On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 10:22:07PM -0700, Stephen Warren wrote:
> On 11/12/2012 06:05 PM, David Gibson wrote:
> > On Fri, Nov 09, 2012 at 09:42:37PM +0000, Grant Likely wrote:
> ...
> > 2) graft bundle
> > 
> > The base tree has something like this:
> > 
> >     ...
> >     i2c@XXX {
> >             ...
> >             cape-socket {
> >                     compatible = "vendor,cape-socket";
> >                     id = "Socket-A";
> >                     piece-id = "i2c";
> >                     ranges = < ... >;
> >             };
> >     };
> >     ...
> >     spi@YYY {
> >             ...
> >             cape-socket {
> >                     compatible = "vendor,cape-socket";
> >                     id = "Socket-A";
> >                     piece-id = "spi";
> >                     ranges = < ... >;
> >             };
> >     };
> >     ...
> >     cape-socket {
> >             compatible = "vendor,cape-socket";
> >             id = "Socket-A";
> >             piece-id = "misc";
> >             interrupt-map = < ... >;
> >             interrupt-map-mask = < ... >;
> >             gpio-map = < ... >;
> >             gpio-map-mask = < ... >;
> >     };
> > 
> > Then instead of grafting a single subtree for the socket, we install a
> > "bundle" of subtrees, one each for each of the pieces within the
> > socket.  That bundle could either be an actual set of multiple fdts,
> > or they could be placed into one fdt with a dummy root node, something like:
> >
> >     / {
> >             plugin-bundle;
> >             compatible = "vendor,cape-plugin";
> >             version = ...;
> >             i2c-piece = {
> >                     piece-id = "i2c";
> >                     ...
> >             };
> >             misc-piece = {
> >                     piece-id = "misc";
> >                     ...
> >             };
> >     };
> 
> I do like this approach; it's the kind of thing I proposed at:
> 
> > http://www.mail-archive.com/devicetree-discuss@lists.ozlabs.org/msg20414.html

Roughly, yes, though a little streamlined from the syntax suggested
there.

> One question though: Perhaps the base board has two instances of the
> same type of connector vendor,cape-socket, allowing 2 independent capes
> to be plugged in. When overlaying/grafting the child board's .dts, we'd
> need some way to specify the socket ID that was being plugged into. Is
> that the intent of the "id" property in your base board example above?

Yes, that's exactly what I had in mind for the "id" property.
Property names and other details entirely negotiable at this stage,
of course.

By the by, I think having multiple interchangable sockets could break
the convention based approach for avoiding collisions between phandles
I suggested, but another mail with some better thoughts on that
shortly to be posted.

-- 
David Gibson                    | I'll have my music baroque, and my code
david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au  | minimalist, thank you.  NOT _the_ _other_
                                | _way_ _around_!
http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson
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