Hi Tom, Bin,François, On Tue, 12 Oct 2021 at 19:34, Tom Rini <tr...@konsulko.com> wrote: > > On Wed, Oct 13, 2021 at 09:29:14AM +0800, Bin Meng wrote: > > Hi Simon, > > > > On Wed, Oct 13, 2021 at 9:01 AM Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org> wrote: > > > > > > With Ilias' efforts we have dropped OF_PRIOR_STAGE and OF_HOSTFILE so > > > there are only three ways to obtain a devicetree: > > > > > > - OF_SEPARATE - the normal way, where the devicetree is built and > > > appended to U-Boot > > > - OF_EMBED - for development purposes, the devicetree is embedded in > > > the ELF file (also used for EFI) > > > - OF_BOARD - the board figures it out on its own > > > > > > The last one is currently set up so that no devicetree is needed at all > > > in the U-Boot tree. Most boards do provide one, but some don't. Some > > > don't even provide instructions on how to boot on the board. > > > > > > The problems with this approach are documented at [1]. > > > > > > In practice, OF_BOARD is not really distinct from OF_SEPARATE. Any board > > > can obtain its devicetree at runtime, even it is has a devicetree built > > > in U-Boot. This is because U-Boot may be a second-stage bootloader and its > > > caller may have a better idea about the hardware available in the machine. > > > This is the case with a few QEMU boards, for example. > > > > > > So it makes no sense to have OF_BOARD as a 'choice'. It should be an > > > option, available with either OF_SEPARATE or OF_EMBED. > > > > > > This series makes this change, adding various missing devicetree files > > > (and placeholders) to make the build work. > > > > Adding device trees that are never used sounds like a hack to me. > > > > For QEMU, device tree is dynamically generated on the fly based on > > command line parameters, and the device tree you put in this series > > has various hardcoded <phandle> values which normally do not show up > > in hand-written dts files. > > > > I am not sure I understand the whole point of this. > > I am also confused and do not like the idea of adding device trees for > platforms that are capable of and can / do have a device tree to give us > at run time.
(I'll just reply to this one email, since the same points applies to all replies I think) I have been thinking about this and discussing it with people for a few months now. I've been signalling a change like this for over a month now, on U-Boot contributor calls and in discussions with Linaro people. I sent a patch (below) to try to explain things. I hope it is not a surprise! The issue here is that we need a devicetree in-tree in U-Boot, to avoid the mess that has been created by OF_PRIOR_STAGE, OF_BOARD, BINMAN_STANDALONE_FDT and to a lesser extent, OF_HOSTFILE. Between Ilias' series and this one we can get ourselves on a stronger footing. There is just OF_SEPARATE, with OF_EMBED for debugging/ELF use. For more context: http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/patch/20210919215111.3830278-3-...@chromium.org/ BTW I did suggest to QEMU ARM that they support a way of adding the u-boot.dtsi but there was not much interest there (in fact the maintainer would prefer there was no special support even for booting Linux directly!) But in any case it doesn't really help U-Boot. I think the path forward might be to run QEMU twice, once to get its generated tree and once to give the 'merged' tree with the U-Boot properties in it, if people want to use U-Boot features. I do strongly believe that OF_BOARD must be a run-time option, not a build-time one. It creates all sorts of problems and obscurity which have taken months to unpick. See the above patch for the rationale. To add to that rationale, OF_BOARD needs to be an option available to any board. At some point in the future it may become a common way things are done, e.g. TF-A calling U-Boot and providing a devicetree to it. It doesn't make any sense to have people decide whether or not to set OF_BOARD at build time, thus affecting how the image is put together. We'll end up with different U-Boot build targets like capricorn, capricorn_of_board and the like. It should be obvious where that will lead. Instead, OF_BOARD needs to become a commonly used option, perhaps enabled by most/all boards, so that this sort of build explosion is not needed. U-Boot needs to be flexible enough to function correctly in whatever runtime environment in which it finds itself. Also as binman is pressed into service more and more to build the complex firmware images that are becoming fashionable, it needs a definition (in the devicetree) that describes how to create the image. We can't support that unless we are building a devicetree, nor can the running program access the image layout without that information. François's point about 'don't use this with any kernel' is germane...but of course I am not suggesting doing that, since OF_BOARD is, still, enabled. We already use OF_BOARD for various boards that include an in-tree devicetree - Raspberry Pi 1, 2 and 3, for example (as I said in the cover letter "Most boards do provide one, but some don't."). So this series is just completing the picture by enforcing that *some sort* of devicetree is always present. I can't quite pinpoint the patch where U-Boot started allowing the devicetree to be omitted, but if people are interested I could try a little harder. It was certainly not my intention (putting on my device-tree-maintainer hat) to go down that path and it slipped in somehow in all the confusion. I'm not sure anyone could tell you that rpi_3 has an in-tree devicetree but rpi_4 does not... Anyway this series is very modest. It just adds the requirement that all in-tree boards have some sort of sample devicetree and preferably some documentation as to where it might come from at runtime. That should not be a tough call IMO. Assuming we can get the validation in place (mentioned by Rob Herring recently) it will be quite natural to sync them between (presumably) Linux and U-Boot. I am also quite happy to discuss what should actually be in these devicetree files and whether some of them should be essentially empty. As you probably noticed, some of them are empty since I literally could not figure out where they come from! But there needs to be at least some skeleton for U-Boot to progress, since devicetree is critical to its feature set. It is high time we tidied all this up. I predict it will be much harder, and much more confusing, in 6 months. Regards, Simon