Hi Abdellatif, On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 04:31:57PM +0000, Abdellatif El Khlifi wrote: > > Hi Simon, Tom, > > The FF-A transport is a SW bus and is not associated to any HW peripheral or > undiscoverable base address. > > There is only 1 way of discovering the FF-A bus and it's through the FF-A SW > interfaces. The FF-A spec [1] describes this in details. > > Discovering means gathering information about the FF-A framework such as: > the FF-A version, supported features, secure partitions number and attributes. > > Please refer to the following paragraphs for more details: [2], [3], [4], [5] > > The core driver provided by this patchset implements the Setup and discovery > interfaces > in addition to direct messaging. > > The driver provides ffa_bus_discover() API that allows to discover the FF-A > bus > as described by the spec and in the FF-A driver readme [6]. > > We expect and highly recommend FF-A users to always discover the FF-A bus > using ffa_bus_discover() API. >
Thanks for the details. But IIRC this discussion is not about the FF-A bus and device(partitions) discovery, but the support for FF-A itself. The discussion is about where to have a device node to represent the existence of FF-A support on a platform. If we are talking about individual partitions (devices) in the device tree, then that is pure stupidity as it goes out of since with the firmware the moment a partition is added or removed in the firmware. IIUC, the whole discussion was around whether to use FFA_VERSION as the discovery mechanism for existence of FF-A support on a platform or you have a device node to specify the same. Just to be clear, even if it is decided to add a device node, the FFA_VERSION must be used to detect the presence of FF-A support and return error otherwise. DT node presence is just to satisfy the design and must be treated as no auto-confirmation for the presence of FF-A support. We are just arguing the device node presence is just redundant, but as mentioned before it is up to U-Boot community to make a call on what is best. -- Regards, Sudeep