Hey Stephen-

Thanks for the comments.

On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 03:58:36PM -0600, Stephen Warren wrote:
> On 08/22/2013 01:59 PM, Josh Cartwright wrote:
> > Signed-off-by: Josh Cartwright <jo...@codeaurora.org>
> > ---
> > I'm introducing this as an RFC, because there are set of assumptions
> > made in this binding spec, that currently hold true for the supported
> > controller/addressing scheme for the Snapdragon 800 series, but don't
> > necessarily hold true for SPMI in general.
> > 
> >   1. No use of Group Slave Identifiers (GSIDs)
> >      (SPMI allows for a slave to belong to zero or more groups specified
> >      by GSID, however this feature isn't currently implemented)
> > 
> >   2. No specification of Master Identifier (MID)
> >      (A "system integrator" allocates to each master a 2-bit MID, this
> >      currently isn't being specified, as it isn't needed by software for
> >      the PMIC Arb; not sure if this is of use to other SPMI controllers)
> > 
> >   3. Single SPMI master per controller
> > 
> > Effectively, only a subset of possible SPMI configurations are specified
> > in this document.
> > 
> > So, if it's considered necessary to provide a generic SPMI binding
> > specification, is it acceptable to only define a subset at this time,
> > expanding only when necessary, or shall I expand the definition to at
> > least address 1 & 2, even though they are of no use in the current
> > implementation?
> 
> It's best to define the whole thing from the start if possible. It's
> easier to ensure the whole binding is consistent, and nothing has been
> left out.

That makes sense.  I think I'll go down this route for v3 of this
patchset:

For #1 above, extend the 'reg' property of a slave node to include the
group slave ID's in which the slave is a member.  The first 'reg' entry
will remain the slave's Unique Slave Identifier (USID) as before.

For #2, add additional required 'spmi-mid' property in the
controller/master node that describes the 2-bit Master Identifier (MID).

For #3, rename the SPMI API's s/controller/master/.  The current
controller/master terminology difference is confusing and unnecessary.

> However, it's probably OK to define a subset binding initially and then
> expand it later, as long as some thought it put into how it can be
> expanded in a way that is 100% compatible: old DTs will still operate
> with new kernels and perhaps even new DTs will still operate with old
> kernels.
>
> That said, if the thought is put in to ensure that's possible, it's
> probably just as easy to define the whole binding from the start.

That all makes sense.

If we want to ensure for the generic bindings that we are fulling
characterizing/describing the SPMI bus, then we'll additionally need to
tackle an additional identified assumption:

  4. One master per SPMI bus.  (The SPMI spec allows for up to 4
     masters)

On the Snapdragon 800 series, there exists only one software-controlled
master, but it is conceivably possible to have a setup with two
software-controlled masters on the same SPMI bus.

This necessarily means that the description of the slaves and the
masters will need to be decoupled; I'm imagining a generic binding
supporting multiple masters would look something like this:

        master0: master@0 {
                compatible = "...";
                #spmi-master-cells = <0>;
                spmi-mid = <0>;

                ...
        };

        master2: master@2 {
                compatible = "...";
                #spmi-master-cells = <0>;
                spmi-mid = <2>;

                ...
        };

        spmi_bus {
                compatible = "...";

                spmi-masters = <&master0 &master2>;

                foo@0 {
                        compatible = "...";
                        reg = <0 ...>;
                };

                foo@8 {
                        compatible = "...";
                        reg = <8 ...>;
                };
        };

(This will also necessitate a change in the underlying SPMI driver
model, in the current implementation, a SPMI master 'owns' a particular
device.  This is not a valid assumption to make.)

Would this property-containing-phandle-vector be considered the
canonical way of representing nodes with multiple parents in the device
tree?

Thanks,
  Josh

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