On Tue, Jun 22, 2021 at 2:17 AM Geert Uytterhoeven geert@linux-m68k.org wrote:
Hi Rob,
On Tue, Jun 15, 2021 at 9:16 PM Rob Herring robh@kernel.org wrote:
If a property has an 'items' list, then a 'minItems' or 'maxItems' with the same size as the list is redundant and can be dropped. Note that is DT schema specific behavior and not standard json-schema behavior. The tooling will fixup the final schema adding any unspecified minItems/maxItems.
This condition is partially checked with the meta-schema already, but only if both 'minItems' and 'maxItems' are equal to the 'items' length. An improved meta-schema is pending.
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring robh@kernel.org
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/stm32-dwmac.yaml +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/stm32-dwmac.yaml @@ -46,7 +46,6 @@ properties:
clocks: minItems: 3
- maxItems: 5 items:
- description: GMAC main clock
- description: MAC TX clock
While resolving the conflict with commit fea99822914039c6 ("dt-bindings: net: document ptp_ref clk in dwmac") in soc/for-next, I noticed the following construct for clock-names:
clock-names: minItems: 3 maxItems: 6 contains: enum: - stmmaceth - mac-clk-tx - mac-clk-rx - ethstp - eth-ck - ptp_ref
Should this use items instead of enum, and drop maxItems, or is this a valid construct to support specifying the clocks in random order? If the latter, it does mean that the order of clock-names may not match the order of the clock descriptions.
'contains' is true if one or more entries match the strings. So it is really saying one of these is required. That's not really much of a constraint. There's 'minContains' and 'maxContains' in newer json-schema versions (not yet supported) that could add some constraints if there has to be at least N entries from contains. An 'items' schema (as opposed to a list) would say all items have to match one of the strings. I'm sure that's too strict.
TLDR: clocks for this binding are a mess and the above is probably all we can do here.
Rob