At Mon, 27 Apr 2015 10:54:24 +0200,
Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> 
> On Monday 27 April 2015 14:35:13 Yoshinori Sato wrote:
> > +static struct platform_device sci0_device = {
> > +   .name           = "sh-sci",
> > +   .id             = 0,
> > +   .resource       = sci0_resources,
> > +   .num_resources  = ARRAY_SIZE(sci0_resources),
> > +   .dev            = {
> > +           .platform_data  = &sci0_platform_data,
> > +   },
> > +};
> > +
> > +static struct platform_device sci1_device = {
> > +   .name           = "sh-sci",
> > +   .id             = 1,
> > +   .resource       = sci1_resources,
> > +   .num_resources  = ARRAY_SIZE(sci1_resources),
> > +   .dev            = {
> > +           .platform_data  = &sci1_platform_data,
> > +   },
> > +};
> 
> You should generally not define 'platform_device' structure statically.
> Generally, all new architectures should pass a dtb blob from the
> boot loader that contains the device definitions outside of the
> kernel binary.
> 
> If you don't expect to use h8300 with a lot of external peripherals,
> you can also use platform_device_register_simple() and related functions
> to register the platform device here, which lets you remove the
> static definition.
OK.

> > +void __init early_device_init(void)
> > +{
> > +   early_platform_add_devices(early_devices,
> > +                              ARRAY_SIZE(early_devices));
> > +}
> 
> I would like to eventually remove the early_platform_add_devices()
> interface, and use some other mechanism here. Can you try either using
> devicetree to probe those devices like ARM does, or just calling into
> the drivers manually?

I think it's better to do after a while to DT, so it's considered.

> In case of the sci, using the new 'earlycon' framework is probably the
> best idea, and for the timer, just call the probe() function directly
> instead of going through the whole early_platform_add_devices
> and early_platform_driver_probe() dance.
> 
>       Arnd
> 

OK.
Thanks.

-- 
Yoshinori Sato
<ys...@users.sourceforge.jp>
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