On Mon, Sep 12, 2011 at 08:31:58AM +0200, David Jander wrote:
Mark Brown broonie@opensource.wolfsonmicro.com wrote:
This isn't really something that should go into device tree, ALSA is a Linux specific concept.
There are many Linux-specific details in Linux's implementation of Open Firmware Device Trees. Right now, thanks to Linux, Open-Firmware device trees
This is generally considered a bug in the bindings, the bindings are for cross-platform usage and should not be specific to any OS.
introduced in arch/arm right now. On all these platforms, its sole existence is purely for running Linux with minimal board support code in the kernel.
Other OSs are actively using device tree.
So, why not add a few more Linux-specific bits to it, if it helps get rid of the last bit of board-specific code?
Eliminating board specific code for audio is not a realistic goal, the configuration of modern audio subsystems is too complex and dynamic. It is realistic to make machine drivers which cover broad classes of devices with similar hardware.
The platforms that will use those bindings, will never have Open-Firmware bioses in the first place, and their DT sources will be part of the kernel source tree anyway.
The plan is to push the device trees out of the kernel into a separate repository.
What we should really be doing here is to autodiscover by reading the ID registers in the device. That needs generic AC'97 bus work which we don't have right now.
Seems reasonable, but is correct autodiscovery really possible for all configurations and all DAI-codec combinations?
Yes, it's a very basic part of AC'97.