Hi Wolfram,
On Tuesday 11 March 2014 13:46:22 Wolfram Sang wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 12:56:50PM +0100, Laurent Pinchart wrote:
> > On Monday 10 March 2014 13:38:37 Wolfram Sang wrote:
> > > > I've recently reviewed a patch adding serial port aliases to the
> > > > device tree and would like to pick your brains about a disagreement I
> > > > had with the developer.
> > >
> > > And here is the developer :)
> > >
> > > > The SoC includes 8 serial ports. They are all disabled in the SoC
> > > > .dtsi, and enabled selectively by board DT files. As not all serial
> > > > ports are available on all boards, the question was whether to add
> > > > aliases for all ports (in the .dtsi in this case) like
> > > >
> > > > serial0 = &scif0;
> > > > serial1 = &scif1;
> > > > serial2 = &scif2;
> > > > serial3 = &scif3;
> > > > serial4 = &scif4;
> > > > serial5 = &scif5;
> > > > serial6 = &scif6;
> > > > serial7 = &scif7;
> > > >
> > > > or to just add aliases for the enabled ports (in the board DT file)
> > > > like
> > > >
> > > > serial0 = &scif2;
> > > > serial1 = &scif3;
> > > >
> > > > Note the numbering in the latter case: as the board doesn't use serial
> > > > ports 0 and 1, hardware ports 2 and 3 become logical ports 0 and 1.
> > > >
> > > > I considered that having Linux create ttySC0 and ttySC1 devices for
> > > > the first two ports of the board, regardless of which hardware ports
> > > > are used, is simpler from a user point of view (it allows sharing the
> > > > same inittab settings for the console serial port across several
> > > > boards for instance). I'd appreciate feedback on that.
> > >
> > > First, I don't think this is restricted to serial ports but how to use
> > > aliases in general. We may decide this or that way, yet we should do it
> > > consistently. Using aliases this way for serial ports and that way for
> > > I2C busses will create a mess.
> > > And currently, I only know of 1:1 mappings for I2C/SPI. So, on the same
> > > board, you'll need to open /dev/i2c-2, not /dev/i2c-0.
> > >
> > > From my experience, things get complicated when stuff gets added and the
> > >
> > > numbers go wild:
> > > serial0 = &scif2;
> > > serial1 = &scif3;
> > > serial2 = &scif6;
> > > serial3 = &scif0;
> > > serial4 = &scif7;
> > >
> > > When debugging here, trying to remember which port to open for the
> > > terminal, and which number to scan for in the schematics is error-prone
> > > and a PITA.
>
> No comments on those? Are the experiences from the stable ethernet
> naming which would speak for/against those arguments?
I'm waiting for others to comment :-) I agree that you have a point though.
> > > Yeah, the drawback is that the console might be at different places
> > > across boards. I suggest to update inittab at runtime anyhow, since not
> > > only the number but also the naming often changes (ttyXYZ to ttyABC).
> >
> > Just out of curiosity (as I could use it), do you have a sample
> > implementation of dynamic inittab updates ?
>
> Sure. Can be optimized and improved, but does its job (for an initramfs
> at least, where the default 'ttyS0' keeps constant):
>
> === S02inittab
>
> #!/bin/sh
> #
> # Update inittab at runtime - by Wolfram Sang, WTFPLv2
>
> case "$1" in
> start)
> echo "Adapting inittab to kernel console"
> l=$(cat /proc/cmdline)
> l=${l##*console=}
> l=${l%%,*}
> sed -i s/ttyS0/$l/g /etc/inittab
> kill -s SIGHUP 1
> ;;
> *)
> echo "Usage: $0 {start}"
> exit 1
> esac
>
> exit $?
>
> ===
Thank you.
Maybe we could also let udev create a link to the console serial port.
--
Regards,
Laurent Pinchart
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