On 08/29/2012 01:01 PM, Sascha Hauer wrote: > On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 01:18:10PM +0300, Alexander Shishkin wrote: >> Sascha Hauer <[email protected]> writes: >> >>> On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 10:50:08AM +0300, Alexander Shishkin wrote: >>>> Richard Zhao <[email protected]> writes: >>>> >>>>> i.MX usb controllers shares non-core registers, which may include >>>>> SoC specific controls. We take it as a usbmisc device and usbmisc >>>>> driver set operations needed by ci13xxx_imx driver. >>>>> >>>>> For example, Sabrelite board has bad over-current design, we can >>>>> usbmisc to disable over-current detect. >>>> >>>> Why does this have to be part of the usb driver instead of SoC specific >>>> code? It looks like you've created a whole new device/driver >>>> infrastructure just to disable overcurrent for a specific board. >>> >>> Richards code indeed only handles overcurrent for a specific board, but >>> there are more bits to configure in the longer run: power pin >>> polarities, ULPI/serial mode select and some more.
We already have a patch adding a usbmisc_imx53_init() function to that
driver.
>> Sounds to me like these things that should be taken care of by the phy
>> driver, which will likely be simpler from both driver's and devicetree's
>> perspective.
>
> Most i.MX SoCs have three instances of the chipidea core. These cores
> share a single register space for controlling the mentioned bits (the
> usbmisc register space). The usbmisc looks different on the different
> SoCs.
> Indeed they control some phy specific aspects, but the phy itself may
> also be an external ULPI or UTMI phy with a separate driver. So if we
> integrate the usbmisc into the phy wouldn't that mean that it has to
> be integrated into all possible phy drivers?
>
> From a devicetrees perspective it makes sense to integrate the flags
> into the chipidea nodes, because there is one node per chipidea core,
> but only one usbmisc unit for all ports on the SoC. So we can do a:
>
> chipidea@ofs {
> disable-overcurrent = <1>;
> };
>
> instead of
>
> usbmisc@ofs {
> disable-overcurrent-port0 = <1>;
> disable-overcurrent-port1 = <0>;
> ...
> };
+1
IMHO looks much cleaner.
>>>> And the infrastructure boils down to a complex way of passing a callback
>>>> from imx driver to another imx driver, that only works if they are
>>>> probed in the right order. I don't see any point in doing it like this
>>>> other than inflating the device tree tables even further.
>>>>
>>>> Why can't this be part of the SoC code like it is done, for example in
>>>> arch/arm/mach-omap2/control.c?
>>>
>>> The settings are board specific, so there must be some way to configure
>>> them in the devicetree.
>>
>> But I'm sure there's a way to control board-specific settings/kludges
>> from devicetree?
>
> Hm, yes. That's what Richard does, right? I may be misunderstanding you
> here.
>
> Sascha
Marc
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