On Wed, 18 Apr 2018 13:12:48 +0100
Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandaga...@linaro.org> wrote:

> On 18/04/18 12:41, Alban wrote:
> > On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 18:00:40 +0200
> > Alban <al...@free.fr> wrote:
> >   
> >> On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 16:44:01 +0100
> >> Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandaga...@linaro.org> wrote:
> >>  
> >>> Thanks for explaining,
> >>>
> >>> On 17/04/18 15:54, Alban wrote:  
> >>>> This will not only allow reading the calibration data from nvmem, but
> >>>> will also create a partition on the MTD device, which is not acceptable.
> >>>> With my proposed binding this would become:
> >>>>
> >>>> flash@0 {
> >>>>  #address-cells = <1>;
> >>>>  #size-cells = <1>;
> >>>>  compatible = "s25sl064a";
> >>>>  reg = <0>;
> >>>>
> >>>>  nvmem-cells {
> >>>>          compatible = "nvmem-cells";
> >>>>          #address-cells = <1>;
> >>>>          #address-cells = <1>;
> >>>>
> >>>>          calibration: calib@404 {
> >>>>                  reg = <0x404 0x10>;
> >>>>          };
> >>>>  };  
> >>>
> >>> Why can't we make nvmem-cells node a nvmem provider in this case?
> >>> Which should work!  
> >>
> >> TBH I just copied what have been done to fix the same problem with the
> >> MTD partitions. But yes we could also just extend the current binding
> >> to require a compatible string on each nvmem-cell, which would not
> >> require any code change to support.  
> > 
> > However this scheme will not work if the device node binding already
> > have subnodes with addresses. The addressing, as specified by
> > #address-cells and #size-cells, might be incompatible or might overlap.
> > Using the nvmem-cells subnode solve this problem.
> >   
> 
> I was also suggesting you to use nvmem-cell subnode, but make it a 
> proper nvmem provider device, rather than reusing its parent device.
> 
> You would end up some thing like this in dt.
> 
> flash@0 {
>       #address-cells = <1>;
>       #size-cells = <1>;
>       compatible = "s25sl064a";
>       reg = <0>;
> 
>       nvmem-cells {
>               compatible = "mtd-nvmem";
>               #address-cells = <1>;
>               #size-cells = <1>;
> 
>               calibration: calib@404 {
>                       reg = <0x404 0x10>;
>               };
>       };
> };

But the root cause is in the nvmem binding, this conflict could exists
with any device type, not just MTD. I don't understand why we would want
such workarounds instead of just fixing the problem once and for all.

Alban

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