On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 1:12 AM, Hongbo Zhang <hongbo.zh...@freescale.com> wrote: >>>>> diff --git a/drivers/dma/fsldma.c b/drivers/dma/fsldma.c >>>>> index 49e8fbd..16a9a48 100644 >>>>> --- a/drivers/dma/fsldma.c >>>>> +++ b/drivers/dma/fsldma.c >>>>> @@ -1261,7 +1261,9 @@ static int fsl_dma_chan_probe(struct >>>>> fsldma_device >>>>> *fdev, >>>>> WARN_ON(fdev->feature != chan->feature); >>>>> chan->dev = fdev->dev; >>>>> - chan->id = ((res.start - 0x100) & 0xfff) >> 7; >>>>> + chan->id = (res.start & 0xfff) < 0x300 ? >>>>> + ((res.start - 0x100) & 0xfff) >> 7 : >>>>> + ((res.start - 0x200) & 0xfff) >> 7; >>>>> if (chan->id >= FSL_DMA_MAX_CHANS_PER_DEVICE) { >> >> Isn't it a bit fragile to have this based on the resource address? >> Can't device tree tell you the channel id directly by an index into >> the "dma0: dma@100300" node? > > > Yes, both this way and putting a "cell-index" into device tree work. > This won't be fragile, because the resource address should always be defined > correctly, otherwise even if we can tell a channel id by "cell-index" but > with wrong resource address, nothing will work. > This piece of code only doesn't seem as neat as using "cell-index", but we > prefer the style that let the device tree describes as true as what hardware > really has. This doesn't mean "cell-index" isn't acceptable, if it is > necessary and unavoidable, we can send another patch to add it, but > currently there is no need and we don't have to do this. >
I'm pointing it out because we just had a bug fix to another driver motivated by the fact that resource addresses may move from one implementation to another, whereas the cell index provided by device tree is static. Just a note, no need to fix it now. -- Dan -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/