Re: [PATCH 02/14] dt-bindings: phy: qcom,qmp-usb3-dp: fix sc8280xp bindings

From: Dmitry Baryshkov
Date: Mon Nov 14 2022 - 10:31:15 EST


On 14/11/2022 16:37, Johan Hovold wrote:
On Sat, Nov 12, 2022 at 02:43:03PM +0300, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote:
On 11/11/2022 12:24, Johan Hovold wrote:
The current QMP USB3-DP PHY bindings are based on the original MSM8996
binding which provided multiple PHYs per IP block and these in turn were
described by child nodes.

The QMP USB3-DP PHY block provides a single multi-protocol PHY and even
if some resources are only used by either the USB or DP part of the
device there is no real benefit in describing these resources in child
nodes.

The original MSM8996 binding also ended up describing the individual
register blocks as belonging to either the wrapper node or the PHY child
nodes.

This is an unnecessary level of detail which has lead to problems when
later IP blocks using different register layouts have been forced to fit
the original mould rather than updating the binding. The bindings are
arguable also incomplete as they only the describe register blocks used
by the current Linux drivers (e.g. does not include the PCS LANE
registers).

This is specifically true for later USB4-USB3-DP QMP PHYs where the TX
registers are used by both the USB3 and DP parts of the PHY (and where
the USB4 part of the PHY was not covered by the binding at all). Notably
there are also no DP "RX" (sic) registers as described by the current
bindings and the DP "PCS" region is really a set of DP_PHY registers.

Add a new binding for the USB4-USB3-DP QMP PHYs found on SC8280XP which
further bindings can be based on.

Note that the binding uses a PHY type index to access either the USB3 or
DP part of the PHY and that this can later be used also for the USB4
part if needed.

Similarly, the clock inputs and outputs can later be extended to support
USB4.

Also note that the current binding is simply removed instead of being
deprecated as it was only recently merged and would not allow for
supporting DP mode.

Signed-off-by: Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@xxxxxxxxxx>
---

+ "#clock-cells":
+ const: 1
+
+ clock-output-names:
+ items:
+ - const: usb3_pipe
+ - const: dp_link
+ - const: dp_vco_div
+
+ "#phy-cells":
+ const: 1
+ description: |
+ PHY index
+ - PHY_TYPE_USB3
+ - PHY_TYPE_DP

I'm stepping on Rob's and Krzysztof's ground here, but it might be more
logical and future proof to use indices instead of phy types.

Why would that be more future-proof?

I initially added defines for these indexes to a QMP header, but noticed
that we already have PHY drivers that use the PHY types for this. So
there's already a precedent for this and I didn't see any real benefit
to adding multiple per-SoC defines for the same thing.

As you guessed from my question, I was thinking about USB4 (for which we do not have a separate PHY_TYPE, but that probably shouldn't matter). Would it be a separate PHY here, or would it be a combo UBS3+USB4 plus separate DP phy?

Yes, we have other PHYs, which use types as an index, however it's slightly more common to have indices instead.

Anyway, this is a minor issue. It might be just that I'm more common to using indices everywhere (in other words, I have preference here, but it's not a strong requirement from my side).


Just for my understanding, would USB4 support add another qserdes+tx/rx
construct or would it be the same USB3 register space?

The TX/RX registers are shared by the all three parts of the PHY (USB4,
USB3, DP), while USB4 has two dedicated sets of PLL (serdes) and PCS
registers.

Ack, thanks.

--
With best wishes
Dmitry