On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 17:50:04 +0100 Richard Cochran <richardcoch...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 01:24:44PM -0600, Scott Wood wrote: > > Whatever string is used should be written into a binding document. > > > > fsl,etsec-v1.6-ptp seems like it would be just as good for that purpose. > > > > Even just fsl,etsec-ptp will identify the binding, though it's lacking in > > identifying the hardware (in the absence of access to the eTSEC ID > > registers). > > I read the conversation, and I don't mind admitting that I do not > understand what you both are arguing/discussing about. > > How should I set the strings? Like this? > > arch/powerpc/boot/dts/mpc8313erdb.dts: > ptp_clock@24E00 { > compatible = "fsl,mpc8313-etsec-ptp"; > } > arch/powerpc/boot/dts/mpc8572ds.dts: > ptp_clock@24E00 { > compatible = "fsl,mpc8572-etsec-ptp"; > } > arch/powerpc/boot/dts/p2020ds.dts: > ptp_clock@24E00 { > compatible = "fsl,p2020ds-etsec-ptp"; > } > arch/powerpc/boot/dts/p2020rdb.dts: > ptp_clock@24E00 { > compatible = "fsl,p2020rdb-etsec-ptp"; > } > > drivers/net/gianfar_ptp.c: > > static struct of_device_id match_table[] = { > { .compatible = "fsl,mpc8313-etsec-ptp" }, > { .compatible = "fsl,mpc8572-etsec-ptp" }, > { .compatible = "fsl,p2020ds-etsec-ptp" }, > { .compatible = "fsl,p2020rdb-etsec-ptp" }, > {}, > }; Those last two are boards, not chips. I don't think even Grant is asking to take things that far. My vote, if it goes in a separate node at all, is "fsl,etsec-ptp", and let the driver use SVR. Even encoding an etsec version in the compatible string would be difficult, unless fixed up by u-boot, as it appears to differ based on chip revision (and the chip manuals seem to often not match the hardware regarding the advertised eTSEC revision) and we don't normally have separate dts files for different revisions of the same chip. Plus, our docs (at least the public ones) don't seem to be very helpful in determining what version of eTSEC implies what. If you want to use chip-based compatibles instead, then use the actual name of the chip. You'll need to verify 100% compatibility if you want to claim compatibility with another chip; it's probably easier/safer to just list every single Freescale chip that has this type of PTP in a huge compatible table, like PCI drivers do. -Scott _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev