Thread (11 messages) 11 messages, 5 authors, 2017-01-26

[linux-sunxi] [PATCH 1/2] drivers: pinctrl: add driver for Allwinner H5 SoC

From: Maxime Ripard <hidden>
Date: 2017-01-19 17:51:44
Also in: linux-gpio, lkml

On Wed, Jan 18, 2017 at 09:44:37AM +0000, Andre Przywara wrote:
Hi,

On 16/01/17 16:31, Maxime Ripard wrote:
quoted
On Mon, Jan 09, 2017 at 12:16:00AM +0000, Andr? Przywara wrote:
quoted
On 05/01/17 22:42, Maxime Ripard wrote:
quoted
On Fri, Dec 30, 2016 at 01:55:44PM +0100, Linus Walleij wrote:
quoted
On Mon, Dec 26, 2016 at 3:33 PM, Andr? Przywara [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
So while this patch technically looks correct, I was wondering if we
should really explore the possibility of making the whole of sunxi
pinctrl DT controlled.
I brought this up a while ago, but people weren't overly enthusiastic
about it, though their argument weren't really convincing to me[1].

So:
As this "driver" here is basically a table linking GPIO bit settings
(the actual mux value) to names and every pin we care about needs to be
enumerated in the DT anyway, why not just add something like:
allwinner,pinmux = <4>;
to each pin(group) in the DT and get rid of this "driver" file here
entirely?
I'm open to that if you can use pinctrl-single which is in the kernel
for this purpose only, and is used with both OMAPs and HiSilicon.
I'm not open to that, and I'm getting tired of discussing it over and
over again. Andre, if you want to be convinced again, please read the
last discussion we had on this topic.
As I said: It didn't convince me back then. And frankly we didn't really
discuss it back then, I just refrained from entering a discussion
against _two_ maintainers at this time, since my capacity on this kind
of email threads is really very limited - especially for something that
is a hobby to me.
This is also (mostly) a hobby to me, which is exactly why I prefer to
work on something actually useful, rather than just discussing this
over and over again. Just like I don't want (myself, or anyone,
really, since we're all in the same boat) to have to maintain two
separate pinctrl drivers.

We're having a documented, simple, pinctrl binding, using the generic
bindings now (that almost everyone else is using now, or is very close
to), and we can leverage as much documentation and code from that. Why
would we want to create and maintain a new driver with a new binding,
that will need to be documented again, learned by everyone, and will
lead only to confusion across the people who just want to have their
board supported?
I agree, and thus was proposing a _slightly changed_ pinctrl driver
which actually *reduces* the maintenance burden in the kernel.
In the moment we need to add _both_ a pinctrl .dtsi node _and_ a kernel
"driver" file, which is really boilerplate code plus a table.
Also we need to make sure that both these files match.
If a new SoC is really 99% similar to an existing one, atm we still need
explicit kernel support if only one pin is changed (see the H5).
That's not true anymore. And while it's true that it reduces the
amount of maintainance on the kernel side and more on the DT side. And
from what you're constantly saying, the thing we can't plan on fixing
/ upgrading is the DT, while the kernel is easy to change.

Which means that if we ever want to fix a non-upgradable DT, the only
way to do that would be to add quirks fixing it in the kernel
itself. Adding more maintainance burden to the kernel.

But really, this is not up for debate. You're 4 years too late for
that for the original binding, and almost 2 years for the generic
binding.
quoted
I'm sorry, but this is also our jobs as maintainers to prevent all
these kind of issues, and to maintain consistency. Switching to one
binding to another breaks that consistency on many level,
Yet we did it for the clocks. The very same argumentation that you gave
above applies there as well (two different bindings, two sets of drivers
in the kernel, new learnings for people, etc.)
No, this is very different. An end user just wanting to plug a dumb
device on his i2c bus will never even see how clocks are
described. This is not true for pinctrl.

And all the other arguments for the clocks have been the same than the
pinctrl driver: every driver is converging to the new binding we've
been using, the table in the kernel is easier to fix, etc.
One difference would be that the new pinctrl binding wouldn't be
fundamentally different to the old one, up to the point where the old
driver could possibly use the very same DT nodes (but that would need to
be worked out).
The story is different if you manage to keep the binding. Every
platform (but TI's) is converging to the generic bindings. Not using
them is not an option. Having a different implementation is.

Maxime

-- 
Maxime Ripard, Free Electrons
Embedded Linux and Kernel engineering
http://free-electrons.com
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