
Hi Peter,
On Mon, 28 Aug 2023 at 14:29, Peter Robinson pbrobinson@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Aug 28, 2023 at 6:54 PM Simon Glass sjg@chromium.org wrote:
Hi Peter,
On Mon, 28 Aug 2023 at 10:37, Peter Robinson pbrobinson@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Aug 28, 2023 at 5:20 PM Simon Glass sjg@chromium.org wrote:
Hi,
On Sat, 26 Aug 2023 at 03:07, Sughosh Ganu sughosh.ganu@linaro.org wrote:
Provide a way for removing certain devicetree nodes and/or properties from the devicetree. This is needed to purge certain nodes and properties which may be relevant only in U-Boot. Such nodes and properties are then removed from the devicetree before it is passed to the kernel. This ensures that the devicetree passed to the OS does not contain any non-compliant nodes and properties.
The removal of the nodes and properties is being done through an EVT_FT_FIXUP handler. I am not sure if the removal code needs to be behind any Kconfig symbol.
I have only build tested this on sandbox, and tested on qemu arm64 virt platform. This being a RFC, I have not put this through a CI run.
Sughosh Ganu (5): dt: Provide a way to remove non-compliant nodes and properties fwu: Add the fwu-mdata node for removal from devicetree capsule: Add the capsule-key property for removal from devicetree bootefi: Call the EVT_FT_FIXUP event handler doc: Add a document for non-compliant DT node/property removal
cmd/bootefi.c | 18 +++++ .../devicetree/dt_non_compliant_purge.rst | 64 ++++++++++++++++ drivers/fwu-mdata/fwu-mdata-uclass.c | 5 ++ include/dt-structs.h | 11 +++ lib/Makefile | 1 + lib/dt_purge.c | 73 +++++++++++++++++++ lib/efi_loader/efi_capsule.c | 7 ++ 7 files changed, 179 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/develop/devicetree/dt_non_compliant_purge.rst create mode 100644 lib/dt_purge.c
What is the point of removing them? Instead, we should make sure that we upstream the bindings and encourage SoC vendors to sync them. If we remove them, no one will bother and U-Boot just becomes a dumping ground.
Well things like the binman entries in DT are U-Boot specific and not useful for HW related descriptions or for Linux or another OS being able to deal with HW so arguably we're already a dumping ground to some degree for not defining hardware.
I have started the process to upstream the binman bindings.
I don't think they should be in DT at all, they don't describe anything to do with hardware, or generally even the runtime of a device, they don't even describe the boot/runtime state of the firmware, they describe build time, so I don't see what that has to do with device tree? Can you explain that? To me those sorts of things should live in a build time style config file.
I beg to differ. Devicetree is more than just hardware and always has been. See, for example the /chosen and /options nodes.
We need run-time configuration here, since we cannot know at build time what we will be asked to do by a previous firmware phase.
Perhaps we should use the issue tracker[1] to follow progress on all of this. We need to clean it up.
Instead of this, how about working on bringing the DT validation into U-Boot so we can see what state things are in?
Please send the bindings for Linaro's recent series (which I suspect are motivating this series) so we can start the process.
Regards, Simon
Regards, Simon