On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 4:00 PM, Frank Rowand <frowand.l...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Rob, > > Thanks for the example. It was a good starting tutorial of sorts for me > to understand the format a bit. > > > On 04/18/18 15:29, Rob Herring wrote: >> The current DT binding documentation format of freeform text is painful >> to write, review, validate and maintain. >> >> This is just an example of what a binding in the schema format looks >> like. It's using jsonschema vocabulary in a YAML encoded document. Using >> jsonschema gives us access to existing tooling. A YAML encoding gives us >> something easy to edit. >> >> This example is just the tip of the iceberg, but it the part most >> developers writing bindings will interact with. Backing all this up >> are meta-schema (to validate the binding schemas), some DT core schema, >> YAML encoded DT output with dtc, and a small number of python scripts to >> run validation. The gory details including how to run end-to-end >> validation can be found here: >> >> https://www.spinics.net/lists/devicetree-spec/msg00649.html >> >> Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <r...@kernel.org> >> --- >> Cc list, >> You all review and/or write lots of binding documents. I'd like some feedback >> on the format. >> >> Thanks, >> Rob >> >> .../devicetree/bindings/example-schema.yaml | 149 >> +++++++++++++++++++++ >> 1 file changed, 149 insertions(+) >> create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/example-schema.yaml >> >> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/example-schema.yaml >> b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/example-schema.yaml >> new file mode 100644 >> index 000000000000..fe0a3bd1668e >> --- /dev/null >> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/example-schema.yaml > > I'm guessing by the path name that this is in the Linux kernel source tree.
Yes, well, my kernel tree. Most of the work still lives here: https://github.com/robherring/yaml-bindings/ >> @@ -0,0 +1,149 @@ >> +# SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause > > If in the Linux kernel source tree, then allow gpl-v2 as a possible license. Why? BSD is compatible. The license of the above repo is all BSD. Of course there's all the existing docs which default to GPLv2 and we'll probably have to maintain that. >> +# Copyright 2018 Linaro Ltd. >> +%YAML 1.2 >> +--- >> +# All the top-level keys are standard json-schema keywords except for >> +# 'maintainers' and 'select' >> + >> +# $id is a unique idenifier based on the filename > > ^^^^^^^^^ identifier > >> +$id: "http://devicetree.org/schemas/example-schema.yaml#" > > Does this imply that all schemas will be at devicetree.org instead > of in the Linux kernel source tree? This would be counter to my > earlier guess about where this patch is applied. They could be, but not necessarily. This is just convention in jsonschema is the best I understand it. I don't think you'd want validation to require an internet connection. For the base meta-schema, for example, it does exist at http://json-schema.org/draft-06/schema, but that's also distributed with implementations of jsonschema validators. A large part (not that any part is large) of the tools Grant and I have written is doing the cross reference resolution of files which uses the $id field. >> +$schema: "http://devicetree.org/meta-schemas/core.yaml#" > > How is $schema used? Tells the validator what meta-schema this schema follows. Typically you see draft04 or draft06 here if you haven't written a meta-schema. > Is it accessed across the network? Could be, but generally no. >> + >> +# Only 1 version supported for now >> +version: 1 >> + >> +title: An example schema annotated with jsonschema details >> + >> +maintainers: >> + - Rob Herring <r...@kernel.org> >> + >> +description: | >> + A more detailed multi-line description of the binding. >> + >> + Details about the hardware device and any links to datasheets can go here. >> + >> + The end of the description is marked by indentation less than the first >> line >> + in the description. >> + >> +select: false >> + # 'select' is a schema applied to a DT node to determine if this binding >> + # schema should be applied to the node. It is optional and by default the >> + # possible compatible strings are extracted and used to match. > > My first reaction was that 'node' should somehow be included in the name > of 'select'. But my second thought was that maybe 'node' is implied, > because every schema file describes a single node??? This is where my > lack of knowledge kicks in - I'll go read stuff in your yaml-bindings > repo to get a better background... Yes, schema are applied to nodes and most of the current uses of select are based on node name. We walk the DT and apply all the schema for a node that select (either in the doc or generated from compatible) is valid. >> + >> +properties: >> + # A dictionary of DT properties for this binding schema >> + compatible: >> + # More complicated schema can use oneOf (XOR), anyOf (OR), or allOf >> (AND) >> + # to handle different conditions. >> + # In this case, it's needed to handle a variable number of values as >> there >> + # isn't another way to express a constraint of the last string value. >> + # The boolean schema must be a list of schemas. >> + oneOf: >> + - items: >> + # items is a list of possible values for the property. The number >> of >> + # values is determined by the number of elements in the list. >> + # Order in lists is significant, order in dicts is not >> + # Must be one of the 1st enums followed by the 2nd enum >> + # >> + # Each element in items should be 'enum' or 'const' >> + - enum: >> + - vendor,soc4-ip >> + - vendor,soc3-ip >> + - vendor,soc2-ip >> + - enum: >> + - vendor,soc1-ip >> + # additionalItems being false is implied >> + # minItems/maxItems equal to 2 is implied >> + - items: >> + # 'const' is just a special case of an enum with a single >> possible value >> + - const: vendor,soc1-ip > > I'm using this as an example of a concept, not to pick on this one specific > instance. > > One of my concerns with YAML has been the rich, flexible syntax available. To > a YAML expert, this is a very useful feature. To someone who does not use > YAML > and will not use it for anything other than binding schemas, this adds more > complexity. I think you need to replace YAML with jsonschema. Our YAML use is restricted to the subset of which JSON supports (plus the literal block support which I think can't be done in JSON). And then the vocabulary we are using is jsonschema. I share the concern as I doubt most kernel developers don't know jsonschema. But then the alternative is us defining and writing our own thing which is C like 'cause that's what kernel developers understand. My hope is to simplify and restrict things enough that it writing a binding doc is straightforward without being jsonschema experts. That was the intent of this patch without going into all the details behind it. > What I have heard some people say in the validation discussions is that the > allowed YAML syntax for binding schemas would be limited to one (or a very > small number) of the possible YAML alternative syntaxes for use in the > bindings. Will there be a document describing such a limitation on > alternate syntaxes? The syntax is jsonschema. That's what defines the top-level fields for the most part. For common properties, the syntax is pretty locked down by what the meta-schema allows. So for example the following will fail on the meta-schema even though something like this is valid jsonschema: compatible: allOf: - items: - enum: [ foo ] - items: - enum: [ bar ] Jsonschema has the "feature" that if the validator doesn't recognize a keyword, it is supposed to silently ignore the keyword. So a typo in a keyword would just be ignored. The meta-schema > > (This example file provides a good example of a single syntax style, but does > not preclude other equivalent syntax.) There's also a question of formatting. For example, we can have: enum: [1,2,3] or enum: - 1 - 2 - 3 IMO, we should lock that down too. > Getting back to the specific example of 'const', it is a less verbose way of > specifying a single value enum, and I think it looks cleaner and more > readable. But it is also a case of adding more complexity for someone who > does not otherwise use YAML. I would using the more verbose syntax of > enum even for a single possible value. That's fine. There's certainly cases where we might start with 1 value and plan to add more over time and would want to use enum. >> + >> + reg: >> + # The description of each element defines the order and implicitly >> defines >> + # the number of reg entries >> + items: >> + - description: core registers >> + - description: aux registers >> + # minItems/maxItems equal to 2 is implied >> + >> + reg-names: >> + # The core schema enforces this is a string array >> + items: >> + - const: core >> + - const: aux >> + >> + clocks: >> + # Only a single entry, so just need to set the max number of items. > > # More restrictions are provided in meta-schemas/clocks.yaml > > >> + maxItems: 1 >> + >> + clock-names: >> + items: >> + - const: bus >> + >> + interrupts: >> + # Either 1 or 2 interrupts can be present >> + minItems: 1 >> + maxItems: 2 >> + items: >> + - description: tx or combined interrupt >> + - description: rx interrupt >> + >> + description: | >> + A variable number of interrupts warrants a description of what >> conditions >> + affect the number of interrupts. Otherwise, descriptions on standard >> + properties are not necessary. >> + >> + interrupt-names: >> + # minItems must be specified here because the default would be 2 >> + minItems: 1 > > Why the difference between the interrupts property and the interrupt-names > property (specifying maxItems for interrupt, but not interrupt-names)? I should probably have maxItems here too. > Others have already commented on a desire to have a way to specify that > number of interrupts should match number of interrupt-names. Yeah, but I don't see a way to do that. You could stick the array size constraints in a common definition and have a $ref to that definition from both, but that doesn't really save you too much. >> + items: >> + - const: "tx irq" >> + - const: "rx irq" >> + >> + # Property names starting with '#' must be quoted >> + '#interrupt-cells': >> + # A simple case where the value must always be '2'. >> + # The core schema handles that this must be a single integer. >> + const: 2 >> + >> + interrupt-controller: {} >> + # The core checks this is a boolean, so just have to list it here to be >> + # valid for this binding. >> + >> + clock-frequency: >> + # The type is set in the core schema. Per device schema only need to set >> + # constraints on the possible values. >> + minimum: 100 >> + maximum: 400000 >> + # The value that should be used if the property is not present >> + default: 200 > > This is confusing to me. (Beyond the discussion of this in Stephen Boyd's > reply...) My naive reading of this is that the default is the value that > the driver should implement if the property is missing, which is unrelated > to the concept of validating a dts file. Your reading was my intent and what we currently document. Stephen's suggestion is probably more inline with typical jsonschema use of default (i.e. to fill in missing data). The schema doc is for more than just dts validation. Rob