Hi Mark Brown,
On 11/2/2012 22:24, Mark Brown wrote:
On Fri, Nov 02, 2012 at 10:34:21AM +0800, Bo Shen wrote:
On 11/1/2012 22:43, Mark Brown wrote:
On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 03:26:59PM +0800, Bo Shen wrote:
+dai: dai {
- compatible = "atmel,atmel-ssc-dai";
- atmel,dai-master = <&ssc0>;
+};
This seems to be a purely virtual device which remaps the SSC onto the Linux audio subsystem? If that is the case then it shouldn't appear in the device tree,
Yes. This is a purely virtual device. I add this as to the following reason.
In our case, the ssc can connect to audio codec, DAC and other devices. In order to avoid duplicate the code, so keep ssc as a library, register it directly in Linux and use remap method to let it work onto other different subsystem.
Your quote appears to have deleted the bit of my mail where I told you how to fix this. Is there something unclear in my suggestion that the machine driver directly reference the SSC node?
Sorry for misunderstand. I split your e-mail into two parts. May be you miss some parts of my e-mail. You can check the last mail from me. Or check the following fully quote.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- On 11/1/2012 22:43, Mark Brown wrote:
On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 03:26:59PM +0800, Bo Shen wrote:
+Required properties:
- compatible: "atmel,atmel-ssc-dai"
- atmel,dai-master: this dai base on which ssc controller
+Example: +dai: dai {
- compatible = "atmel,atmel-ssc-dai";
- atmel,dai-master = <&ssc0>;
+};
This seems to be a purely virtual device which remaps the SSC onto the Linux audio subsystem? If that is the case then it shouldn't appear in the device tree,
Yes. This is a purely virtual device. I add this as to the following reason.
In our case, the ssc can connect to audio codec, DAC and other devices. In order to avoid duplicate the code, so keep ssc as a library, register it directly in Linux and use remap method to let it work onto other different subsystem.
So, for ssc connect to audio codec, use dai to remap the SSC onto the Linux audio subsystem. In this way, just let the dai know which ssc channel it based on. The remap is just a simple way. Please take following code as a reference.
---<8--- if (pdev->dev.of_node) { struct device_node *np = pdev->dev.of_node; struct device_node *dai_master_np;
dai_master_np = of_parse_phandle(np, "atmel,dai-master", 0); if (!dai_master_np) { dev_err(&pdev->dev, "No SSC for atmel dai"); return -EINVAL; }
id = of_alias_get_id(dai_master_np, "ssc"); } else { id = to_platform_device(pdev->dev.parent)->id; }
ssc = ssc_request(id); if (IS_ERR(ssc)) { dev_err(&pdev->dev, "Failed to request SSC %d\n", id); return PTR_ERR(ssc); } ssc_info.ssc = ssc; pdev->dev.parent = &(ssc->pdev->dev); --->8---
If ssc connect to other devices, also need to remap to other subsystem.
the machine driver should just directly reference the SSC and instantiate any devices required in Linux directly.
I am not fully understand this. So, which do you mean as the following two method or any other else?
Our old method: using audio machine driver (e.g: sam9g20_wm8731.c) call atmel_ssc_set_audio function to allocate the platform device for atmel-ssc-dai and atmel-pcm-audio and then add device.
Code as following: ---<8--- /* Allocate a dummy device for DMA if we don't have one already */ if (!dma_pdev) { dma_pdev = platform_device_alloc("atmel-pcm-audio", -1); if (!dma_pdev) return -ENOMEM;
ret = platform_device_add(dma_pdev); if (ret < 0) { platform_device_put(dma_pdev); dma_pdev = NULL; return ret; } }
ssc_pdev = platform_device_alloc("atmel-ssc-dai", ssc_id); if (!ssc_pdev) return -ENOMEM;
/* If we can grab the SSC briefly to parent the DAI device off it */ ssc = ssc_request(ssc_id); if (IS_ERR(ssc)) pr_warn("Unable to parent ASoC SSC DAI on SSC: %ld\n", PTR_ERR(ssc)); else { ssc_pdev->dev.parent = &(ssc->pdev->dev); ssc_free(ssc); }
ret = platform_device_add(ssc_pdev); --->8---
Other SoC do like this: register i2s device, and then register dai, finally register platform. So, only one device. --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Best regards, Bo Shen