Re: [PATCH RFC linux] dt-bindings: nvmem: Add binding for U-Boot environment NVMEM provider

From: Srinivas Kandagatla
Date: Thu Oct 14 2021 - 06:30:21 EST




On 14/10/2021 11:06, Marek Behún wrote:
On Thu, 14 Oct 2021 09:26:27 +0100
Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 14/10/2021 00:20, Marek Behún wrote:
Add device tree bindings for U-Boot environment NVMEM provider.

U-Boot environment can be stored at a specific offset of a MTD
device, EEPROM, MMC, NAND or SATA device, on an UBI volume, or in a
file on a filesystem.

The environment can contain information such as device's MAC
address, which should be used by the ethernet controller node.

Have you looked at
./Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/partitions/nvmem-cells.yaml ?

Hello srini,

yes, I have. What about it? :)

That binding won't work for u-boot-env, because the data are stored
in a different way. A cell does not have a constant predetermined
offset on the MTD.

Can't you dynamically update the nodes before nvmem-provider is registered?

The variables are stored as a sequence of values of format
"name=value", separated by '\0's, for example:
board=turris_mox\0ethaddr=00:11:22:33:44:55\0bootcmd=run distro_bootcmd\0....
Chaning lengths of values of variables, or deleting variables, moves
the data around. Integers and MAC addresses are stored as strings, and so on.


Do you already have a provider driver for handing this.

How is pre parsing cell info and post processing data planned to be handled?

Currently in nvmem core we do check for "reg" property for each cell, unless the provider driver is adding/updating dt entries dynamically before registering nvmem provider, It will not work as it is. Alteast this is what I suggested in similar case where cell information is in tlv format.

Secondly mac-address seems to be delimited, we recently introduced post processing callback for provider driver [1], which should help in this case.

If the nvmem-cell names are standard like "mac-address" then you do not need to add a new "type" binding to cell too, you can do post-processing based on name.

[1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/next/linux-next.git/commit/drivers/nvmem/imx-ocotp.c?id=823571f8c6f8968d8f14e91972fa350ce200f5db


--srini

Also the mtd/partitions/nvmem-cells.yaml doesn't take into account
u-boot-env stored on non-MTD devices.

Marek