On Wed, Jul 10, 2013 at 6:23 PM, Florian Fainelli <flor...@openwrt.org> wrote: > Hello Thomas, > > 2013/7/10 Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazz...@free-electrons.com>: >> Dear Florian Fainelli, >> >> On Wed, 10 Jul 2013 17:29:44 +0100, Florian Fainelli wrote: > [snip] > >> >>> > }; >>> > >>> > phy1: ethernet-phy@1 { >>> > ... all the properties you listed ... >>> > ... maybe the "id" property is not needed >>> > because of the phandle ... >>> > }; >>> > }; >>> > >>> > soc { >>> > ethernet@0 { >>> > phy = <&phy0>; >>> > ... >>> > }; >>> > >>> > ethernet@1 { >>> > phy = <&phy1>; >>> > ... >>> > }; >>> > }; >>> > >>> > or do you have in mind another representation? >>> >>> Not really this is more or less what I had in mind. I am wondering >>> whether we should really declare the "mdio-fixed" node, or if we >>> should not rather make the following: >>> >>> - declare all PHY nodes in the system as sub nodes of their belonging >>> real hardware MDIO bus node >>> - flag specific PHY nodes as "fixed" with a "fixed-link" boolean for >>> instance >>> - if we see that flag, make that specific PHY node bind to the >>> fixed-phy driver instead >> >> So the fixed PHY driver is going to travel through *all* nodes of the >> DT, and whenever some random node has a "fixed" property, it's going to >> say it corresponds to a fixed PHY? That doesn't seem like a good idea. > > Why not? Since we are already have to scan the entire MDIO bus we are > attached to, when we encounter such a PHY node with the special > "fixed" properties, we just call fixed_phy_add() with the right > parameters and voila. Which is also the reason why I was suggesting to > put the "fixed" PHY nodes as sub-nodes of the real MDIO node such that > we have this logic only in one place.
Hi Florian, I think this discussion is going in the wrong direction. The concept of a dummy phy is really a Linux kernel internal detail. Creating some kind of dummy MDIO bus node does not describe the hardware. There is already support in the kernel for Ethernet MACs connected directly to a switch or other device. It is far better to describe how the MAC needs to be configured than to invent a non-existent phy. Search for "fixed-link" in the kernel tree to see how it is used. g. _______________________________________________ devicetree-discuss mailing list devicetree-discuss@lists.ozlabs.org https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/devicetree-discuss