[linux-sunxi] Re: [PATCH 1/4] brcmfmac: Add brcm, nvram_file_name dt property
From: Hans de Goede <hidden>
Date: 2016-06-30 09:53:21
Also in:
linux-devicetree, linux-wireless
Hi, On 29-06-16 20:51, 'Arend Van Spriel' via linux-sunxi wrote:
On 29-6-2016 20:01, Hans de Goede wrote:quoted
Hi, On 29-06-16 19:00, Kalle Valo wrote:quoted
Hans de Goede [off-list ref] writes:quoted
Hi, On 29-06-16 16:42, Jonas Gorski wrote:quoted
Hi, On 29 June 2016 at 16:04, Hans de Goede [off-list ref] wrote:quoted
Add a brcm,nvram_file_name dt property to allow overruling the default nvram filename for sdio devices. The idea is that we can specify a board specific nvram file, e.g. brcmfmac43362-ap6210.txt for boards with an ap6210 wifi sdio module and ship this in linux-firmware, so that wifi will work out of the box, without requiring users to find and then manually install the right nvram file for their board.Directly defining a filename doesn't seem like a good OS-agnostic approach. Maybe an alternative would be to add a model-property to the nodes (this is allowed) and make brcmfmac to request "FWFILENAME-<model>" as firmware if set? That would leave it to the OS on how the filename is set.It only defines the base-filename, not the entire path, how / where this file is searched for / loaded-from is then left up to the osIt's still a bad idea. The filename, including the path, should be created in the driver. Can't you provide chipname (or similar) via device tree and then the driver can choose what image to use?No, the driver already does that, but this is not ...quoted
Can you tell more about the naming the firmware image, how does it work exactly?About firmware, this is about the nvram file which is board specific, rather then chip specific.The nvram filename is determined pretty much the same as the firmware filename, but indeed the nvram data is board specific. This is main reason why we do not submit nvram files to linux-firmware, because we simply do not have those files.quoted
Typical wifi devices will have some sort of non volatile storage on board to not only store the ethernet(mac) address, but also to contain e.g. info about the antenna gain so that the firmware and/or the driver can take the antenna gain into account and ensure that they never exceed the maximum allowed broadcast strength. However on some embedded devices there is no non-volatile storage for the wifi (for cost reasons) and instead this configuration info (which is board / pcb specific) is loaded in the form of a file which contains the contents which would normally be in the non-volatile storage. Since we are dealing with a per-board config-file here, which is loaded from the os filesystem we really need to specify a basename here as the list of possible boards is endless, so we cannot have a lookup table in the driver.As Jonas mentioned the general principle of device tree is to be agnostic with regards to OS and/or driver as you undoubtedly know. His proposal seems like a usable solution for your problem while complying to the device tree principle. So instead of overriding the default brcmfmac should modify it when dt specifies the "module" property, ie: no "module" in DT: nvram filename = brcm/brcmfmac43362-sdio.txt "module=ap6210" in DT: nvram filename = brcm/brcmfmac43362-ap6210.txt
Yes that seems like a good solution, I will send a v2 implementing this.
By the way, the example in the bindings file does not seem to specify a basename, but path+basename+fileext.
fileext is always part of a file basename, but you're right that it does include a relative path because of the way the existing firmware files are organized under /lib/firmware under Linux and yes I'll admit that that is a bit os specific :) Regards, Hans