Re: [RFC][PATCH v3 1/3] runtime interpreted power sequences
From: Stephen Warren
Date: Mon Jul 30 2012 - 18:26:30 EST
On 07/30/2012 09:44 AM, Rob Herring wrote:
> On 07/27/2012 07:05 AM, Alexandre Courbot wrote:
>> Some device drivers (panel backlights especially) need to follow precise
>> sequences for powering on and off, involving gpios, regulators, PWMs
>> with a precise powering order and delays to respect between each steps.
>> These sequences are board-specific, and do not belong to a particular
>> driver - therefore they have been performed by board-specific hook
>> functions to far.
>>
>> With the advent of the device tree and of ARM kernels that are not
>> board-tied, we cannot rely on these board-specific hooks anymore but
>> need a way to implement these sequences in a portable manner. This patch
>> introduces a simple interpreter that can execute such power sequences
>> encoded either as platform data or within the device tree.
>>
>
> Why not? We'll always have some amount of board code. The key is to
> limit parts that are just data. I'm not sure this is something that
> should be in devicetree.
>
> Perhaps what is needed is a better way to hook into the driver like
> notifiers?
I would answer that by asking the reverse question - why should we have
to put some data in DT, and some data into board files still?
I'd certainly argue that the sequence of which GPIOs/regulators/PWMs to
manipulate is just data.
To be honest, if we're going to have to put some parts of a board's
configuration into board files anyway, then the entirety of DT seems
useless; I'd far rather see all the configuration in one cohesive place
than arbitrarily split into two/n different locations - that would make
everything harder to maintain.
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