From: Anatolij Gustschin <ag...@denx.de>
Date: Tue, 9 Feb 2010 15:23:17 +0100

> In my understanding, in the ESP scsi driver the set of defines for
> the register offsets is common for all chip drivers. The chip driver
> methods for register access translate the offsets because the
> registers on some chips are at different intervals (4-byte, 1-byte,
> 16-byte for mac_esp.c). But the register order is the same for
> different chips.
> 
> In our case non only the register order is not the same for 8xx
> FEC and 5121 FEC, but there are also other differences, different
> reserved areas between several registers, some registers are
> available only on 8xx and some only on 5121.

That only means you would need to use a table based register address
translation scheme, rather than a simple calculation.  Something
like:

static unsigned int chip_xxx_table[] =
{
        [GENERIC_REG_FOO]        = CHIP_XXX_FOO,
        ...
};

static u32 chip_xxx_read_reg(struct chip *p, unsigned int reg)
{
        unsigned int reg_off = chip_xxx_table[reg];

        return readl(p->regs + reg_off);
}

And this table can have special tokens in entries for
registers which do not exist on a chip, so you can trap
attempted access to them in these read/write handlers.

Please stop looking for excuses to fork this driver, a
unified driver I think can be done cleanly.
_______________________________________________
Linuxppc-dev mailing list
Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org
https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev

Reply via email to