Re: Heads up on a device tree change
From: Grant Likely
Date: Sat Apr 13 2013 - 15:27:16 EST
On Thu, 7 Feb 2013 10:32:13 +0000, James Hogan <james.hogan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 06/02/13 14:28, Grant Likely wrote:
> > On Wed, Feb 6, 2013 at 1:32 PM, James Hogan <james.hogan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> On 06/02/13 13:11, Grant Likely wrote:
> >>> - Resources on platform_devices get registered so they appear in
> >>> /proc/iomem and /proc/ioports and so that device drivers get the added
> >>> protection of request_region. This will cause breakage on device trees
> >>> nodes with partially overlapping memory regions. (ie. 0x100..0x1ff and
> >>> 0x180..0x27f). I also have a workaround for this, but I doubt that it
> >>> will be necessary.
> >>
> >> Hi Grant,
> >>
> >> If I understand you correctly, the non-overlapping memory regions thing
> >> could be a problem for me. We have a Meta based SoC that has various SoC
> >> registers grouped together for doing GPIOs and Pin control things. I'm
> >> still in the process of converting it to device tree, but the way I've
> >> been handling it is to provide overlapping registers to both the gpio
> >> and pinctl DT nodes. Each GPIO bank's registers are also interleaved
> >> with the others, so I've been providing overlapping register ranges
> >> (offset by 4 for each bank) to the DT node for each gpio bank too, so
> >> each bank can function independently and the driver doesn't have to
> >> worry about multiple banks. Does that sound like a reasonable use case?
> >>
> >> I guess I could cheat with the length, or specify each register in it's
> >> own memory resource, but it seems like overkill.
> >
> > Note that overlapping regions are fine /provided/ that they are the
> > same size or one fits nicely inside another. It's partial overlap that
> > is a problem
>
> It still feels a bit artificial to impose that limitation on something
> that is supposed to be implementation independent. Having said that it
> doesn't particularly bother me having to work around it.
I've backed out on this. It broke too much.
g.
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