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[00/13] EDAC/synopsys: Add generic resources and Baikal-T1 support

Message ID 20220822191957.28546-1-Sergey.Semin@baikalelectronics.ru
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Series EDAC/synopsys: Add generic resources and Baikal-T1 support | expand

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Serge Semin Aug. 22, 2022, 7:19 p.m. UTC
This patchset is a third one in the series created in the framework of my
Baikal-T1 DDRC-related work:

[1: In-progress] EDAC/mc/synopsys: Various fixes and cleanups
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-edac/20220822190730.27277-1-Sergey.Semin@baikalelectronics.ru/
[2: In-progress] EDAC/synopsys: Add generic DDRC info and address mapping
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-edac/20220822191427.27969-1-Sergey.Semin@baikalelectronics.ru/
[3: In-progress] EDAC/synopsys: Add generic resources and Baikal-T1 support
Link: ---you are looking at it---

Note the patchsets above must be merged in the same order as they are
placed in the list in order to prevent conflicts. Nothing prevents them
from being reviewed synchronously though. Any tests are very welcome.
Thanks in advance.

This is a final patchset in the framework of my Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDRC
work, which completes the driver updates with the new functionality and
at the closure introduces the Baikal-T1 DDRC support.

The series starts from extending the Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDRC DT-schema
with the controller specific IRQs, clocks and resets properties. In
addition to the Baikal-T1 DDRC is added to the DT-bindings since it's
based on the DW uMCTL2 DDRC v2.61a.

After that we suggest to finally inform the MCI core with the detected
SDRAM ranks and make sure the detected errors are reported to the
corresponding rank. Then we extend the DDRC capabilities with optional
Scrub functionality. It's indeed possible to have the DW uMCTL2 controller
with no HW-accelerated Scrub support (no RMW engine). In that case the MCI
core is supposed to perform the erroneous location ECC update by means of
the platform-specific scrub method.

Then we get to fix the error-injection functionality a bit. First since
the driver now has the Sys<->SDRAM address translation infrastructure we
can use it to convert the supplied poisonous system address to the SDRAM
one. Thus there is no longer need in preserving the address in the device
private data. Second we suggest to add a DebuFS node-based command to
disable the error-injection feature (no idea why it hasn't been done in
the first place).

Afterwards a series of the IRQ-related patches goes. First we introduce the
individual DDRC event IRQs support in accordance with what has been added
to the DT-bindings and what the native DW uMCTL2 DDR controller actually
provides. Then aside to the ECC CE/UE errors detection we suggest to the
DFI/SDRAM CRC/Parity errors report. It specifically useful for the DDR4
memory which has dedicated ALARM_n signal, but can be still utilized in
the framework of the older protocols if the device DFI-PHY calculates
the HIF-interface signals parity. Third after adding the platform
clock/resets request procedure we introduce the HW-accelerated Scrubber
support. Its performance can be tuned by means of the sdram_scrub_rate
SysFS node and the Core clock rate. Note it is possible to one-time-run
the Scrubber in the back-to-back mode so to perform a burst-like scan of
the whole SDRAM memory.

At the patchset closure we finally fix the DW uMCTL2 DDRC kernel config to
be available not only on the Xilinx, Intel and MXC platforms and add the
Baikal-T1 DDRC support which the whole work has been dedicated for in the
first place.

Signed-off-by: Serge Semin <Sergey.Semin@baikalelectronics.ru>
Cc: Alexey Malahov <Alexey.Malahov@baikalelectronics.ru>
Cc: Michail Ivanov <Michail.Ivanov@baikalelectronics.ru>
Cc: Pavel Parkhomenko <Pavel.Parkhomenko@baikalelectronics.ru>
Cc: Punnaiah Choudary Kalluri <punnaiah.choudary.kalluri@xilinx.com>
Cc: Manish Narani <manish.narani@xilinx.com>
Cc: Dinh Nguyen <dinguyen@kernel.org>
Cc: James Morse <james.morse@arm.com>
Cc: Robert Richter <rric@kernel.org>
Cc: Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org>
Cc: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski+dt@linaro.org>
Cc: devicetree@vger.kernel.org
Cc: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org
Cc: linux-edac@vger.kernel.org
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org

Serge Semin (13):
  dt-bindings: memory: snps: Extend schema with IRQs/resets/clocks props
  dt-bindings: memory: snps: Add Baikal-T1 DDRC support
  EDAC/synopsys: Add multi-ranked memory support
  EDAC/synopsys: Add optional ECC Scrub support
  EDAC/synopsys: Drop ECC poison address from private data
  EDAC/synopsys: Add data poisoning disable support
  EDAC/synopsys: Split up ECC UE/CE IRQs handler
  EDAC/synopsys: Add individual named ECC IRQs support
  EDAC/synopsys: Add DFI alert_n IRQ support
  EDAC/synopsys: Add reference clocks support
  EDAC/synopsys: Add ECC Scrubber support
  EDAC/synopsys: Drop vendor-specific arch dependency
  EDAC/synopsys: Add Baikal-T1 DDRC support

 .../snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml                  |  75 +-
 drivers/edac/Kconfig                          |   1 -
 drivers/edac/synopsys_edac.c                  | 952 ++++++++++++++----
 3 files changed, 830 insertions(+), 198 deletions(-)

Comments

Rob Herring (Arm) Aug. 30, 2022, 6 p.m. UTC | #1
On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 10:19:45PM +0300, Serge Semin wrote:
> Baikal-T1 DDR controller is based on the DW uMCTL2 DDRC IP-core v2.51a
> with up to DDR3 protocol capability and 32-bit data bus + 8-bit ECC. There
> are individual IRQs for each ECC and DFI events.The dedicated scrubber
> clock source is absent since it's fully synchronous to the core clock.
> In addition to that the DFI-DDR PHY CSRs can be accessed via a separate
> registers space.

Are you sure the phy and dfi irq shouldn't be a separate device?

Rob
Krzysztof Kozlowski Sept. 5, 2022, 10:14 a.m. UTC | #2
On 26/08/2022 11:54, Serge Semin wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 11:12:28AM +0300, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
>> On 22/08/2022 22:19, Serge Semin wrote:
>>> Baikal-T1 DDR controller is based on the DW uMCTL2 DDRC IP-core v2.51a
>>> with up to DDR3 protocol capability and 32-bit data bus + 8-bit ECC. There
>>> are individual IRQs for each ECC and DFI events.The dedicated scrubber
>>
> 
>> Missing space before "The".
> 
> Ok. Thanks.
> 
>>
>>> clock source is absent since it's fully synchronous to the core clock.
>>
> 
>> You need allOf:if-then restricting this per variant.
> 
> I really don't like the allOf-if-if-etc pattern because it gets to be
> very bulky if all the vendor-specific and generic platform
> peculiarities are placed in there. I am more keen of having a
> generic DT-schema which would be then allOf-ed by the vendor-specific
> device bindings. What do you think I'd provide such design in this
> case too?

Sure, it would work.

> 
> But I'll need to move the compatible property definition to the
> "select" property. Like this:
> 
> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory-controllers/snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:
> +[...]
> +# Please create a separate DT-schema for your DW uMCTL2 DDR controller
> +# and make sure it's assigned with the vendor-specific compatible string.
> +select:
> +  properties:
> +    compatible:
> +      oneOf:
> +        - deprecated: true
> +          description: Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDR controller v3.80a
> +          const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
> +        - description: Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDR controller
> +          const: snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc
> +        - description: Xilinx ZynqMP DDR controller v2.40a
> +          const: xlnx,zynqmp-ddrc-2.40a
> +  required:
> +    - compatible

Not entirely. If you need select, then add it with compatibles, but all
descriptions and deprecated are staying in properties.


> +
> +properties:
> +  compatible: true
> +[...]
> +required:
> +  - compatible
> +  - reg
> +  - interrupts
> +
> +additionalProperties: true
> 
> After that the "snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml" schema can be referenced in the
> allOf composition. Like this:
> 
> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory-controllers/baikal,bt1-ddrc.yaml:
> +[...]
> +allOf:
> +  - $ref: /schemas/memory-controllers/snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml#
> +[...]
> 
> At the same time the generic DT-schema will be used to evaluate the
> "snps,ddrc-3.80a", "snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc" and "xlnx,zynqmp-ddrc-2.40a"
> device nodes as before. What do you think about that?
> 
> One big positive side of this that even though the generic schema
> can't define the IRQ/resets/clocks phandlers order because various
> platforms may have different external signals setup, the
> vendor-specific schema can and should. So I'll be able to describe the
> Baikal-T1 DDRC specific properties (clocks, clock-names, interrupts,
> interrupt-names, etc) in much more details including the reference
> signals order what you asked in the previous patch review.

It's ok. You need then second schema for your device, because something
must end with additional/unevaluatedProperties false.

Best regards,
Krzysztof
Serge Semin Sept. 8, 2022, 3:08 p.m. UTC | #3
On Thu, Sep 08, 2022 at 11:58:50AM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> On 08/09/2022 11:46, Serge Semin wrote:
> > On Mon, Sep 05, 2022 at 12:14:21PM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> >> On 26/08/2022 11:54, Serge Semin wrote:
> >>> On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 11:12:28AM +0300, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> >>>> On 22/08/2022 22:19, Serge Semin wrote:
> >>>>> Baikal-T1 DDR controller is based on the DW uMCTL2 DDRC IP-core v2.51a
> >>>>> with up to DDR3 protocol capability and 32-bit data bus + 8-bit ECC. There
> >>>>> are individual IRQs for each ECC and DFI events.The dedicated scrubber
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>>> Missing space before "The".
> >>>
> >>> Ok. Thanks.
> >>>
> >>>>
> >>>>> clock source is absent since it's fully synchronous to the core clock.
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>>> You need allOf:if-then restricting this per variant.
> >>>
> >>> I really don't like the allOf-if-if-etc pattern because it gets to be
> >>> very bulky if all the vendor-specific and generic platform
> >>> peculiarities are placed in there. I am more keen of having a
> >>> generic DT-schema which would be then allOf-ed by the vendor-specific
> >>> device bindings. What do you think I'd provide such design in this
> >>> case too?
> >>
> >> Sure, it would work.
> >>
> >>>
> >>> But I'll need to move the compatible property definition to the
> >>> "select" property. Like this:
> >>>
> >>> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory-controllers/snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:
> >>> +[...]
> >>> +# Please create a separate DT-schema for your DW uMCTL2 DDR controller
> >>> +# and make sure it's assigned with the vendor-specific compatible string.
> >>> +select:
> >>> +  properties:
> >>> +    compatible:
> >>> +      oneOf:
> >>> +        - deprecated: true
> >>> +          description: Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDR controller v3.80a
> >>> +          const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
> >>> +        - description: Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDR controller
> >>> +          const: snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc
> >>> +        - description: Xilinx ZynqMP DDR controller v2.40a
> >>> +          const: xlnx,zynqmp-ddrc-2.40a
> >>> +  required:
> >>> +    - compatible
> >>
> > 
> >> Not entirely. If you need select, then add it with compatibles, but all
> >> descriptions and deprecated are staying in properties.
> > 
> > Ok. But note in such case the compatible string constraints will get
> > to be opened for any non-common string. Like this:
> > 
> > + properties:
> > +   compatible:
> > +     oneOf:
> > +       - const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
> > +       - {}
> 
> Not really. If you define here specific device compatibles in select,
> they must be here as well.
> 
> > 
> > It's required for the DT-schemas referencing the common one, otherwise
> > they will fail DT-nodes evaluation due to the "compatible" property
> > missing the vendor-specific string.
> 

> o you probably mix here purposes. Either you define common schema or
> device specific one. If you define common, usually it does not enforce
> any compatibles. You do not need select, no need for compatibles either,
> although you can add above syntax if it is valid. If you write here
> specific device bindings, then compatibles should be listed. Judging
> from what you wrote it's neither this nor that...

My idea was to provide both the common DT-schema and the
vendor-specific ones. But the later one would refer to the common
schema in the framework of the "allOf:" composition. Like this:

snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:
+ [...]
+ select:
+   properties:
+     compatible:
+       enum:
+         - snps,ddrc-3.80a
+ [...]
+ properties:
+   compatible:
+     oneOf:
+       - const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
+       - {}
+   interrupts:
+   [...]
+   interrupt-names:
+   [...]
+ additionalProperties: false
+ [...]

baikal,bt1-ddrc.yaml:
+ [...]
+ allOf:
+   - "schemas/memory-controllers/snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:#"
+ [...]
+ unevaluateProperties: false
+ [...]

Thus the common schema as before would provide the widest set of the
properties and their constraints, while the vendor-specific one would
be !obligated! to follow the common schema conventions, but provide a
more specific set of the properties and constraints. A similar
approach is implemented for instance in the DW USB3 DT-schemas, but
with the generic compatible string fallback. In this case we don't
need the fallback string, but in order for the common schema being
applicable for both the common and vendor-specific DT-nodes the
compatible property constraints need to be designed as is provided in
the example above.

Alternatively we can split the snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml schema up into
the two ones:
snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc-common.yaml
and
snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml
So the first schema would contain all the common properties definition
and would be only used for being referenced in the particular device
DT-bindings (select: false). The snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml and
vendor-specific DT-schemas would just have it "allOf:"ed.

Personally I'd prefer the design pattern with the always-true
compatible property constraint as in the example above since it seems
easier to maintain than having the common and generic device
DT-schemas.

Note having a common DT-schema and a vendor-specific one referencing
the common schema is very much useful practice for the devices based
on the same IP-core. Vendor-device driver authors tend to create their
own bindings for the same clocks/resets/phys/etc thus making the
drivers much harder to maintain (for a bright example see what has
been done for the DW PCIe RP/EP IP-core). The worst part of it is that
ones the DT-bindings interface is implemented it can't be changed
since the kernel needs to be backward compatible with the DT-sources
compiled before. So the main goal of the common DT-schema is to fix
the common DT interface and make sure the new vendor-specific device
drivers would at least consider either to follow the IP-core DT
convention or to widen it up if required.

-Sergey

> 
> Best regards,
> Krzysztof
Krzysztof Kozlowski Sept. 8, 2022, 3:27 p.m. UTC | #4
On 08/09/2022 17:08, Serge Semin wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 08, 2022 at 11:58:50AM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
>> On 08/09/2022 11:46, Serge Semin wrote:
>>> On Mon, Sep 05, 2022 at 12:14:21PM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
>>>> On 26/08/2022 11:54, Serge Semin wrote:
>>>>> On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 11:12:28AM +0300, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
>>>>>> On 22/08/2022 22:19, Serge Semin wrote:
>>>>>>> Baikal-T1 DDR controller is based on the DW uMCTL2 DDRC IP-core v2.51a
>>>>>>> with up to DDR3 protocol capability and 32-bit data bus + 8-bit ECC. There
>>>>>>> are individual IRQs for each ECC and DFI events.The dedicated scrubber
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>> Missing space before "The".
>>>>>
>>>>> Ok. Thanks.
>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> clock source is absent since it's fully synchronous to the core clock.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>> You need allOf:if-then restricting this per variant.
>>>>>
>>>>> I really don't like the allOf-if-if-etc pattern because it gets to be
>>>>> very bulky if all the vendor-specific and generic platform
>>>>> peculiarities are placed in there. I am more keen of having a
>>>>> generic DT-schema which would be then allOf-ed by the vendor-specific
>>>>> device bindings. What do you think I'd provide such design in this
>>>>> case too?
>>>>
>>>> Sure, it would work.
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> But I'll need to move the compatible property definition to the
>>>>> "select" property. Like this:
>>>>>
>>>>> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory-controllers/snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:
>>>>> +[...]
>>>>> +# Please create a separate DT-schema for your DW uMCTL2 DDR controller
>>>>> +# and make sure it's assigned with the vendor-specific compatible string.
>>>>> +select:
>>>>> +  properties:
>>>>> +    compatible:
>>>>> +      oneOf:
>>>>> +        - deprecated: true
>>>>> +          description: Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDR controller v3.80a
>>>>> +          const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
>>>>> +        - description: Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDR controller
>>>>> +          const: snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc
>>>>> +        - description: Xilinx ZynqMP DDR controller v2.40a
>>>>> +          const: xlnx,zynqmp-ddrc-2.40a
>>>>> +  required:
>>>>> +    - compatible
>>>>
>>>
>>>> Not entirely. If you need select, then add it with compatibles, but all
>>>> descriptions and deprecated are staying in properties.
>>>
>>> Ok. But note in such case the compatible string constraints will get
>>> to be opened for any non-common string. Like this:
>>>
>>> + properties:
>>> +   compatible:
>>> +     oneOf:
>>> +       - const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
>>> +       - {}
>>
>> Not really. If you define here specific device compatibles in select,
>> they must be here as well.
>>
>>>
>>> It's required for the DT-schemas referencing the common one, otherwise
>>> they will fail DT-nodes evaluation due to the "compatible" property
>>> missing the vendor-specific string.
>>
> 
>> o you probably mix here purposes. Either you define common schema or
>> device specific one. If you define common, usually it does not enforce
>> any compatibles. You do not need select, no need for compatibles either,
>> although you can add above syntax if it is valid. If you write here
>> specific device bindings, then compatibles should be listed. Judging
>> from what you wrote it's neither this nor that...
> 
> My idea was to provide both the common DT-schema and the
> vendor-specific ones. But the later one would refer to the common
> schema in the framework of the "allOf:" composition. Like this:
> 
> snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:
> + [...]
> + select:
> +   properties:
> +     compatible:
> +       enum:
> +         - snps,ddrc-3.80a
> + [...]
> + properties:
> +   compatible:
> +     oneOf:
> +       - const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
> +       - {}

This is not the approach snps,dwc3.yaml is doing. It is closer to
snps,dw-pcie.yaml, but that one ends with additionalProperties:true so
it is expected to be constrained by something else.

You can choose either way, but what you wrote before looked different -
basically loosing the compatibles documentation.

> +   interrupts:
> +   [...]
> +   interrupt-names:
> +   [...]
> + additionalProperties: false
> + [...]
> 
> baikal,bt1-ddrc.yaml:
> + [...]
> + allOf:
> +   - "schemas/memory-controllers/snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:#"
> + [...]
> + unevaluateProperties: false
> + [...]
> 
> Thus the common schema as before would provide the widest set of the
> properties and their constraints, while the vendor-specific one would
> be !obligated! to follow the common schema conventions, but provide a
> more specific set of the properties and constraints. A similar
> approach is implemented for instance in the DW USB3 DT-schemas, but
> with the generic compatible string fallback. In this case we don't
> need the fallback string, but in order for the common schema being
> applicable for both the common and vendor-specific DT-nodes the
> compatible property constraints need to be designed as is provided in
> the example above.

Anyway, it's getting complicated so I am not sure about which option now
we discuss. You cannot have deprecated entries in select and compatibles
described there, without describing them in properties.

> 
> Alternatively we can split the snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml schema up into
> the two ones:
> snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc-common.yaml
> and
> snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml
> So the first schema would contain all the common properties definition
> and would be only used for being referenced in the particular device
> DT-bindings (select: false). The snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml and
> vendor-specific DT-schemas would just have it "allOf:"ed.
> 
> Personally I'd prefer the design pattern with the always-true
> compatible property constraint as in the example above since it seems
> easier to maintain than having the common and generic device
> DT-schemas.
> 
> Note having a common DT-schema and a vendor-specific one referencing
> the common schema is very much useful practice for the devices based
> on the same IP-core. Vendor-device driver authors tend to create their
> own bindings for the same clocks/resets/phys/etc thus making the
> drivers much harder to maintain (for a bright example see what has
> been done for the DW PCIe RP/EP IP-core). The worst part of it is that
> ones the DT-bindings interface is implemented it can't be changed
> since the kernel needs to be backward compatible with the DT-sources
> compiled before. So the main goal of the common DT-schema is to fix
> the common DT interface and make sure the new vendor-specific device
> drivers would at least consider either to follow the IP-core DT
> convention or to widen it up if required.


Best regards,
Krzysztof
Serge Semin Sept. 8, 2022, 3:40 p.m. UTC | #5
On Thu, Sep 08, 2022 at 05:27:30PM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> On 08/09/2022 17:08, Serge Semin wrote:
> > On Thu, Sep 08, 2022 at 11:58:50AM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> >> On 08/09/2022 11:46, Serge Semin wrote:
> >>> On Mon, Sep 05, 2022 at 12:14:21PM +0200, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> >>>> On 26/08/2022 11:54, Serge Semin wrote:
> >>>>> On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 11:12:28AM +0300, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote:
> >>>>>> On 22/08/2022 22:19, Serge Semin wrote:
> >>>>>>> Baikal-T1 DDR controller is based on the DW uMCTL2 DDRC IP-core v2.51a
> >>>>>>> with up to DDR3 protocol capability and 32-bit data bus + 8-bit ECC. There
> >>>>>>> are individual IRQs for each ECC and DFI events.The dedicated scrubber
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>> Missing space before "The".
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Ok. Thanks.
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>> clock source is absent since it's fully synchronous to the core clock.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>> You need allOf:if-then restricting this per variant.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I really don't like the allOf-if-if-etc pattern because it gets to be
> >>>>> very bulky if all the vendor-specific and generic platform
> >>>>> peculiarities are placed in there. I am more keen of having a
> >>>>> generic DT-schema which would be then allOf-ed by the vendor-specific
> >>>>> device bindings. What do you think I'd provide such design in this
> >>>>> case too?
> >>>>
> >>>> Sure, it would work.
> >>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> But I'll need to move the compatible property definition to the
> >>>>> "select" property. Like this:
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory-controllers/snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:
> >>>>> +[...]
> >>>>> +# Please create a separate DT-schema for your DW uMCTL2 DDR controller
> >>>>> +# and make sure it's assigned with the vendor-specific compatible string.
> >>>>> +select:
> >>>>> +  properties:
> >>>>> +    compatible:
> >>>>> +      oneOf:
> >>>>> +        - deprecated: true
> >>>>> +          description: Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDR controller v3.80a
> >>>>> +          const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
> >>>>> +        - description: Synopsys DW uMCTL2 DDR controller
> >>>>> +          const: snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc
> >>>>> +        - description: Xilinx ZynqMP DDR controller v2.40a
> >>>>> +          const: xlnx,zynqmp-ddrc-2.40a
> >>>>> +  required:
> >>>>> +    - compatible
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>>> Not entirely. If you need select, then add it with compatibles, but all
> >>>> descriptions and deprecated are staying in properties.
> >>>
> >>> Ok. But note in such case the compatible string constraints will get
> >>> to be opened for any non-common string. Like this:
> >>>
> >>> + properties:
> >>> +   compatible:
> >>> +     oneOf:
> >>> +       - const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
> >>> +       - {}
> >>
> >> Not really. If you define here specific device compatibles in select,
> >> they must be here as well.
> >>
> >>>
> >>> It's required for the DT-schemas referencing the common one, otherwise
> >>> they will fail DT-nodes evaluation due to the "compatible" property
> >>> missing the vendor-specific string.
> >>
> > 
> >> o you probably mix here purposes. Either you define common schema or
> >> device specific one. If you define common, usually it does not enforce
> >> any compatibles. You do not need select, no need for compatibles either,
> >> although you can add above syntax if it is valid. If you write here
> >> specific device bindings, then compatibles should be listed. Judging
> >> from what you wrote it's neither this nor that...
> > 
> > My idea was to provide both the common DT-schema and the
> > vendor-specific ones. But the later one would refer to the common
> > schema in the framework of the "allOf:" composition. Like this:
> > 
> > snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:
> > + [...]
> > + select:
> > +   properties:
> > +     compatible:
> > +       enum:
> > +         - snps,ddrc-3.80a
> > + [...]
> > + properties:
> > +   compatible:
> > +     oneOf:
> > +       - const: snps,ddrc-3.80a
> > +       - {}
> 

> This is not the approach snps,dwc3.yaml is doing. It is closer to
> snps,dw-pcie.yaml, but that one ends with additionalProperties:true so
> it is expected to be constrained by something else.

Right. I should have used the "additionalProperties: true" instead in
the common DT-schema below.

> 
> You can choose either way, but what you wrote before looked different -
> basically loosing the compatibles documentation.

Ok. I'll make sure the compatibles documentation won't be lost.

> 
> > +   interrupts:
> > +   [...]
> > +   interrupt-names:
> > +   [...]

> > + additionalProperties: false

* here should have been "true" of course.

> > + [...]
> > 
> > baikal,bt1-ddrc.yaml:
> > + [...]
> > + allOf:
> > +   - "schemas/memory-controllers/snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml:#"
> > + [...]
> > + unevaluateProperties: false
> > + [...]
> > 
> > Thus the common schema as before would provide the widest set of the
> > properties and their constraints, while the vendor-specific one would
> > be !obligated! to follow the common schema conventions, but provide a
> > more specific set of the properties and constraints. A similar
> > approach is implemented for instance in the DW USB3 DT-schemas, but
> > with the generic compatible string fallback. In this case we don't
> > need the fallback string, but in order for the common schema being
> > applicable for both the common and vendor-specific DT-nodes the
> > compatible property constraints need to be designed as is provided in
> > the example above.
> 

> Anyway, it's getting complicated so I am not sure about which option now
> we discuss. You cannot have deprecated entries in select and compatibles
> described there, without describing them in properties.

Ok. That's what I intended in the later approach. I'll resend the
series with the updated bindings. We can continue the discussion after
that in the new emails thread.

-Sergey

> 
> > 
> > Alternatively we can split the snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml schema up into
> > the two ones:
> > snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc-common.yaml
> > and
> > snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml
> > So the first schema would contain all the common properties definition
> > and would be only used for being referenced in the particular device
> > DT-bindings (select: false). The snps,dw-umctl2-ddrc.yaml and
> > vendor-specific DT-schemas would just have it "allOf:"ed.
> > 
> > Personally I'd prefer the design pattern with the always-true
> > compatible property constraint as in the example above since it seems
> > easier to maintain than having the common and generic device
> > DT-schemas.
> > 
> > Note having a common DT-schema and a vendor-specific one referencing
> > the common schema is very much useful practice for the devices based
> > on the same IP-core. Vendor-device driver authors tend to create their
> > own bindings for the same clocks/resets/phys/etc thus making the
> > drivers much harder to maintain (for a bright example see what has
> > been done for the DW PCIe RP/EP IP-core). The worst part of it is that
> > ones the DT-bindings interface is implemented it can't be changed
> > since the kernel needs to be backward compatible with the DT-sources
> > compiled before. So the main goal of the common DT-schema is to fix
> > the common DT interface and make sure the new vendor-specific device
> > drivers would at least consider either to follow the IP-core DT
> > convention or to widen it up if required.
> 
> 
> Best regards,
> Krzysztof