Re: [PATCH 2/6] phy: improved lookup method

From: Kishon Vijay Abraham I
Date: Wed Sep 24 2014 - 05:44:37 EST


Hi,

On Tuesday 23 September 2014 05:13 PM, Heikki Krogerus wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 23, 2014 at 04:33:09PM +0530, Kishon Vijay Abraham I wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> On Tuesday 23 September 2014 04:23 PM, Heikki Krogerus wrote:
>>> On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 05:07:55PM +0530, Kishon Vijay Abraham I wrote:
>>>> On Thursday 18 September 2014 03:55 PM, Heikki Krogerus wrote:
>>>>> On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 03:35:08PM +0300, Heikki Krogerus wrote:
>>>>>> On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 08:16:01PM +0530, Kishon Vijay Abraham I wrote:
>>>>>>> Assume you have 2 phys in your system..
>>>>>>> static struct phy_lookup usb_lookup = {
>>>>>>> .phy_name = "phy-usb.0",
>>>>>>> .dev_id = "usb.0",
>>>>>>> .con_id = "usb",
>>>>>>> };
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> static struct phy_lookup sata_lookup = {
>>>>>>> .phy_name = "sata-usb.1",
>>>>>>> .dev_id = "sata.0",
>>>>>>> .con_id = "sata",
>>>>>>> };
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> First you do modprobe phy-usb, the probe of USB PHY driver gets invoked and it
>>>>>>> creates the PHY. The phy-core will find a free id (now it will be 0) and then
>>>>>>> name the phy as phy-usb.0.
>>>>>>> Then with modprobe phy-sata, the phy-core will create phy-sata.1.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This is an ideal case where the .phy_name in phy_lookup matches.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Consider if the order is flipped and the user does modprobe phy-sata first. The
>>>>>>> phy_names won't match anymore (the sata phy device name would be "sata-usb.0").
>>>>>
>>>>> Actually, I don't think there would be this problem if we used the
>>>>> name of the actual device which is the parent of phy devices, right?
>>>>
>>>> hmm.. but if the parent is a multi-phy phy provider (like pipe3 PHY driver), we
>>>> might end up with the same problem.
>>>
>>> I'm not completely sure what you mean? If you are talking about
>>> platforms with multiple instances of a single phy, I don't see how
>>> there could ever be a scenario where we did not know the order in
>>> which they were enumerated. Can you give an example again?
>>
>> If a single IP implements multiple PHYs (phy-miphy365x.c in linux-phy next),
>> the parent for all the phy devices would be the same.
>
> OK, got it. So I guess we need to match to the phy dev and to the phy
> name. First to the dev and then in case the phy name is defined in the
> lookup, to that as well. That should cover both cases.

So what would be the phy name? I mean it's completely user-defined or it's
derived from device name?

Isn't making the PHY to be aware of it's user much simpler?

Thanks
Kishon
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