Message ID | 1573255036-10302-1-git-send-email-jhugo@codeaurora.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Superseded |
Headers | show |
Series | MSM8998 Multimedia Clock Controller | expand |
On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 04:17:16PM -0700, Jeffrey Hugo wrote: > The global clock controller on MSM8998 can consume a number of external > clocks. Document them. > > Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> > --- > .../devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml | 47 +++++++++++++++------- > 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > index e73a56f..2f3512b 100644 > --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > @@ -40,20 +40,38 @@ properties: > - qcom,gcc-sm8150 > > clocks: > - minItems: 1 1 or 2 clocks are no longer allowed? > - maxItems: 3 > - items: > - - description: Board XO source > - - description: Board active XO source > - - description: Sleep clock source > + oneOf: > + #qcom,gcc-sm8150 > + #qcom,gcc-sc7180 Typically, this would be an if/then schema, but I'm okay with leaving it like this. Depends whether you want to check the clocks match the compatible. > + - items: > + - description: Board XO source > + - description: Board active XO source > + - description: Sleep clock source > + #qcom,gcc-msm8998 > + - items: > + - description: Board XO source > + - description: USB 3.0 phy pipe clock > + - description: UFS phy rx symbol clock for pipe 0 > + - description: UFS phy rx symbol clock for pipe 1 > + - description: UFS phy tx symbol clock > + - description: PCIE phy pipe clock > > clock-names: > - minItems: 1 > - maxItems: 3 > - items: > - - const: bi_tcxo > - - const: bi_tcxo_ao > - - const: sleep_clk > + oneOf: > + #qcom,gcc-sm8150 > + #qcom,gcc-sc7180 > + - items: > + - const: bi_tcxo > + - const: bi_tcxo_ao > + - const: sleep_clk > + #qcom,gcc-msm8998 > + - items: > + - const: xo > + - const: usb3_pipe > + - const: ufs_rx_symbol0 > + - const: ufs_rx_symbol1 > + - const: ufs_tx_symbol0 > + - const: pcie0_pipe > > '#clock-cells': > const: 1 > @@ -118,6 +136,7 @@ else: > compatible: > contains: > enum: > + - qcom,gcc-msm8998 > - qcom,gcc-sm8150 > - qcom,gcc-sc7180 > then: > @@ -179,8 +198,8 @@ examples: > clock-controller@100000 { > compatible = "qcom,gcc-sc7180"; > reg = <0x100000 0x1f0000>; > - clocks = <&rpmhcc 0>, <&rpmhcc 1>; > - clock-names = "bi_tcxo", "bi_tcxo_ao"; > + clocks = <&rpmhcc 0>, <&rpmhcc 1>, <0>; > + clock-names = "bi_tcxo", "bi_tcxo_ao", "sleep_clk"; The patch subject says 8998, but this is changing sc7180. > #clock-cells = <1>; > #reset-cells = <1>; > #power-domain-cells = <1>; > -- > Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. is a member of the > Code Aurora Forum, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project. >
On 11/11/2019 5:44 PM, Rob Herring wrote: > On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 04:17:16PM -0700, Jeffrey Hugo wrote: >> The global clock controller on MSM8998 can consume a number of external >> clocks. Document them. >> >> Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> >> --- >> .../devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml | 47 +++++++++++++++------- >> 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >> index e73a56f..2f3512b 100644 >> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >> @@ -40,20 +40,38 @@ properties: >> - qcom,gcc-sm8150 >> >> clocks: >> - minItems: 1 > > 1 or 2 clocks are no longer allowed? Correct. The primary reason is that Stephen indicated in previous discussions that if the hardware exists, it should be indicated in DT, regardless if the driver uses it. In the 7180 and 8150 case, the hardware exists, so these should not be optional. The secondary reason is I found that the schema was broken anyways. In the way it was written, if you implemented sleep, you could not skip xo_ao, however there is a dts that did exactly that. The third reason was that I couldn't find a way to write valid yaml to preserve the original meaning. when you have an "items" as a subnode of "oneOf", you no longer have control over the minItems/maxItems, so all 3 became required anyways. I find it disappointing that the "version" of Yaml used for DT bindings is not documented, so after several hours of trial and error, I just gave up since I found this to work (failed cases just gave me an error with no indication of what was wrong, not even a line number). > >> - maxItems: 3 >> - items: >> - - description: Board XO source >> - - description: Board active XO source >> - - description: Sleep clock source >> + oneOf: >> + #qcom,gcc-sm8150 >> + #qcom,gcc-sc7180 > > Typically, this would be an if/then schema, but I'm okay with leaving it > like this. Depends whether you want to check the clocks match the > compatible. Is there an example somewhere? The only thing I found was example-schema.yaml which seemed to suggest this way. > >> + - items: >> + - description: Board XO source >> + - description: Board active XO source >> + - description: Sleep clock source >> + #qcom,gcc-msm8998 >> + - items: >> + - description: Board XO source >> + - description: USB 3.0 phy pipe clock >> + - description: UFS phy rx symbol clock for pipe 0 >> + - description: UFS phy rx symbol clock for pipe 1 >> + - description: UFS phy tx symbol clock >> + - description: PCIE phy pipe clock >> >> clock-names: >> - minItems: 1 >> - maxItems: 3 >> - items: >> - - const: bi_tcxo >> - - const: bi_tcxo_ao >> - - const: sleep_clk >> + oneOf: >> + #qcom,gcc-sm8150 >> + #qcom,gcc-sc7180 >> + - items: >> + - const: bi_tcxo >> + - const: bi_tcxo_ao >> + - const: sleep_clk >> + #qcom,gcc-msm8998 >> + - items: >> + - const: xo >> + - const: usb3_pipe >> + - const: ufs_rx_symbol0 >> + - const: ufs_rx_symbol1 >> + - const: ufs_tx_symbol0 >> + - const: pcie0_pipe >> >> '#clock-cells': >> const: 1 >> @@ -118,6 +136,7 @@ else: >> compatible: >> contains: >> enum: >> + - qcom,gcc-msm8998 >> - qcom,gcc-sm8150 >> - qcom,gcc-sc7180 >> then: >> @@ -179,8 +198,8 @@ examples: >> clock-controller@100000 { >> compatible = "qcom,gcc-sc7180"; >> reg = <0x100000 0x1f0000>; >> - clocks = <&rpmhcc 0>, <&rpmhcc 1>; >> - clock-names = "bi_tcxo", "bi_tcxo_ao"; >> + clocks = <&rpmhcc 0>, <&rpmhcc 1>, <0>; >> + clock-names = "bi_tcxo", "bi_tcxo_ao", "sleep_clk"; > > The patch subject says 8998, but this is changing sc7180. I'm fixing up the example so that it no longer fails checks. See the above comment. > >> #clock-cells = <1>; >> #reset-cells = <1>; >> #power-domain-cells = <1>; >> -- >> Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. is a member of the >> Code Aurora Forum, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project. >>
On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 10:25 AM Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> wrote: > > On 11/11/2019 5:44 PM, Rob Herring wrote: > > On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 04:17:16PM -0700, Jeffrey Hugo wrote: > >> The global clock controller on MSM8998 can consume a number of external > >> clocks. Document them. > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> > >> --- > >> .../devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml | 47 +++++++++++++++------- > >> 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) > >> > >> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > >> index e73a56f..2f3512b 100644 > >> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > >> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > >> @@ -40,20 +40,38 @@ properties: > >> - qcom,gcc-sm8150 > >> > >> clocks: > >> - minItems: 1 > > > > 1 or 2 clocks are no longer allowed? > > Correct. > > The primary reason is that Stephen indicated in previous discussions > that if the hardware exists, it should be indicated in DT, regardless if > the driver uses it. In the 7180 and 8150 case, the hardware exists, so > these should not be optional. Agreed. The commit message should mention this though. > > The secondary reason is I found that the schema was broken anyways. In > the way it was written, if you implemented sleep, you could not skip > xo_ao, however there is a dts that did exactly that. If a dts can be updated in a compatible way, we should do that rather than carry inconsistencies into the schema. > The third reason was that I couldn't find a way to write valid yaml to > preserve the original meaning. when you have an "items" as a subnode of > "oneOf", you no longer have control over the minItems/maxItems, so all 3 > became required anyways. That would be a bug. You're saying something like this doesn't work?: oneOf: - minItems: 1 maxItems: 3 items: - const: a - const: b - const: c > I find it disappointing that the "version" of > Yaml used for DT bindings is not documented, Not sure which part you mean? json-schema is the vocabulary which has a spec. The meta-schema then constrains what the json-schema structure should look like. That's still evolving a bit as I try to improve it based on mistakes people make. Then there's the intermediate .dt.yaml format used internally. That's supposed to stay internal and may go away when/if we integrate the validation into dtc. > so after several hours of > trial and error, I just gave up since I found this to work (failed cases > just gave me an error with no indication of what was wrong, not even a > line number). Schema failures or dts failures? It is possible to get line numbers for either, but that makes validation much slower. In the latter case, the line numbers aren't too useful either given they are for the .dt.yaml file and not the .dts source file (dtc integration would solve that). Adding '-n' to dt-doc-validate or dt-validate will turn them on though. Yes, error messages need work. I have some idea how to improve them, but haven't had time to implement. Too many binding reviews... You can get more detail with '-v' option. It's *way* more verbose, but not necessarily more useful. Rob
On 11/12/2019 11:37 AM, Rob Herring wrote: > On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 10:25 AM Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> wrote: >> >> On 11/11/2019 5:44 PM, Rob Herring wrote: >>> On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 04:17:16PM -0700, Jeffrey Hugo wrote: >>>> The global clock controller on MSM8998 can consume a number of external >>>> clocks. Document them. >>>> >>>> Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> >>>> --- >>>> .../devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml | 47 +++++++++++++++------- >>>> 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) >>>> >>>> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >>>> index e73a56f..2f3512b 100644 >>>> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >>>> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >>>> @@ -40,20 +40,38 @@ properties: >>>> - qcom,gcc-sm8150 >>>> >>>> clocks: >>>> - minItems: 1 >>> >>> 1 or 2 clocks are no longer allowed? >> >> Correct. >> >> The primary reason is that Stephen indicated in previous discussions >> that if the hardware exists, it should be indicated in DT, regardless if >> the driver uses it. In the 7180 and 8150 case, the hardware exists, so >> these should not be optional. > > Agreed. The commit message should mention this though. Fair enough, will do. > >> >> The secondary reason is I found that the schema was broken anyways. In >> the way it was written, if you implemented sleep, you could not skip >> xo_ao, however there is a dts that did exactly that. > > If a dts can be updated in a compatible way, we should do that rather > than carry inconsistencies into the schema. > >> The third reason was that I couldn't find a way to write valid yaml to >> preserve the original meaning. when you have an "items" as a subnode of >> "oneOf", you no longer have control over the minItems/maxItems, so all 3 >> became required anyways. > > That would be a bug. You're saying something like this doesn't work?: > > oneOf: > - minItems: 1 > maxItems: 3 > items: > - const: a > - const: b > - const: c Yes. That specifically won't work. "items" would need to have the dash preceding it, otherwise it won't compile if you have more than one. But ignoring that, yes, when it compiled, and I saw the output from the check failing (after adding verbose mode), min and max for the items list would be 3, and the check would fail. > >> I find it disappointing that the "version" of >> Yaml used for DT bindings is not documented, > > Not sure which part you mean? json-schema is the vocabulary which has > a spec. The meta-schema then constrains what the json-schema structure > should look like. That's still evolving a bit as I try to improve it > based on mistakes people make. Then there's the intermediate .dt.yaml > format used internally. That's supposed to stay internal and may go > away when/if we integrate the validation into dtc. So, this is probably off-topic, but hopefully you'll find this useful. I'm probably in the minority, but I really haven't used json-schema nor yaml before. I have experience with other "schema" languages, so I figured I could pick what I need from the documentation. The only documentation I see is writing-schema.md and example-schema.yaml To me, writing-schema.md is insufficient. Its better than nothing, so I'm still glad it exists, but I don't have any confidence I can really write a binding yaml from scratch based on it. It does a good thing by telling you what are important properties of a binding, so based on that you can kind of start to understand how existing bindings actually work. Its great in telling you how to run the validation checks (the Running checks) section. The dependencies section is awesome from my perspective - most projects seem to assume you just know what their dependencies are, and its painful to try to figure them out when you get cryptic errors during make. Where it really fails is that I get no sense of the language. As a minimum a lexigraphic specification that would allow me to write a compiler (I've done this before). Then I would understand what are the keywords, and where they are valid. I wouldn't understand what they mean, but at-least I can look at some implemented examples and extrapolate from there. Have you by chance ever looked at the ACPI spec? Maybe not the best example, but its the one that comes to my mind first. ACPI has ACPI Source Language (ASL). Its an interpreted hardware description language that doesn't match yaml, but I think the ACPI spec does a reasonable job of describing it. You have a lexographic definition which seems to be really helpful to ACPICA in implementing the intrepreter. It lists all of the valid operators, types, etc. It provides detailed references of each keyword - how they are used, what they do, etc. Its not the greatest at "how to write ASL 101" or "these are common problems that people face, and how they can be solved", but atleast with what there is, I could read every keyword that seems to be possibly related to what I want to do, and hazard a guess if it would work for my problem. Perhaps that is outside the scope of the writing-schema.md document, that is fair. However, I argue that the document does not provide sufficient references. The document provides a reference to the json-schema spec, but the spec is kinda useless (atleast I feel that it is). "minItems" is not defined anywhere in the spec. What does it mean? How can I use it? Specific to minItems/maxItems, I'll I've gathered about it is from example-schema.yaml which indicates its a way to identify mandatory and optional values for a property, but it doesn't describe the fact that order matters, and you cannot mix/match things - IE it looks like you need atleast min items, and at most max items, but even if you have enough items to satisfy min, there cannot be gaps (you can't pick items 1, 5, 10 from the list). I only found that out from running the validation checks with trial/error. There is no reference to the yaml spec, despite the document stating that the bindings are written in yaml. However, having found the yaml spec, its really not much better than the json-schema spec, and it doesn't line up because as the document states, the bindings are not really written in yaml - its a subset of yaml where a ton of the boilerplate "code" is skipped. What is boilerplate that is skipped? IMO, if you are not strictly adhering to yaml, then you need to clearly document your own derivative language so that someone like me whom is being introduced to all of this for the first time can start to figure out some of it. It would be helpful to look at other yaml examples, and understand what is considered to be boilerplate so I can translate that to a DT binding. I understand, the majority of the above is complaints and demands which is really not fair to you, since you are spending what I presume to be your "non-dayjob" time to make the community better. However, I don't really know how to contribute to make the documentation better. I don't understand enough. As far as this topic is concerned, I'm a dumb monkey banging on a keyboard hoping to get close enough to Shakespeare to pass mustard by accident, and maybe learn something along the way so that next time, I might have an idea of how to do something of what I need. Hopefully you've made it this far - that ended up being a lot more text that I thought it would be. I really hope this is useful feedback to you, but let me know if I am still not clear on something. I will try my best to clarify more. If you feel like I can contribute somehow, just let me know. > >> so after several hours of >> trial and error, I just gave up since I found this to work (failed cases >> just gave me an error with no indication of what was wrong, not even a >> line number). > > Schema failures or dts failures? It is possible to get line numbers > for either, but that makes validation much slower. In the latter case, > the line numbers aren't too useful either given they are for the > .dt.yaml file and not the .dts source file (dtc integration would > solve that). Adding '-n' to dt-doc-validate or dt-validate will turn > them on though. Schema compilation failures. I don't recall the exact error message, but it was something like "no valid schema found, continuing". Essentially running "dt_binding_check". I tried with -v but wasn't getting much more in this case. I didn't try -n. > > Yes, error messages need work. I have some idea how to improve them, > but haven't had time to implement. Too many binding reviews... You can > get more detail with '-v' option. It's *way* more verbose, but not > necessarily more useful. > > Rob >
On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 1:38 PM Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> wrote: > > On 11/12/2019 11:37 AM, Rob Herring wrote: > > On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 10:25 AM Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> wrote: > >> > >> On 11/11/2019 5:44 PM, Rob Herring wrote: > >>> On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 04:17:16PM -0700, Jeffrey Hugo wrote: > >>>> The global clock controller on MSM8998 can consume a number of external > >>>> clocks. Document them. > >>>> > >>>> Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> > >>>> --- > >>>> .../devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml | 47 +++++++++++++++------- > >>>> 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) > >>>> > >>>> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > >>>> index e73a56f..2f3512b 100644 > >>>> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > >>>> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml > >>>> @@ -40,20 +40,38 @@ properties: > >>>> - qcom,gcc-sm8150 > >>>> > >>>> clocks: > >>>> - minItems: 1 > >>> > >>> 1 or 2 clocks are no longer allowed? > >> > >> Correct. > >> > >> The primary reason is that Stephen indicated in previous discussions > >> that if the hardware exists, it should be indicated in DT, regardless if > >> the driver uses it. In the 7180 and 8150 case, the hardware exists, so > >> these should not be optional. > > > > Agreed. The commit message should mention this though. > > Fair enough, will do. > > > > >> > >> The secondary reason is I found that the schema was broken anyways. In > >> the way it was written, if you implemented sleep, you could not skip > >> xo_ao, however there is a dts that did exactly that. > > > > If a dts can be updated in a compatible way, we should do that rather > > than carry inconsistencies into the schema. > > > >> The third reason was that I couldn't find a way to write valid yaml to > >> preserve the original meaning. when you have an "items" as a subnode of > >> "oneOf", you no longer have control over the minItems/maxItems, so all 3 > >> became required anyways. > > > > That would be a bug. You're saying something like this doesn't work?: > > > > oneOf: > > - minItems: 1 > > maxItems: 3 > > items: > > - const: a > > - const: b > > - const: c > > Yes. That specifically won't work. "items" would need to have the dash > preceding it, otherwise it won't compile if you have more than one. But > ignoring that, yes, when it compiled, and I saw the output from the > check failing (after adding verbose mode), min and max for the items > list would be 3, and the check would fail. A '-' before items would make oneOf have 2 separate schemas. That would pass with any values for 1-3 items except it would fail for 3 items with [a, b, c] because 2 oneOf clauses pass. > >> I find it disappointing that the "version" of > >> Yaml used for DT bindings is not documented, > > > > Not sure which part you mean? json-schema is the vocabulary which has > > a spec. The meta-schema then constrains what the json-schema structure > > should look like. That's still evolving a bit as I try to improve it > > based on mistakes people make. Then there's the intermediate .dt.yaml > > format used internally. That's supposed to stay internal and may go > > away when/if we integrate the validation into dtc. > > So, this is probably off-topic, but hopefully you'll find this useful. I'm interested in knowing the pain points. > I'm probably in the minority, but I really haven't used json-schema nor > yaml before. I have experience with other "schema" languages, so I > figured I could pick what I need from the documentation. Well, json-schema was new to me before this. There's definitely some things I really don't love about it, but it's better than trying to define our own language. It's generally been able to handle some of the more complex cases. > The only documentation I see is writing-schema.md and example-schema.yaml > > To me, writing-schema.md is insufficient. Its better than nothing, so > I'm still glad it exists, but I don't have any confidence I can really > write a binding yaml from scratch based on it. It does a good thing by > telling you what are important properties of a binding, so based on that > you can kind of start to understand how existing bindings actually work. > Its great in telling you how to run the validation checks (the Running > checks) section. The dependencies section is awesome from my > perspective - most projects seem to assume you just know what their > dependencies are, and its painful to try to figure them out when you get > cryptic errors during make. > > Where it really fails is that I get no sense of the language. As a > minimum a lexigraphic specification that would allow me to write a > compiler (I've done this before). Then I would understand what are the > keywords, and where they are valid. I wouldn't understand what they > mean, but at-least I can look at some implemented examples and > extrapolate from there. > > Have you by chance ever looked at the ACPI spec? Maybe not the best > example, but its the one that comes to my mind first. ACPI has ACPI > Source Language (ASL). Its an interpreted hardware description language > that doesn't match yaml, but I think the ACPI spec does a reasonable job > of describing it. You have a lexographic definition which seems to be > really helpful to ACPICA in implementing the intrepreter. It lists all > of the valid operators, types, etc. It provides detailed references of > each keyword - how they are used, what they do, etc. Its not the > greatest at "how to write ASL 101" or "these are common problems that > people face, and how they can be solved", but atleast with what there > is, I could read every keyword that seems to be possibly related to what > I want to do, and hazard a guess if it would work for my problem. I have not read the ACPI spec. > Perhaps that is outside the scope of the writing-schema.md document, > that is fair. However, I argue that the document does not provide > sufficient references. The document provides a reference to the > json-schema spec, but the spec is kinda useless (atleast I feel that it > is). "minItems" is not defined anywhere in the spec. What does it > mean? How can I use it? Specific to minItems/maxItems, I'll I've > gathered about it is from example-schema.yaml which indicates its a way > to identify mandatory and optional values for a property, but it doesn't > describe the fact that order matters, and you cannot mix/match things - > IE it looks like you need atleast min items, and at most max items, but > even if you have enough items to satisfy min, there cannot be gaps (you > can't pick items 1, 5, 10 from the list). I only found that out from > running the validation checks with trial/error. I think you looked at the 'Core' spec rather than the 'Validation' spec: http://json-schema.org/draft/2019-09/json-schema-validation.html Though that has moved on to a newer version and we're still on draft7 which is here: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-handrews-json-schema-validation-01 I guess a direct link to this with 'Details on json-schema keywords is here' would be helpful. minItems/maxItems is the one area we deviate from json-schema defaults. That's what the 'Property Schema' section calls out. Order matters for DT too, so that aspect matches up well with json-schema. That's been a common issue in dts files, so schema starting to enforce that will be good for new bindings, but somewhat painful for existing ones. > There is no reference to the yaml spec, despite the document stating > that the bindings are written in yaml. > > However, having found the yaml spec, its really not much better than the > json-schema spec, and it doesn't line up because as the document states, > the bindings are not really written in yaml - its a subset of yaml where > a ton of the boilerplate "code" is skipped. Yeah, there's a lot to YAML that no one uses and I too find the spec pretty useless (hence why no reference). Like most other uses I've encountered, we're using a JSON compatible subset which is just lists and dicts of key/value pairs. The main thing folks need to know and trip up on are: indentation is important (including no tabs) and pay attention to '-' or lack of. > What is boilerplate that is skipped? IMO, if you are not strictly > adhering to yaml, then you need to clearly document your own derivative > language so that someone like me whom is being introduced to all of this > for the first time can start to figure out some of it. It would be > helpful to look at other yaml examples, and understand what is > considered to be boilerplate so I can translate that to a DT binding. We're not skipping any boilerplate. We're not using advanced features like tags or anchors. You can use any YAML parser including online ones to read the files. > I understand, the majority of the above is complaints and demands which > is really not fair to you, since you are spending what I presume to be > your "non-dayjob" time to make the community better. It's my day job or part of it, just not enough hours in the day... > However, I don't > really know how to contribute to make the documentation better. I don't > understand enough. As far as this topic is concerned, I'm a dumb monkey > banging on a keyboard hoping to get close enough to Shakespeare to pass > mustard by accident, and maybe learn something along the way so that > next time, I might have an idea of how to do something of what I need. The challenge is providing enough information to write bindings without being json-schema experts. My hope is really to build up enough examples and make the meta-schema good enough to keep folks within the lines. Maybe that's a flawed approach, but even getting folks to follow writing-schema.rst and run 'make dt_binding_check' has been a challenge. > Hopefully you've made it this far - that ended up being a lot more text > that I thought it would be. I really hope this is useful feedback to > you, but let me know if I am still not clear on something. I will try > my best to clarify more. If you feel like I can contribute somehow, > just let me know. > > > > >> so after several hours of > >> trial and error, I just gave up since I found this to work (failed cases > >> just gave me an error with no indication of what was wrong, not even a > >> line number). > > > > Schema failures or dts failures? It is possible to get line numbers > > for either, but that makes validation much slower. In the latter case, > > the line numbers aren't too useful either given they are for the > > .dt.yaml file and not the .dts source file (dtc integration would > > solve that). Adding '-n' to dt-doc-validate or dt-validate will turn > > them on though. > > Schema compilation failures. I don't recall the exact error message, > but it was something like "no valid schema found, continuing". > Essentially running "dt_binding_check". I tried with -v but wasn't > getting much more in this case. I didn't try -n. That's before we even validate the schema, so something has gone wrong pretty early. You may get farther with 'make -k'. I'll have to look into it. The schemas are actually built twice. They are all built into processed-schema.yaml. That's supposed to skip any with errors and is what's used to validate dts files. If that's failing for some reason, then it's going to be pretty vague. The dt_binding_check rule also fully validates each binding schema and builds and validates the examples. It should print more detailed errors (though still sometimes vague). Rob
On 11/12/2019 2:18 PM, Rob Herring wrote: > On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 1:38 PM Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> wrote: >> >> On 11/12/2019 11:37 AM, Rob Herring wrote: >>> On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 10:25 AM Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> wrote: >>>> >>>> On 11/11/2019 5:44 PM, Rob Herring wrote: >>>>> On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 04:17:16PM -0700, Jeffrey Hugo wrote: >>>>>> The global clock controller on MSM8998 can consume a number of external >>>>>> clocks. Document them. >>>>>> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> >>>>>> --- >>>>>> .../devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml | 47 +++++++++++++++------- >>>>>> 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) >>>>>> >>>>>> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >>>>>> index e73a56f..2f3512b 100644 >>>>>> --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >>>>>> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml >>>>>> @@ -40,20 +40,38 @@ properties: >>>>>> - qcom,gcc-sm8150 >>>>>> >>>>>> clocks: >>>>>> - minItems: 1 >>>>> >>>>> 1 or 2 clocks are no longer allowed? >>>> >>>> Correct. >>>> >>>> The primary reason is that Stephen indicated in previous discussions >>>> that if the hardware exists, it should be indicated in DT, regardless if >>>> the driver uses it. In the 7180 and 8150 case, the hardware exists, so >>>> these should not be optional. >>> >>> Agreed. The commit message should mention this though. >> >> Fair enough, will do. >> >>> >>>> >>>> The secondary reason is I found that the schema was broken anyways. In >>>> the way it was written, if you implemented sleep, you could not skip >>>> xo_ao, however there is a dts that did exactly that. >>> >>> If a dts can be updated in a compatible way, we should do that rather >>> than carry inconsistencies into the schema. >>> >>>> The third reason was that I couldn't find a way to write valid yaml to >>>> preserve the original meaning. when you have an "items" as a subnode of >>>> "oneOf", you no longer have control over the minItems/maxItems, so all 3 >>>> became required anyways. >>> >>> That would be a bug. You're saying something like this doesn't work?: >>> >>> oneOf: >>> - minItems: 1 >>> maxItems: 3 >>> items: >>> - const: a >>> - const: b >>> - const: c >> >> Yes. That specifically won't work. "items" would need to have the dash >> preceding it, otherwise it won't compile if you have more than one. But >> ignoring that, yes, when it compiled, and I saw the output from the >> check failing (after adding verbose mode), min and max for the items >> list would be 3, and the check would fail. > > A '-' before items would make oneOf have 2 separate schemas. That > would pass with any values for 1-3 items except it would fail for 3 > items with [a, b, c] because 2 oneOf clauses pass. What I was trying to do was something like: oneOf: -minItems: 1 -maxItems: 3 -items: -const: a -const: b -const: c -items: -const: x -const: y -const: z Where you have to have either [x, y, z] xor a set from [a, b, c]. One of the two items lists, where min/max is applied to the first one. "-" on both of the items is needed since you can't seem to have the same tag more than one at the same scope level. Probably this was a flawed idea from the start. > >>>> I find it disappointing that the "version" of >>>> Yaml used for DT bindings is not documented, >>> >>> Not sure which part you mean? json-schema is the vocabulary which has >>> a spec. The meta-schema then constrains what the json-schema structure >>> should look like. That's still evolving a bit as I try to improve it >>> based on mistakes people make. Then there's the intermediate .dt.yaml >>> format used internally. That's supposed to stay internal and may go >>> away when/if we integrate the validation into dtc. >> >> So, this is probably off-topic, but hopefully you'll find this useful. > > I'm interested in knowing the pain points. > >> I'm probably in the minority, but I really haven't used json-schema nor >> yaml before. I have experience with other "schema" languages, so I >> figured I could pick what I need from the documentation. > > Well, json-schema was new to me before this. There's definitely some > things I really don't love about it, but it's better than trying to > define our own language. It's generally been able to handle some of > the more complex cases. > >> The only documentation I see is writing-schema.md and example-schema.yaml >> >> To me, writing-schema.md is insufficient. Its better than nothing, so >> I'm still glad it exists, but I don't have any confidence I can really >> write a binding yaml from scratch based on it. It does a good thing by >> telling you what are important properties of a binding, so based on that >> you can kind of start to understand how existing bindings actually work. >> Its great in telling you how to run the validation checks (the Running >> checks) section. The dependencies section is awesome from my >> perspective - most projects seem to assume you just know what their >> dependencies are, and its painful to try to figure them out when you get >> cryptic errors during make. >> >> Where it really fails is that I get no sense of the language. As a >> minimum a lexigraphic specification that would allow me to write a >> compiler (I've done this before). Then I would understand what are the >> keywords, and where they are valid. I wouldn't understand what they >> mean, but at-least I can look at some implemented examples and >> extrapolate from there. >> >> Have you by chance ever looked at the ACPI spec? Maybe not the best >> example, but its the one that comes to my mind first. ACPI has ACPI >> Source Language (ASL). Its an interpreted hardware description language >> that doesn't match yaml, but I think the ACPI spec does a reasonable job >> of describing it. You have a lexographic definition which seems to be >> really helpful to ACPICA in implementing the intrepreter. It lists all >> of the valid operators, types, etc. It provides detailed references of >> each keyword - how they are used, what they do, etc. Its not the >> greatest at "how to write ASL 101" or "these are common problems that >> people face, and how they can be solved", but atleast with what there >> is, I could read every keyword that seems to be possibly related to what >> I want to do, and hazard a guess if it would work for my problem. > > I have not read the ACPI spec. > >> Perhaps that is outside the scope of the writing-schema.md document, >> that is fair. However, I argue that the document does not provide >> sufficient references. The document provides a reference to the >> json-schema spec, but the spec is kinda useless (atleast I feel that it >> is). "minItems" is not defined anywhere in the spec. What does it >> mean? How can I use it? Specific to minItems/maxItems, I'll I've >> gathered about it is from example-schema.yaml which indicates its a way >> to identify mandatory and optional values for a property, but it doesn't >> describe the fact that order matters, and you cannot mix/match things - >> IE it looks like you need atleast min items, and at most max items, but >> even if you have enough items to satisfy min, there cannot be gaps (you >> can't pick items 1, 5, 10 from the list). I only found that out from >> running the validation checks with trial/error. > > I think you looked at the 'Core' spec rather than the 'Validation' spec: > http://json-schema.org/draft/2019-09/json-schema-validation.html > > Though that has moved on to a newer version and we're still on draft7 > which is here: > https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-handrews-json-schema-validation-01 Yes, that looks completely different than what I read. Thanks for the direct link. I'm going to go read it. > > I guess a direct link to this with 'Details on json-schema keywords is > here' would be helpful. Yes please. Or atleast a "Hey, there are actually two specs, 'core' and 'validation'. The 'validation' one is the relevant one. Hopefully that clarifies any confusion" > > minItems/maxItems is the one area we deviate from json-schema > defaults. That's what the 'Property Schema' section calls out. > > Order matters for DT too, so that aspect matches up well with > json-schema. That's been a common issue in dts files, so schema > starting to enforce that will be good for new bindings, but somewhat > painful for existing ones. You are right, order does matter in DT. I think I've gotten used to just having -names, and assuming if a, b, c, and d are all listed as optional, that means you could have a and c. However that kind of breaks the index mapping, so if you have c, you really need a and b as well. I was attempting to apply that concept to schema, and it wasn't working. I suspect that concept shouldn't be valid normally. > >> There is no reference to the yaml spec, despite the document stating >> that the bindings are written in yaml. >> >> However, having found the yaml spec, its really not much better than the >> json-schema spec, and it doesn't line up because as the document states, >> the bindings are not really written in yaml - its a subset of yaml where >> a ton of the boilerplate "code" is skipped. > > Yeah, there's a lot to YAML that no one uses and I too find the spec > pretty useless (hence why no reference). Like most other uses I've > encountered, we're using a JSON compatible subset which is just lists > and dicts of key/value pairs. The main thing folks need to know and > trip up on are: indentation is important (including no tabs) and pay > attention to '-' or lack of. > >> What is boilerplate that is skipped? IMO, if you are not strictly >> adhering to yaml, then you need to clearly document your own derivative >> language so that someone like me whom is being introduced to all of this >> for the first time can start to figure out some of it. It would be >> helpful to look at other yaml examples, and understand what is >> considered to be boilerplate so I can translate that to a DT binding. > > We're not skipping any boilerplate. We're not using advanced features > like tags or anchors. You can use any YAML parser including online > ones to read the files. Ok, so I feel like I've misunderstood this except from writing-schema.md: "The Devicetree schemas don't exactly match the YAML encoded DT data produced by dtc. They are simplified to make them more compact and avoid a bunch of boilerplate." I thought this meant the bindings were simplified to be more readable, by skipping boilerplate text. What does it actually mean? > >> I understand, the majority of the above is complaints and demands which >> is really not fair to you, since you are spending what I presume to be >> your "non-dayjob" time to make the community better. > > It's my day job or part of it, just not enough hours in the day... > >> However, I don't >> really know how to contribute to make the documentation better. I don't >> understand enough. As far as this topic is concerned, I'm a dumb monkey >> banging on a keyboard hoping to get close enough to Shakespeare to pass >> mustard by accident, and maybe learn something along the way so that >> next time, I might have an idea of how to do something of what I need. > > The challenge is providing enough information to write bindings > without being json-schema experts. My hope is really to build up > enough examples and make the meta-schema good enough to keep folks > within the lines. Maybe that's a flawed approach, but even getting > folks to follow writing-schema.rst and run 'make dt_binding_check' has > been a challenge. > >> Hopefully you've made it this far - that ended up being a lot more text >> that I thought it would be. I really hope this is useful feedback to >> you, but let me know if I am still not clear on something. I will try >> my best to clarify more. If you feel like I can contribute somehow, >> just let me know. >> >>> >>>> so after several hours of >>>> trial and error, I just gave up since I found this to work (failed cases >>>> just gave me an error with no indication of what was wrong, not even a >>>> line number). >>> >>> Schema failures or dts failures? It is possible to get line numbers >>> for either, but that makes validation much slower. In the latter case, >>> the line numbers aren't too useful either given they are for the >>> .dt.yaml file and not the .dts source file (dtc integration would >>> solve that). Adding '-n' to dt-doc-validate or dt-validate will turn >>> them on though. >> >> Schema compilation failures. I don't recall the exact error message, >> but it was something like "no valid schema found, continuing". >> Essentially running "dt_binding_check". I tried with -v but wasn't >> getting much more in this case. I didn't try -n. > > That's before we even validate the schema, so something has gone wrong > pretty early. You may get farther with 'make -k'. I'll have to look > into it. The schemas are actually built twice. They are all built into > processed-schema.yaml. That's supposed to skip any with errors and is > what's used to validate dts files. If that's failing for some reason, > then it's going to be pretty vague. The dt_binding_check rule also > fully validates each binding schema and builds and validates the > examples. It should print more detailed errors (though still sometimes > vague). > > Rob >
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml index e73a56f..2f3512b 100644 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml @@ -40,20 +40,38 @@ properties: - qcom,gcc-sm8150 clocks: - minItems: 1 - maxItems: 3 - items: - - description: Board XO source - - description: Board active XO source - - description: Sleep clock source + oneOf: + #qcom,gcc-sm8150 + #qcom,gcc-sc7180 + - items: + - description: Board XO source + - description: Board active XO source + - description: Sleep clock source + #qcom,gcc-msm8998 + - items: + - description: Board XO source + - description: USB 3.0 phy pipe clock + - description: UFS phy rx symbol clock for pipe 0 + - description: UFS phy rx symbol clock for pipe 1 + - description: UFS phy tx symbol clock + - description: PCIE phy pipe clock clock-names: - minItems: 1 - maxItems: 3 - items: - - const: bi_tcxo - - const: bi_tcxo_ao - - const: sleep_clk + oneOf: + #qcom,gcc-sm8150 + #qcom,gcc-sc7180 + - items: + - const: bi_tcxo + - const: bi_tcxo_ao + - const: sleep_clk + #qcom,gcc-msm8998 + - items: + - const: xo + - const: usb3_pipe + - const: ufs_rx_symbol0 + - const: ufs_rx_symbol1 + - const: ufs_tx_symbol0 + - const: pcie0_pipe '#clock-cells': const: 1 @@ -118,6 +136,7 @@ else: compatible: contains: enum: + - qcom,gcc-msm8998 - qcom,gcc-sm8150 - qcom,gcc-sc7180 then: @@ -179,8 +198,8 @@ examples: clock-controller@100000 { compatible = "qcom,gcc-sc7180"; reg = <0x100000 0x1f0000>; - clocks = <&rpmhcc 0>, <&rpmhcc 1>; - clock-names = "bi_tcxo", "bi_tcxo_ao"; + clocks = <&rpmhcc 0>, <&rpmhcc 1>, <0>; + clock-names = "bi_tcxo", "bi_tcxo_ao", "sleep_clk"; #clock-cells = <1>; #reset-cells = <1>; #power-domain-cells = <1>;
The global clock controller on MSM8998 can consume a number of external clocks. Document them. Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo <jhugo@codeaurora.org> --- .../devicetree/bindings/clock/qcom,gcc.yaml | 47 +++++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-)