On Tue, Nov 12, 2013 at 02:51:45PM +0000, Ivan T. Ivanov wrote:
> From: "Ivan T. Ivanov" <iiva...@mm-sol.com>
> 
> Allows MSM OTG controller to be specified via device tree.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Ivan T. Ivanov <iiva...@mm-sol.com>
> Cc: devicet...@vger.kernel.org
> ---
>  .../devicetree/bindings/usb/msm-hsusb.txt          |   57 +++++++++++++-
>  drivers/usb/phy/phy-msm-usb.c                      |   79 
> +++++++++++++++++---
>  2 files changed, 124 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/msm-hsusb.txt 
> b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/msm-hsusb.txt
> index 0a85eba..f1045e3 100644
> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/msm-hsusb.txt
> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/msm-hsusb.txt
> @@ -30,4 +30,59 @@ Required properties:
>               dr_mode = "peripheral";
>               interrupts = <0 134 0>;
>               usb-phy = <&usb_otg>;
> -     };
> \ No newline at end of file
> +     };
> +
> +USB PHY with optional OTG:
> +
> +Required properties:
> +- compatible:        should contain "qcom,usb-otg-ci" for chipsets with
> +                             Chipidea 45nm PHY or "qcom,usb-otg-snps" for 
> chipsets
> +                             with Synopsys 28nm PHY

To make this easier to read and extend in future, I'd reorganise this
like so:

compatible: should contain:
 * "qcom,usb-otg-ci" for chipsets with Chipidea 45nm PHY
 * "qcom,usb-otg-snps" for chipsets with Synopsys 28nm PHY

> +- regs:                      offset and length of the register set in the 
> memory map
> +- interrupts:        interrupt-specifier for the OTG interrupt.
> +
> +- clocks:            A list of phandle + clock-specifier pairs for the
> +                             clocks listed in clock-names
> +- clock-names:       Should contain the following:
> +  "phy"                      USB PHY reference clock
> +  "core"             Protocol engine clock
> +  "iface"            Interface bus clock
> +  "alt_core" Optional: Protocol engine clock for targets with asynchronous
> +                             reset methodology.

I'd rearrange that last entry:

"alt_core": Protocol engine clock for targets with asynchronous
            reset methodology. (optional)

> +
> +- dr_mode:           One of "host", "peripheral" or "otg". Defaults to "otg"

If this has a default and thus isn't required, it should be listed as
optional.

> +
> +- vdccx-supply:      phandle to the regulator for the vdd supply for
> +                             digital circuit operation.
> +- v1p8-supply:       phandle to the regulator for the 1.8V supply
> +- v3p3-supply:       phandle to the regulator for the 3.3V supply
> +
> +- qcom,otg-control: OTG control (VBUS and ID notifications) can be one of
> +                             1 - PHY control
> +                             2 - PMIC control
> +                             3 - User control (via debugfs)

NAK. This does not seem like a description of the hardware, and given
the debugfs comment is fundamentally tied to the way Linux functions
today.

> +
> +Optional properties:
> +- qcom,phy-init-sequence: PHY configuration sequence. val, reg pairs
> +                             terminate with -1

What is this? I'm really not keen on having arbitrary register/memory
poking sequences in the dt.

Why does it need to be terminated? Surely the size of the property tells
you that it's terminated.

> +
> +Example HSUSB OTG controller device node:
> +
> +     usb@f9a55000 {
> +             compatible = "qcom,usb-otg-snps";
> +             reg = <0xf9a55000 0x400>;
> +             interrupts = <0 134 0>;;

s/;;/;/

> +             dr_mode = "peripheral";
> +
> +             clocks = <&gcc GCC_XO_CLK>, <&gcc GCC_USB_HS_SYSTEM_CLK>,
> +                             <&gcc GCC_USB_HS_AHB_CLK>;
> +
> +             clock-names = "phy", "core", "iface";
> +
> +             vddcx-supply = <&pm8841_s2_corner>;
> +             v1p8-supply = <&pm8941_l6>;
> +             v3p3-supply = <&pm8941_l24>;
> +
> +             qcom,otg-control = <1>;
> +             qcom,phy-init-sequence = <0x01 0x90 0xffffffff>;

I believe modern dtc versions can handle negative numbers directly.

[...]

> +static int msm_otg_read_dt(struct platform_device *pdev, struct msm_otg 
> *motg)
> +{
> +     struct msm_otg_platform_data *pdata;
> +     const struct of_device_id *id;
> +     struct device_node *node = pdev->dev.of_node;
> +     int len = 0;
> +     u32 val;
> +
> +     pdata = devm_kzalloc(&pdev->dev, sizeof(*pdata), GFP_KERNEL);
> +     if (!pdata)
> +             return -ENOMEM;
> +
> +     motg->pdata = pdata;
> +
> +     id = of_match_device(msm_otg_dt_match, &pdev->dev);
> +     pdata->phy_type = (int) id->data;
> +
> +     pdata->mode = of_usb_get_dr_mode(node);
> +     if (pdata->mode == USB_DR_MODE_UNKNOWN)
> +             pdata->mode = USB_DR_MODE_OTG;
> +
> +     pdata->otg_control = OTG_PHY_CONTROL;
> +     if (!of_property_read_u32(node, "qcom,otg-control", &val))
> +             pdata->otg_control = val;

Is this validated elsewhere?

Thanks,
Mark.
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