layout. > > I don't really have a strong opinion on the layout myself, I'm happy to > implement whatever works for people. > > The board level compatible string vendor is the top-level compatible, > right? e.g.: > / { > model = "Calxeda Highbank"; > compatible = "calxeda,highbank"; > "calxeda,highbank" in this case. So you propose s|,|/| on that so the > file ends up in calxeda/highbank.dts? > > For the included ecx-common.dtsi I think you are proposing to find all > the files which include it and then find the > deepest-common-subdirectory? In this case the other include is > ecx-2000.dts which is compatible calxeda,ecx-2000 > (->calxeda/ecx2000.dts) so the common subdir is calxeda and dtsi would > become calxeda/ecs-2000.dtsi. That works, I should probably have picked > an example which didn't rely on files you are so involved with in case > there is a selection bias at work ;-)
That layout sounds pretty reasonable. Are all those patches underneath dt/ or is calxeda/ a top-level directory? I guess that means that common files like skeleton.dtsi will simply end up at the top-level (or in "top-level" dt/). That's probably fine. I'd like the filenames to stay the same; to some degree I consider that part of the DT ABI. At least for Tegra, and I think most/many other SoCs follow this scheme..., we have named the files ${soc}-${board}.dts, and made sure that the ${soc} and ${board} values match U-Boot's values, so U-Boot can just "load mmc 0:1 ${soc}-${board}.dts" and hence use the exact same U-Boot script for all Tegra boards (and potentially for any board that defines ${soc} and ${board}, and doing that is easy). -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/