From: Jonas Jelonek <jelonek.jonas@gmail.com>
To: Oleksij Rempel <o.rempel@pengutronix.de>
Cc: "Kory Maincent" <kory.maincent@bootlin.com>,
"Andrew Lunn" <andrew+netdev@lunn.ch>,
"David S . Miller" <davem@davemloft.net>,
"Eric Dumazet" <edumazet@google.com>,
"Jakub Kicinski" <kuba@kernel.org>,
"Paolo Abeni" <pabeni@redhat.com>,
"Rob Herring" <robh@kernel.org>,
"Krzysztof Kozlowski" <krzk+dt@kernel.org>,
"Conor Dooley" <conor+dt@kernel.org>,
netdev@vger.kernel.org, devicetree@vger.kernel.org,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
"Daniel Golle" <daniel@makrotopia.org>,
"Bjørn Mork" <bjorn@mork.no>
Subject: Re: [PATCH net-next 0/2] net: pse-pd: add Realtek/Broadcom PSE MCU support
Date: Fri, 12 Jun 2026 09:32:19 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <94fc9839-b20e-47de-b530-ebd8eadb25d9@gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <aiqV_10qQahSHXca@pengutronix.de>
Hi Oleksij,
On 11.06.26 13:03, Oleksij Rempel wrote:
> Hi Jonas,
>
> On Mon, Jun 08, 2026 at 08:57:55PM +0000, Jonas Jelonek wrote:
>> This series adds a PSE-PD driver for the microcontroller (MCU) that fronts
>> the PSE silicon on a range of managed switches, together with its DT
>> binding.
>>
>> Hardware model
>> ==============
>>
>> These boards do not expose the PSE chips to the host directly. A small
>> microcontroller sits on an I2C/SMBus or UART bus and manages one or more PSE
>> chips behind it; the host CPU only ever talks to that MCU, using a fixed
>> 12-byte request/response protocol with a trailing checksum. The PSE silicon
>> never appears on the bus.
>>
>> The same protocol family is used by MCUs fronting Realtek PSE chips
>> (RTL8238B, RTL8239, RTL8239C) and Broadcom PSE chips (BCM59111, BCM59121),
>> diverging in opcode numbering and a few response layouts. The driver
>> abstracts that behind a per-dialect opcode table and parser hooks, selected
>> by the compatible. The specific PSE chip behind the MCU is detected at
>> runtime and only influences per-chip constants (power scaling and the
>> per-port cap).
>>
>> Why the compatible names the protocol, not the chip
>> ===================================================
>>
>> The compatibles are "realtek,pse-mcu-rtk" and "realtek,pse-mcu-bcm". This is
>> a deliberate choice and the part most likely to raise questions, so the
>> reasoning up front.
>>
>> The node names the protocol dialect, not a part:
>>
>> - The DT node describes the MCU, not a PSE chip: the PSE chips are behind
>> the MCU and never appear on the bus, so naming the node after one (e.g.
>> "realtek,rtl8239") would describe hardware that isn't at that address.
>>
>> - The PSE chips are, in principle, usable without this MCU (host-driven
>> directly) - different hardware with a different programming model that
>> would warrant its own binding. Claiming the PSE-chip compatibles here
>> would collide with that.
>>
>> - Naming the MCU silicon is equally wrong: these are ordinary
>> general-purpose microcontrollers (GigaDevice, Nuvoton, ...) that vary
>> across boards and are not dedicated to this application.
>>
>> - What is fixed, and all the driver needs at DT-parse time, is the
>> protocol dialect, so the compatible encodes exactly that. The two
>> dialects share one protocol family and one binding, kept in a single
>> "realtek" vendor namespace because this MCU front-end is found almost
>> exclusively on Realtek-based switches; a "-rtk"/"-bcm" suffix selects
>> the dialect. This follows the "google,cros-ec-*" pattern: a compatible
>> for a firmware/protocol interface implemented by varying
>> microcontrollers.
>>
>> One compatible per dialect spans both transports:
>>
>> - The 12-byte wire protocol is identical over I2C/SMBus and UART; only the
>> plumbing differs (SMBus vs native framing on I2C, baud rate on UART),
>> and the transport is already expressed structurally by the node's parent
>> bus (i2c@... vs serial@...). A "-i2c"/"-uart" suffix would only
>> duplicate that, for a protocol that does not change across transports.
>>
>> - This is the multi-transport model used by e.g. "bosch,bmi160" (one
>> compatible, separate i2c and spi drivers binding it), rather than the
>> cros-ec model of per-transport compatibles - cros-ec splits because its
>> on-wire framing genuinely differs per bus, which is not the case here.
>>
>> The binding documents both points as well.
>>
>> Testing
>> =======
>>
>> - Linksys LGS328MPCv2 (RTL8238B, I2C)
>> - Zyxel GS1900-10HP A1 (BCM59121, UART)
>> - Zyxel GS1900-10HP B1 (RTL8238B, UART)
>> - Zyxel XMG1915-10EP (RTL8239C, UART)
>> - Zyxel XS1930-12HP (RTL8239, SMBus)
>>
>
> Thank you for your work!
Thank you!
> Overall, LGTM. Can you please take a look at this report:
> https://sashiko.dev/#/patchset/20260608205758.1830521-1-jelonek.jonas%40gmail.com
>
> kzalloc_obj - seems to be a false positive. Some other have good points.
Yes, I'll have a look and address those issues in v2 soon.
> Best Regards,
> Oleksij
Best,
Jonas
prev parent reply other threads:[~2026-06-12 7:32 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2026-06-08 20:57 [PATCH net-next 0/2] net: pse-pd: add Realtek/Broadcom PSE MCU support Jonas Jelonek
2026-06-08 20:57 ` [PATCH net-next 1/2] dt-bindings: net: pse-pd: add bindings for Realtek/Broadcom PSE MCU Jonas Jelonek
2026-06-08 20:57 ` [PATCH net-next 2/2] net: pse-pd: add Realtek/Broadcom PSE MCU driver Jonas Jelonek
2026-06-11 11:03 ` [PATCH net-next 0/2] net: pse-pd: add Realtek/Broadcom PSE MCU support Oleksij Rempel
2026-06-12 7:32 ` Jonas Jelonek [this message]
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=94fc9839-b20e-47de-b530-ebd8eadb25d9@gmail.com \
--to=jelonek.jonas@gmail.com \
--cc=andrew+netdev@lunn.ch \
--cc=bjorn@mork.no \
--cc=conor+dt@kernel.org \
--cc=daniel@makrotopia.org \
--cc=davem@davemloft.net \
--cc=devicetree@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=edumazet@google.com \
--cc=kory.maincent@bootlin.com \
--cc=krzk+dt@kernel.org \
--cc=kuba@kernel.org \
--cc=linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=netdev@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=o.rempel@pengutronix.de \
--cc=pabeni@redhat.com \
--cc=robh@kernel.org \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox