From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: robherring2@gmail.com (Rob Herring) Date: Mon, 14 Nov 2011 10:49:48 -0600 Subject: [PATCH v4 01/10] arm/tegra: initial device tree for tegra30 In-Reply-To: <74CDBE0F657A3D45AFBB94109FB122FF1740805A80@HQMAIL01.nvidia.com> References: <1321010541-31337-1-git-send-email-pdeschrijver@nvidia.com> <1321010541-31337-2-git-send-email-pdeschrijver@nvidia.com> <4EBDE766.5080505@gmail.com> <20111114152518.GJ19069@tbergstrom-lnx.Nvidia.com> <4EC13699.5030205@gmail.com> <20111114160633.GK19069@tbergstrom-lnx.Nvidia.com> <74CDBE0F657A3D45AFBB94109FB122FF1740805A80@HQMAIL01.nvidia.com> Message-ID: <4EC146AC.4070203@gmail.com> To: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org List-Id: linux-arm-kernel.lists.infradead.org On 11/14/2011 10:20 AM, Stephen Warren wrote: > Peter De Schrijver wrote at Monday, November 14, 2011 9:07 AM: >> On Mon, Nov 14, 2011 at 04:41:13PM +0100, Rob Herring wrote: >>> On 11/14/2011 09:25 AM, Peter De Schrijver wrote: >>>> On Sat, Nov 12, 2011 at 04:26:30AM +0100, Rob Herring wrote: >>>>> On 11/11/2011 05:22 AM, Peter De Schrijver wrote: >>>>>> This patch adds the initial device tree for tegra30 > ... >>>>>> + interrupt-parent = <&intc>; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + intc: interrupt-controller at 50041000 { >>>>>> + compatible = "nvidia,tegra30-gic", "nvidia,tegra20-gic"; >>>>>> + interrupt-controller; >>>>>> + #interrupt-cells = <1>; >>>>> >>>>> Is the Tegra GIC really different from a standard A9 gic? You need to >>>>> update to use the gic binding. The cells should be 3 for example. >>>> >>>> It has an extra 'legacy' interrupt controller like tegra20 has. This is used >>>> when waking up the CPU from power off mode. >>> >>> Although that is probably not part of the GIC h/w (i.e. at a different >>> address) and should be described in the dts separately. That doesn't >>> change the GIC binding or the fact that you are using >>> arch/arm/common/gic.c though. Whether you have a different compatible >>> string or not is not really the issue. That can already be supported if >>> necessary. The issue is you are not using the existing GIC binding as a >>> starting point and that has implications on every node using a GIC >>> interrupt. >>> >> >> The GIC is the same as the one used on tegra20. So I copied the binding from >> tegra20.dtsi. Is that one wrong too then? > > The existing Tegra20 .dtsi file doesn't use the new GIC bindings yet > either, which as Peter points out is where he copied the GIC node from. > My suggestion is that we merge the Tegra30 .dtsi as shown above, and then > do a single pass to convert both tegra20.dtsi and tegra30.dtsi over to the > new GIC binding, to prevent blocking the merge of tegra30.dtsi on the GIC > binding rework. Does that sound fair? > If the change was complex to address then I would agree, but it's not. In fact, the code to enable GIC DT binding is shorter than the additional copy of a wrong/incomplete/unused binding. I think it is needless churn doing as you suggest. Rob