Hi Srinivas,Ok,
Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@xxxxxxxxxx> hat am 13. Juli 2015 um
21:35 geschrieben:
On 13/07/15 19:54, Stefan Wahren wrote:
Hi Srinivas,Not sure what is the real use-case here, But this is how it is supposed
[...]
Providers APIs:
nvmem_register/unregister();
How do i get the cell info from the devicetree into the nvmem_config?
to work.
cellinfo in nvmem_config is used to pass cell information in non-dt
style to the core. The core would parse it and convert into nvmem-cells.
Am not sure why would you want to do other way round. Could you explain
the real use case here?
my question comes from porting mxs_ocotp to NVMEM framework.
Here is the devicetree part:
ocotp: ocotp@8002c000 {
compatible = "fsl,imx28-ocotp", "fsl,ocotp";
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
reg = <0x8002c000 0x2000>;
clocks = <&clks 25>;
read-only;
/* Data cells */
ocotp_customer: costumer@20 {
reg = <0x20 0x10>;
};
ocotp_rom0: rom0@1a0 {
reg = <0x1a0 0x4>;
};
};
After calling nvmem_register() in the provider driver [1] no data cell is
registered. So
i looked at the core code and i thought that retrieving the cell info and put it
into the nvmem_config
is job of the provider driver.
Did i missed something?
--
[1] -
https://github.com/lategoodbye/fsl_ocotp/commit/7c98e19755b69f761885b0e1ceb2c258a7c47ade
...
nvmem file would read full nvmem size which is passed to it as regmap.userspace interface: binary file in /sys/bus/nvmem/devices/*/nvmem
ex:
hexdump /sys/bus/nvmem/devices/qfprom0/nvmem
0000000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
*
00000a0 db10 2240 0000 e000 0c00 0c00 0000 0c00
0000000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
...
*
0001000
Since we're entering userspace the behavior should be clear.
How do we treat register gaps? Fill them with zero?
So It would dump whatever the provider returns.
Sure, but wouldn't it be nice if different provider behave the same?
--srini
Best regards
Stefan