Hi Stephen, On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 1:41 PM, Stephen Warren <swar...@nvidia.com> wrote: > On 01/10/2012 02:22 PM, Simon Glass wrote: >> Hi Stephen, >> >> On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 12:27 PM, Stephen Warren <swar...@nvidia.com> wrote: >>> On 12/26/2011 03:31 PM, Simon Glass wrote: >>>> Stephen Warren pointed out that we should use nodes whether or not they >>>> have an alias in the /aliases section. The aliases section specifies the >>>> order so far as it can, but is not essential. Operating without alisses >>>> is useful when the enumerated order of nodes does not matter (admittedly >>>> rare in U-Boot). >>> ... >>>> +/** >>>> + * Find the nodes for a peripheral and return a list of them in the >>>> correct >>>> + * order. This is used to enumerate all the peripherals of a certain type. >>>> + * >>>> + * To use this, optionally set up a /aliases node with alias properties >>>> for >>>> + * a peripheral. For example, for usb you could have: >>>> + * >>>> + * aliases { >>>> + * usb0 = "/ehci@c5008000"; >>>> + * usb1 = "/ehci@c5000000"; >>>> + * }; >>>> + * >>>> + * Pass "usb" as the name to this function and will return a list of two >>>> + * nodes offsets: /ehci@c5008000 and ehci@c5000000. >>>> + * >>>> + * All nodes returned will match the compatible ID, as it is assumed that >>>> + * all peripherals use the same driver. >>>> + * >>>> + * If no alias node is found, then the node list will be returned in the >>>> + * order found in the fdt. If the aliases mention a node which doesn't >>>> + * exist, then this will be ignored. If nodes are found with no aliases, >>>> + * they will be added in any order. >>>> + * >>>> + * The array returned will not have any gaps. >> >> Thanks for the detailed comments - much appreciated. >> >>> >>> You can't make that guarantee without incorrectly parsing the device >>> tree; I don't believe there's any restriction on the IDs in the aliases >>> being contiguous. Maybe in practice this restriction will be fine, but >>> it doesn't seem like a great idea. >> >> Well actually I was thinking from a U-Boot POV since if someone uses a >> device that doesn't exist U-Boot may just crash or hang. So having >> such a hole would normally be a bug. But since there is no restriction >> in the fdt format, and since I suppose we have to assume the user >> knows what he is doing, I will remove this restriction. > > Great! > >>>> + * If there is a gap in the aliases, then this function will only return >>>> up >>>> + * to the number of nodes it found until the gap. It will also print a >>>> warning >>>> + * in this case. As an example, say you define aliases for usb2 and usb3, >>>> and >>>> + * have 3 nodes. Then in this case the node without an alias will become >>>> usb0 >>>> + * and the aliases will be use for usb2 and usb3. But since there is no >>>> + * usb1, this function will only list one node (usb0), and will print a >>>> + * warning. >>>> + * >>>> + * This function does not check node properties - so it is possible that >>>> the >>>> + * node is marked disabled (status = "disabled"). The caller is expected >>>> to >>>> + * deal with this. >>>> + * TBD: It might be nicer to handle this here since we don't want a >>>> + * discontiguous list to result in the caller. >>> >>> Yes, I think handling disabled is a requirement; Tegra has quite a few >>> instances of each HW module, and in many cases, not all of them are used >>> by a given board design, so they're marked disabled. >>> >>> I don't think this has any impact on handling discontiguous device IDs; >>> I think we need that anyway. >> >> Yes ok. In that case I will make the code check for status = >> "disabled" at the same time. It is convenient. > > Thanks. > >>> The itself array could always be contiguous if each entry were a pair >>> (id, node) instead of the ID being implied by the array index. >> >> Slightly easier to do it this way I think. Not completely sure yet. >> >>> >>>> + * >>>> + * Note: the algorithm used is O(maxcount). >>>> + * >>>> + * @param blob FDT blob to use >>>> + * @param name Root name of alias to search for >>>> + * @param id Compatible ID to look for >>> >>> That's a little restrictive. Many drivers will handle multiple >>> compatible values, e.g. N manufactures each making identical chips but >>> giving each its own marketing name. These need different compatible >>> flags in case some bug WAR needs to differentiate between them. Equally, >>> Tegra30's say I2C controllers will be compatible with both >>> nvidia,tegra30-i2c and nvidia,tegra20-i2c. While missing out the Tegra20 >>> compatible value would probably technically be a bug in the device tree, >>> it does seem reasonable to expect the driver to still match on the >>> Tegra30 compatible value. >> >> I think you are asking then for a list of IDs to match on. Is that >> right? How about I rename this function to >> fdtdec_find_aliases_for_id() and we then can create a >> fdtdec_find_aliases() function later when needed for T30? That way >> callers don't need to allocate and pass an array of IDs yet? > > OK, that'll work.
Actually I just hit this with i2c. However I have solved this another way - see what you think when you see the series, probably tomorrow. > >>>> + * @param node Place to put list of found nodes >>>> + * @param maxcount Maximum number of nodes to find >>> >>> It'd be nice not to have maxcount; it seems slightly restrictive for a >>> helper function. I suppose that most drivers can supply a reasonable >>> value for this since there's a certain max number of devices possible >>> given extant HW designs, but when you start talking about e.g. a driver >>> for an I2C bus multiplexer, where there's one instance per chip on a >>> board, the number begins to get a bit arbitrary. >> >> Do you mean that you want the function to allocate the memory for an >> array and return it? I would rather avoid that sort of overhead in >> U-Boot if I can. Again if we find that devices might need an arbitrary >> number of nodes we can support it later. > > Yes, that's what I meant. I guess as you say we can add it later; the > failure mode is pretty easy to diagnose if we ever hit this case. Yes. Regards Simon > > -- > nvpublic _______________________________________________ U-Boot mailing list U-Boot@lists.denx.de http://lists.denx.de/mailman/listinfo/u-boot