On Thu, 25 Oct 2018, Richard Fitzgerald wrote:
On 25/10/18 09:26, Charles Keepax wrote:
On Thu, Oct 25, 2018 at 08:44:59AM +0100, Lee Jones wrote:
On Mon, 08 Oct 2018, Charles Keepax wrote:...
From: Charles Keepax <ckeepax@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
+static const struct reg_default lochnagar1_reg_defaults[] = {
+ { LOCHNAGAR1_CDC_AIF1_SEL, 0x00 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR1_CDC_AIF2_SEL, 0x00 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR1_LED1, 0x00 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR1_LED2, 0x00 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR1_I2C_CTRL, 0x01 },
+};
Why do you need to specify each register value?
The way regmap operates it needs to know the starting value of
each register. It will use this to initialise the cache and to
determine if writes need to actually update the hardware on
cache_syncs after devices have been powered back up.
That sounds crazy to me. Some devices have thousands of registers.
At a line per register, that's thousands of lines of code/cruft.
Especially seeing as most (sane?) register layouts I've seen default
to zero.
s/w.
Even if it is absolutely critical that you have to supply these to
Regmap up-front, instead of on first use/read, why can't you just
supply the oddball non-zero ones?
+static const struct reg_sequence lochnagar1_patch[] = {
+ { 0x40, 0x0083 },
+ { 0x46, 0x0001 },
+ { 0x47, 0x0018 },
+ { 0x50, 0x0000 },
+};
I'm really not a fan of these so call 'patches'.
Can't you set the registers up proper way?
I will see if we could move any out of here or define any of the
registers but as we have discussed before it is not always possible.
Also patches generally come out of hardware tuning/qualification/tools
as this list of address,value. So it's easy for people to dump an update
into the driver as a trivial copy-paste but more work if they have to
reverse-engineer the patch list from hardware/datasheet into what each
line "means" and then find the relevant lines of code to change. It's also
much easier to answer the question "Have these hardware patches been
applied to the driver?" if we have them in the original documented format.
It just makes people's lives more difficult if they have to search around
the code to try to find something that looks like the originally specified
patch list. We don't use them just as a lazy way to setup some registers.
I understand why they normally exist (sometimes people are just lazy
too) (Mark: BTW chicken-bits sound delicious!). They're just ugly
from an Open Source PoV.
...+static bool lochnagar2_readable_register(struct device *dev, unsigned int reg)
+{
+ switch (reg) {
+ case LOCHNAGAR_SOFTWARE_RESET:
+ case LOCHNAGAR_FIRMWARE_ID1:
+ case LOCHNAGAR_FIRMWARE_ID2:
...+ case LOCHNAGAR2_MICVDD_CTRL2:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_VDDCORE_CDC_CTRL1:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_VDDCORE_CDC_CTRL2:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_SOUNDCARD_AIF_CTRL:
+ return true;
+ default:
+ return false;
+ }
+}
+
+static bool lochnagar2_volatile_register(struct device *dev, unsigned int reg)
+{
+ switch (reg) {
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL1:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL2:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL3:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL13:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL14:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL15:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL16:
+ case LOCHNAGAR2_ANALOGUE_PATH_CTRL1:
+ return true;
+ default:
+ return false;
+ }
+}
This is getting silly now. Can't you use ranges?
I can if you feel strongly about it? But it does make the drivers
much more error prone and significantly more annoying to work
with. I find it is really common to be checking that a register
is handled correctly through the regmap callbacks and it is nice
to just be able to grep for that. Obviously this won't work for
all devices/regmaps as well since many will not have consecutive
addresses on registers, for example having multi-byte registers
that are byte addressed.
How far would you like me to take this as well? Is it just the
numeric registers you want ranges for ie.
LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL1...LOCHNAGAR_GPIO_CHANNEL16
Or is it all consecutive registers even if they are unrelated
(exmaple is probably not accurate as I haven't checked the
addresses):
LOCHNAGAR2_GPIO_CHANNEL1...LOCHNAGAR2_ANALOGURE_PATH_CTRL1
I don't mind the first at all but the second is getting really
horrible in my opinion.
My issue is that we have one end of the scale, where contributors are
submitting patches, trying to remove a line of code here, a line of
code there, then there are patches like this one which describe the
initial value, readable status, writable status and volatile status of
each and every register.
The API is obscene and needs a re-work IMHO.
I really hope we do not really have to list every register, but *if we
absolutely must*, let's do it once:
REG_ADDRESS, WRV, INITIAL_VALUE
...+static const struct reg_default lochnagar2_reg_defaults[] = {
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_CDC_AIF1_CTRL, 0x0000 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_CDC_AIF2_CTRL, 0x0000 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_CDC_AIF3_CTRL, 0x0000 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_DSP_AIF1_CTRL, 0x0000 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_MINICARD_RESETS, 0x0000 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_ANALOGUE_PATH_CTRL2, 0x0000 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_COMMS_CTRL4, 0x0001 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_SPDIF_CTRL, 0x0008 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_POWER_CTRL, 0x0001 },
+ { LOCHNAGAR2_SOUNDCARD_AIF_CTRL, 0x0000 },
+};
OMG! Vile, vile vile!
I really feel this isn't the driver you are objecting to as such
but the way regmap operates and also we seem to always have the same
discussions around regmap every time we push a driver.
Absolutely. I didn't like it before. I like it even less now.
Is there
any way me, you and Mark could hash this out and find out a way to
handle regmaps that is acceptable to you? I don't suppose you are
in Edinburgh at the moment for ELCE?
I'm not at ELCE I'm afraid.
I suppose if Mark was willing to promote the regmap drivers to be a
top-level subsystem that could contain the regmap definitions of devices
then we could dump our regmap definitions in there, where Mark can review
it as he's familiar with regmap and the chips and the reasons why things
are done the way they are, rather than Lee having to stress about it every
time we need to create an MFD device that uses regmap. Though that would
make the initialization of an MFD rather awkward with the code required
to init the MFD it not actually being in the MFD tree.
My issue isn't where all this bumph lives.
It's the fact that it's required (at least at this level) at all.
+ /* Wait for Lochnagar to boot */
+ ret = lochnagar_wait_for_boot(lochnagar->regmap, &val);
+ if (ret < 0) {
+ dev_err(dev, "Failed to read device ID: %d\n", ret);
Eh?
So you read the LOCHNAGAR_SOFTWARE_RESET register and out pops the
device/revision IDs? That's just random!
I shall let the hardware guys know you don't approve of their
life choices :-) and add some comments to the code.
Please do. And tell them to stop drinking at lunch time. ;)
+ ret = devm_of_platform_populate(dev);
+ if (ret < 0) {
+ dev_err(dev, "Failed to populate child nodes: %d\n", ret);
+ return ret;
+ }
Please do not mix OF and MFD device registration strategies.
Pick one and register all devices through your chosen method.
Hmmm we use this to do things like register some fixed regulators
and clocks that don't need any control but do need to be associated
with the device. I could do that through the MFD although it is in
direct conflict with the feedback on the clock patches I received
to move the fixed clocks into devicetree rather than registering
them manually (see v2 of the patch chain).
The I suggest moving everything to DT.
I will have a look see if I can find any ideas that will make
everyone happy but we might need to discuss with Mark and the
clock guys.
+ .probe_new = lochnagar_i2c_probe,
Hasn't this been replaced yet?
I will check, the patchset has been around internally for a while
so it is possible this is no longer needed.
+#ifndef CIRRUS_LOCHNAGAR_H
+#define CIRRUS_LOCHNAGAR_H
+
+#include "lochnagar1_regs.h"
+#include "lochnagar2_regs.h"
Why are you including these here?
It is just a convenience so the drivers only need to include
lochnagar.h rather than including all three headers manually.
That's against convention.
If a source file needs a head, it should include it explicitly.
diff --git a/include/linux/mfd/lochnagar1_regs.h b/include/linux/mfd/lochnagar1_regs.h
diff --git a/include/linux/mfd/lochnagar2_regs.h b/include/linux/mfd/lochnagar2_regs.h
So Lochnagar 1 and 2 are completely different devices?
What do they do?
Completely different devices is a bit strong, they are different
versions of the same system. They have quite different register
maps but provide very similar functionality.
The register maps are different partly because some silicon
used on the V1 is no longer manufactured and partly because some
silicon added in V2 didn't fit into the older register map.
I just looked at the maps, which appeared to be vastly different.
All the other comments I will get fixed up for the next spin of
the patches.