Re: [PATCH 19/28] nios2: Device tree support

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On Wednesday 23 April 2014 14:52:47 Ley Foon Tan wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 9:42 PM, Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Friday 18 April 2014, Ley Foon Tan wrote:
> >> diff --git a/arch/nios2/boot/dts/3c120_devboard.dts b/arch/nios2/boot/dts/3c120_devboard.dts
> 
> >> +/dts-v1/;
> >> +
> >> +/ {
> >> +     model = "ALTR,qsys_ghrd_3c120";
> >> +     compatible = "ALTR,qsys_ghrd_3c120";
> >
> > You have a mix of "ALTR" and "altr" prefixes. The general recommendation
> > is to use lower-case letters, which is also what is used on ARM socfpga,
> > and what is documented in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/vendor-prefixes.txt
> > for Altera.
> Yes, the vendor prefix should be changed to lower case. FYI, this dts
> file is generated by our dts generator tool called sopc2dts.
> Our tool already aware of this requirement, but haven't support this yet.
> I can edit this file manually to change 'ALTR' to 'altr', but I will
> update nios2 code to match for both "ALTR" and "altr" for backward
> compatibility. "ALTR" will be deprecated later. Are you okay with
> this?

You seem to have a large number of "ALTR" strings at the moment.
I don't think it would be good to allow matching both variants
everywhere, that would be a lot of extra code.

If it's only about the root compatible property, I have no objections,
but I don't know if it will help you when all the other strings don't
match.

> >> +     sopc@0 {
> >> +             device_type = "soc";
> >> +             ranges;
> >> +             #address-cells = < 1 >;
> >> +             #size-cells = < 1 >;
> >> +             compatible = "ALTR,avalon", "simple-bus";
> >> +             bus-frequency = < 125000000 >;
> >> +
> >> +             pb_cpu_to_io: bridge@0x8000000 {
> >> +                     compatible = "simple-bus";
> >> +                     reg = < 0x08000000 0x00800000 >;
> >
> > Are these all synthesized devices, or is there also some hardwired
> > logic? It often makes sense to split out the reusable parts into
> > a separate .dtsi file that gets included by every implementation.
> All these are synthesized devices and the system hierarchy is also not
> fixed and it is depends on user hardware design. It is highly
> configurable.
> So, we can't have a common .dtsi file.

Ok, I see.

> >> +                     #address-cells = < 1 >;
> >> +                     #size-cells = < 1 >;
> >> +                     ranges = < 0x00400000 0x08400000 0x00000020
> >> +                             0x00004D40 0x08004D40 0x00000008
> >> +                             0x00004D50 0x08004D50 0x00000008
> >> +                             0x00004000 0x08004000 0x00000400
> >> +                             0x00004400 0x08004400 0x00000040
> >> +                             0x00004800 0x08004800 0x00000040
> >> +                             0x00002000 0x08002000 0x00002000
> >> +                             0x00004C80 0x08004C80 0x00000020
> >> +                             0x00004CC0 0x08004CC0 0x00000010
> >> +                             0x00004CE0 0x08004CE0 0x00000010
> >> +                             0x00004D00 0x08004D00 0x00000010 >;
> >

> > - The ranges should reflect what the bus actually translates,
> >   which is typically not individual bytes but rather whole
> >   address ranges.
> The ranges here reflect the address range translate by each device and
> user can assign any base address they desired in our FPGA. The address
> ranges might not in continuous regions as well. So, we will keep this
> translation way.

If you can support any address, why not just have an empty 'ranges'
property?

> >> +                     timer_1ms: timer@0x400000 {
> >> +                             compatible = "ALTR,timer-1.0";
> >> +
> >> +                     sysid: sysid@0x4d40 {
> >> +                             compatible = "ALTR,sysid-1.0";
> >> +                             reg = < 0x00004D40 0x00000008 >;
> >
> >> +                     jtag_uart: serial@0x4d50 {
> >> +                             compatible = "ALTR,juart-1.0";
> >> +                             reg = < 0x00004D50 0x00000008 >;
> >> +
> >> +                     tse_mac: ethernet@0x4000 {
> >> +                             compatible = "ALTR,tse-1.0";
> >
> >
> > Does each one of these have a binding document in
> > Documentation/devicetree/bindings?
> jtag_uart and tse drivers are upstreamed. They already have their own
> bindings doc:
> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/serial/altera_jtaguart.txt
> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/altera_tse.txt
> 
> I will add the binding doc for timer, but sysid driver is not in
> mainline kernel yet. I will remove sysid entry from this file.

Ok. BTW, could the sysid be used for the soc device strings, or
is that something else?

> >> +                             reg = < 0x00004000 0x00000400
> >> +                                     0x00004400 0x00000040
> >> +                                     0x00004800 0x00000040
> >> +                                     0x00002000 0x00002000 >;
> >> +                                reg-names = "control_port", "rx_csr", "tx_csr", "s1";
> >
> > - wrong order, missing "tx_desc" and "rx_desc" entries
> FYI, TSE driver supports both SGDMA and MSGDMA soft IP and "tx_desc"
> and "rx_desc" entries are for MSGDMA (see below). But this 3c120
> hardware design is using TSE + SGDMA. So, the expect entries are
> "control_port", "rx_csr", "tx_csr", "s1".
> I can sort the entries order by their addresses.

You can't reorder the registers, as they can be accessed by
index in some OS, the strings are just annotations really.

> Excerpt from Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/altera_tse.txt
> - reg-names: Should contain the reg names
>   "control_port": MAC configuration space region
>   "tx_csr":       xDMA Tx dispatcher control and status space region
>   "tx_desc":      MSGDMA Tx dispatcher descriptor space region
>   "rx_csr" :      xDMA Rx dispatcher control and status space region
>   "rx_desc":      MSGDMA Rx dispatcher descriptor space region
>   "rx_resp":      MSGDMA Rx dispatcher response space region
>   "s1":           SGDMA descriptor memory

The important part is

- reg: Address and length of the register set for the device. It contains
  the information of registers in the same order as described by reg-names.

You can either provide dummy entries for tx_desc, rx_desc and rx_resp,
or change the binding to reflect the current usage, and provide two
different lists depending on the compatible string.

> >> +                             max-frame-size = < 1518 >;
> >> +                             local-mac-address = [ 02 00 00 00 00 00 ];
> >> +                             phy-mode = "rgmii-id";
> >> +                             ALTR,mii-id = < 0 >;
> >
> > ALTR,mii-id is not documented, and required "phy-addr" is missing.
> Will remove ALTR,mii-id. "phy-addr" is not required if we provide "phy-handle".
> 
> Excerpt from Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/altera_tse.txt:
> - phy-addr: See ethernet.txt in the same directory. A configuration should
>                 include phy-handle or phy-addr.

Ok.

> >> diff --git a/arch/nios2/boot/linked_dtb.S b/arch/nios2/boot/linked_dtb.S
> >> new file mode 100644
> >> index 0000000..071f922db338e2cb4064bc77bf346f50e584d04f
> >> --- /dev/null
> >> +++ b/arch/nios2/boot/linked_dtb.S
> >> + */
> >> +.section .dtb.init.rodata,"a"
> >> +.incbin "arch/nios2/boot/system.dtb"
> >
> > Linking in the dtb file is really against the point of device trees.
> > You should require boot loaders to pass the dtb seperately.
> We do support pass the dtb from boot loaders. This is optional feature
> that allow user to linking in dtb into kernel image if
> CONFIG_DTB_SOURCE_BOOL is enabled. This is very useful for develpment
> stage/debugging stage, where we can download vmlinux image directly
> into SDRAM and boot without boot loader.
> Noticed that other architectures have linking in dtd file as well, eg:
> c6x and microblaze.

Ok.

	Arnd
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