On Fri, Dec 19, 2014 at 04:18:09PM +0000, Andrew Jackson wrote:
Add documentation for Designware I2S hardware block. The block requires two clocks (one for audio sampling, the other for APB) and DMA channels for receive and transmit.
You should generally include the binding before the code to parse it, both because the binding is required in order to tell if the code is doing the right thing and also because people will often not even look at code with a missing binding.
- clocks : Pairs of phandle and specifier referencing the controller's clocks.
- The controller expects two clocks, the clock used for the APB interface and
- the clock used as the sampling rate reference clock sample.
- clock-names : "apb_plck" for the clock to the APB interface, "i2sclk" for the sample
- rate reference clock.
This is a name based lookup of clocks but the code doesn't use apb_pclk at all; it needs to or the binding needs to say that apb_pclk must be the first listed clock (which would not be good).
- soc_i2s: i2s@7ff90000 {
compatible = "snps,designware-i2s";
reg = <0x0 0x7ff90000 0x0 0x1000>;
clocks = <&scpi_i2sclk 0>, <&soc_refclk100mhz>;
clock-names = "i2sclk", "apb_pclk";
#sound-dai-cells = <0>;
dmas = <&dma0 5>;
dma-names = "tx";
- };
This omits a lot of configurability that is in platform data and replaces it by reading back the parameters from the hardware. If this is a viable approach to that configuration you should do this for both platform data and device tree rather than only device tree. The point with keeping platform data is that it's not good to make the device DT only, improving the usability of platform data in a way that happens to also make the DT case easier is totally fine. If we can determine how the IP is configured from the hardware that's both less work and more robust no matter how the device is instantiated.