Re: [PATCH v5 15/17] dt-bindings: qca7000: append UART interface to binding

From: Jakub Kicinski
Date: Fri May 12 2017 - 02:43:57 EST


On Fri, 12 May 2017 06:15:52 +0000, Michael Heimpold wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Zitat von Jakub Kicinski <kubakici@xxxxx>:
>
> > On Thu, 11 May 2017 21:12:22 +0200, Michael Heimpold wrote:
> >> Am Mittwoch, 10. Mai 2017, 10:53:26 CEST schrieb Stefan Wahren:
> >> > This merges the serdev binding for the QCA7000 UART driver (Ethernet over
> >> > UART) into the existing document.
> >> >
> >> > Signed-off-by: Stefan Wahren <stefan.wahren@xxxxxxxx>
> >> > ---
> >> > .../devicetree/bindings/net/qca-qca7000.txt | 32
> >> > ++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 32 insertions(+)
> >> >
> >> > diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/qca-qca7000.txt
> >> > b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/qca-qca7000.txt index
> >> > a37f656..08364c3 100644
> >> > --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/qca-qca7000.txt
> >> > +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/qca-qca7000.txt
> >> > @@ -54,3 +54,35 @@ ssp2: spi@80014000 {
> >> > local-mac-address = [ A0 B0 C0 D0 E0 F0 ];
> >> > };
> >> > };
> >> > +
> >> > +(b) Ethernet over UART
> >> > +
> >> > +In order to use the QCA7000 as UART slave it must be defined as
> >> a child of
> >> > a +UART master in the device tree. It is possible to preconfigure the UART
> >> > +settings of the QCA7000 firmware, but it's not possible to change them
> >> > during +runtime.
> >> > +
> >> > +Required properties:
> >> > +- compatible : Should be "qca,qca7000-uart"
> >>
> >> I already discussed this with Stefan off-list a little bit, but I would like
> >> to bring this to a broader audience: I'm not sure whether the compatible
> >> should contain the "-uart" suffix, because the hardware chip is the
> >> very same
> >> QCA7000 chip which can also be used with SPI protocol.
> >> The only difference is the loaded firmware within the chip which can either
> >> speak SPI or UART protocol (but not both at the same time - due to shared
> >> pins). So the hardware design decides which interface type is used.
> >>
> >> At the moment, this patch series adds a dedicated driver for the UART
> >> protocol, in parallel to the existing SPI driver. So a different compatible
> >> string is needed here to match against the new driver.
> >>
> >> An alternative approach would be to re-use the existing compatible string
> >> "qca,qca7000" for both, the SPI and UART protocol, because a "smarter"
> >> (combined) driver would detect which protocol to use. For example the driver
> >> could check for spi-cpha and/or spi-cpol which are required for SPI
> >> protocol:
> >> if these exists the driver could assume that SPI must be used, if both are
> >> missing then UART protocol should be used.
> >> (This way it would not be necessary to check whether the node is a child of
> >> a SPI or UART master node - but maybe this is even easier - I don't know)
> >>
> >> Or in shorter words: my concern is that while "qca7000-uart" describes the
> >> hardware, it's too closely coupled to the driver implementation. Having
> >> some feedback of the experts would be nice :-)
> >
> > I'm no expert, but devices which can do both I2C and SPI are quite
> > common, and they usually have the same compatible string for both
> > buses.
>
> do you have an example driver at hand? I only found GPIO mcp23s08 driver,
> which can handle both I2C and SPI chips, but there are different compatible
> strings used to distinguish several chip models.

I think drivers/tty/serial/sc16is7xx.c has the same strings, and some
Kconfig magic to work when either bus is enabled in .config.

Quick grep shows there are couple more potential ones to look at:

$ find . -name Kconfig | xargs grep -n 'SPI_MASTER.* I2C'
./drivers/tty/serial/Kconfig:1208: depends on (SPI_MASTER && !I2C) || I2C
./drivers/mfd/Kconfig:327: depends on (SPI_MASTER || I2C)
./drivers/iio/dac/Kconfig:10: depends on (SPI_MASTER && I2C!=m) || I2C
./drivers/iio/dac/Kconfig:34: depends on (SPI_MASTER && I2C!=m) || I2C
./drivers/iio/dac/Kconfig:57: depends on (SPI_MASTER && I2C!=m) || I2C
./drivers/gpio/Kconfig:1231: depends on (SPI_MASTER && !I2C) || I2C
$ find . -name Kconfig | xargs grep -n 'I2C.*||.*SPI_MASTER'
./drivers/mfd/Kconfig:1094: depends on (I2C=y || SPI_MASTER=y)
./drivers/iio/gyro/Kconfig:55: depends on (I2C || SPI_MASTER)
./drivers/iio/gyro/Kconfig:107: depends on (I2C || SPI_MASTER) && SYSFS
./drivers/iio/accel/Kconfig:153: depends on (I2C || SPI_MASTER) && SYSFS
./drivers/iio/pressure/Kconfig:20: depends on (I2C || SPI_MASTER)
./drivers/iio/pressure/Kconfig:161: depends on (I2C || SPI_MASTER) && SYSFS
./drivers/iio/magnetometer/Kconfig:118: depends on (I2C || SPI_MASTER) && SYSFS

drivers/mfd/mc13xxx-*.c seems to have the same strings. The iio/dac drivers
don't support DT but do share names. The MCP GPIO chip you mention indeed has
different product names based on the bus it's made for (0 vs s in the middle
of the name), so I gather less relevant case? drivers/iio/pressure/bmp280-*.c
has the same strings, if I'm looking correctly... I didn't look at the others.