Re: [PATCH v2 00/12] arm64: Kconfig: Update ARCH_EXYNOS select configs
From: Lee Jones
Date: Thu Sep 30 2021 - 08:45:18 EST
On Thu, 30 Sep 2021, Tomasz Figa wrote:
> 2021年9月30日(木) 20:51 Lee Jones <lee.jones@xxxxxxxxxx>:
> >
> > On Thu, 30 Sep 2021, Tomasz Figa wrote:
> >
> > > 2021年9月30日(木) 18:23 Lee Jones <lee.jones@xxxxxxxxxx>:
> > > >
> > > > I've taken the liberty of cherry-picking some of the points you have
> > > > reiteratted a few times. Hopefully I can help to address them
> > > > adequently.
> > > >
> > > > On Thu, 30 Sep 2021, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> > > > > Reminder: these are essential drivers and all Exynos platforms must have
> > > > > them as built-in (at least till someone really tests this on multiple
> > > > > setups).
> > > >
> > > > > Therefore I don't agree with calling it a "problem" that we select
> > > > > *necessary* drivers for supported platforms. It's by design - supported
> > > > > platforms should receive them without ability to remove.
> > > >
> > > > > The selected drivers are essential for supported platforms.
> > > >
> > > > SoC specific drivers are only essential/necessary/required in
> > > > images designed to execute solely on a platform that requires them.
> > > > For a kernel image which is designed to be generic i.e. one that has
> > > > the ability to boot on vast array of platforms, the drivers simply
> > > > have to be *available*.
> > > >
> > > > Forcing all H/W drivers that are only *potentially* utilised on *some*
> > > > platforms as core binary built-ins doesn't make any technical sense.
> > > > The two most important issues this causes are image size and a lack of
> > > > configurability/flexibility relating to real-world application i.e.
> > > > the one issue we already agreed upon; H/W or features that are too
> > > > new (pre-release).
> > > >
> > > > Bloating a generic kernel with potentially hundreds of unnecessary
> > > > drivers that will never be executed in the vast majority of instances
> > > > doesn't achieve anything. If we have a kernel image that has the
> > > > ability to boot on 10's of architectures which have 10's of platforms
> > > > each, that's a whole host of unused/wasted executable space.
> > > >
> > > > In order for vendors to work more closely with upstream, they need the
> > > > ability to over-ride a *few* drivers to supplement them with some
> > > > functionality which they believe provides them with a competitive edge
> > > > (I think you called this "value-add" before) prior to the release of a
> > > > device. This is a requirement that cannot be worked around.
> > >
> > > [Chiming in as a clock driver sub-maintainer and someone who spent a
> > > non-insignificant part of his life on SoC driver bring-up - not as a
> > > Google employee.]
> > >
> > > I'd argue that the proper way for them to achieve it would be to
> > > extend the upstream frameworks and/or existing drivers with
> > > appropriate APIs to allow their downstream modules to plug into what's
> > > already available upstream.
> >
> > Is that the same as exporting symbols to framework APIs?
> >
> > Since this is already a method GKI uses to allow external modules to
> > interact with the core kernel/frameworks. However, it's not possible
> > to upstream these without an upstream user for each one.
>
> Not necessary the core frameworks, could also be changing the ways the
> existing drivers register to allow additional drivers to extend the
> functionality rather than completely overwrite them. It's really hard
> to tell what the right way would be without knowing the exact things
> they find missing in the upstream drivers. As for upstream users, this
> is exactly the point - upstream is a bidirectional effort, one takes
> from it and should contribute things back.
>
> Generally, the subsystems being mentioned here are so basic (clock,
> pinctrl, rtc), that I really can't imagine what kind of rocket science
> one might want to hide for competitive reasons... If it's for an
> entire SoC, I wonder why Intel and AMD don't have similar concerns and
> contribute support for their newest hardware far before the release.
I don't have visibility into the driver-overrides I'm afraid.
I do know that code-space can be a problem though. So any way we can
make the core binary smaller (i.e. remove anything that can be built
as a module) will have a positive effect.
--
Lee Jones [李琼斯]
Senior Technical Lead - Developer Services
Linaro.org │ Open source software for Arm SoCs
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