Re: [GIT PULL 1/2] arm64: dts: exynos: Pull for v5.4

From: Marek Szyprowski
Date: Thu Sep 12 2019 - 02:56:13 EST


Hi

On 2019-09-12 08:32, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> On Wed, 11 Sep 2019 at 23:07, Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 8:36 PM Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzk@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Unfortunately the patches were applied right after closing the linux-next.
>> Hi Krzysztof,
>>
>> I took a look at these and am not convinced this is right:
>>
>>> 1. Fix boot of Exynos7 due to wrong address/size of memory node,
>> The current state is clearly broken and a fix is needed, but
>> I'm not sure this is the right fix. Why do you have 32-bit physical
>> addressing on a 64-bit chip? I looked at commit ef72171b3621
>> that introduced it, and it seems it would be better to just
>> revert back to 64-bit addresses.
> We discussed with Marek Szyprowski that either we can go back to
> 64-bit addressing or stick to 32. There are not known boards with more
> than 4 GB of RAM so from this point of view the choice was irrelevant.
> At the end of discussion I mentioned to stick with other arm64 boards
> (although not all), so revert to have 64 bit address... but Marek
> chosen differently. Since you ask, let's go back with revert.

I decided to go with 32bit version to make the fix smaller and easier to
backport. If you select revert, make sure that it is applied after
moving gpu node under /soc, otherwise the gpu node will have incorrect
(32bit) reg property. Also add the gpu related patch as an (optional?)
prerequisite for it.

>> 2. Move GPU under /soc node,
>> No problem
>>
>>> 3. Minor cleanup of #address-cells.
>> IIRC, an interrupt-controller is required to have a #address-cells
>> property, even if that is normally zero. I don't remember the
>> details, but the gic binding lists it as mandatory, and I think
>> the PCI interrupt-map relies on it. I would just drop this patch.
> Indeed, binding requires both address and size cells. I'll drop it.

Ookay, I wasn't aware of that.


Best regards
--
Marek Szyprowski, PhD
Samsung R&D Institute Poland