On 01/14/2013 11:24 AM, Felipe Balbi wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 11:18:53AM +0100, Marc Kleine-Budde wrote:
>> On 01/14/2013 11:16 AM, Felipe Balbi wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 06:12:39PM +0800, Peter Chen wrote:
>>>> @@ -2756,22 +2753,41 @@ static int fsl_udc_otg_resume(struct device *dev)
>>>>
>>>> return fsl_udc_resume(NULL);
>>>> }
>>>> -
>>>>
>>>> /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>> Register entry point for the peripheral controller driver
>>>>
>>>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
>>>> -
>>>> +static const struct platform_device_id fsl_udc_devtype[] = {
>>>> + {
>>>> + .name = "imx-udc-mx25",
>>>> + .driver_data = IMX25_UDC,
>>>> + }, {
>>>> + .name = "imx-udc-mx27",
>>>> + .driver_data = IMX27_UDC,
>>>> + }, {
>>>> + .name = "imx-udc-mx31",
>>>> + .driver_data = IMX31_UDC,
>>>> + }, {
>>>> + .name = "imx-udc-mx35",
>>>> + .driver_data = IMX35_UDC,
>>>> + }, {
>>>> + .name = "imx-udc-mx51",
>>>> + .driver_data = IMX51_UDC,
>>>> + }
>>>> +};
>>>
>>> I wonder if your driver-data is actually needed since you can use string
>>> comparisson to achieve the exact same outcome.
>>
>> Why use a string compare, if the kernel infrastructure already does this
>> for you?
>
> what do you mean ? What kernel infrastructure is doing waht for me ?The kernel infrastructure is doing the string compare for you to match the device against the driver (via platform_device_id->name). You get the a pointer to the driver_data for free. So you don't need any string compare in the driver later. Marc -- Pengutronix e.K. | Marc Kleine-Budde | Industrial Linux Solutions | Phone: +49-231-2826-924 | Vertretung West/Dortmund | Fax: +49-5121-206917-5555 | Amtsgericht Hildesheim, HRA 2686 | http://www.pengutronix.de |
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