From 5063ced278e0093bdf926bc832a804f09fd3bd66 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Simon Glass Date: Sat, 30 Jul 2022 15:52:06 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] dm: core: Split out the declaration of ofnode This is used by a lot of files, but ofnode.h needs to include a lot of header files. This can create dependency cycles, particularly with global_data.h which must include various declarations. Split the core delcarations into a separate file to fix this. Signed-off-by: Simon Glass --- include/dm/ofnode.h | 61 +--------------------------------- include/dm/ofnode_decl.h | 72 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 73 insertions(+), 60 deletions(-) create mode 100644 include/dm/ofnode_decl.h diff --git a/include/dm/ofnode.h b/include/dm/ofnode.h index bb60433124b..346b09c7d96 100644 --- a/include/dm/ofnode.h +++ b/include/dm/ofnode.h @@ -19,41 +19,7 @@ struct resource; -/** - * typedef union ofnode_union ofnode - reference to a device tree node - * - * This union can hold either a straightforward pointer to a struct device_node - * in the live device tree, or an offset within the flat device tree. In the - * latter case, the pointer value is just the integer offset within the flat DT. - * - * Thus we can reference nodes in both the live tree (once available) and the - * flat tree (until then). Functions are available to translate between an - * ofnode and either an offset or a `struct device_node *`. - * - * The reference can also hold a null offset, in which case the pointer value - * here is NULL. This corresponds to a struct device_node * value of - * NULL, or an offset of -1. - * - * There is no ambiguity as to whether ofnode holds an offset or a node - * pointer: when the live tree is active it holds a node pointer, otherwise it - * holds an offset. The value itself does not need to be unique and in theory - * the same value could point to a valid device node or a valid offset. We - * could arrange for a unique value to be used (e.g. by making the pointer - * point to an offset within the flat device tree in the case of an offset) but - * this increases code size slightly due to the subtraction. Since it offers no - * real benefit, the approach described here seems best. - * - * For now these points use constant types, since we don't allow writing - * the DT. - * - * @np: Pointer to device node, used for live tree - * @of_offset: Pointer into flat device tree, used for flat tree. Note that this - * is not a really a pointer to a node: it is an offset value. See above. - */ -typedef union ofnode_union { - const struct device_node *np; - long of_offset; -} ofnode; +#include struct ofnode_phandle_args { ofnode node; @@ -61,31 +27,6 @@ struct ofnode_phandle_args { uint32_t args[OF_MAX_PHANDLE_ARGS]; }; -/** - * struct ofprop - reference to a property of a device tree node - * - * This struct hold the reference on one property of one node, - * using struct ofnode and an offset within the flat device tree or either - * a pointer to a struct property in the live device tree. - * - * Thus we can reference arguments in both the live tree and the flat tree. - * - * The property reference can also hold a null reference. This corresponds to - * a struct property NULL pointer or an offset of -1. - * - * @node: Pointer to device node - * @offset: Pointer into flat device tree, used for flat tree. - * @prop: Pointer to property, used for live treee. - */ - -struct ofprop { - ofnode node; - union { - int offset; - const struct property *prop; - }; -}; - /** * ofnode_to_np() - convert an ofnode to a live DT node pointer * diff --git a/include/dm/ofnode_decl.h b/include/dm/ofnode_decl.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..7c9e43e4ad8 --- /dev/null +++ b/include/dm/ofnode_decl.h @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ */ +/* + * Copyright 2022 Google LLC + * Written by Simon Glass + */ + +#ifndef _DM_OFNODE_DECL_H +#define _DM_OFNODE_DECL_H + +/** + * typedef union ofnode_union ofnode - reference to a device tree node + * + * This union can hold either a straightforward pointer to a struct device_node + * in the live device tree, or an offset within the flat device tree. In the + * latter case, the pointer value is just the integer offset within the flat DT. + * + * Thus we can reference nodes in both the live tree (once available) and the + * flat tree (until then). Functions are available to translate between an + * ofnode and either an offset or a `struct device_node *`. + * + * The reference can also hold a null offset, in which case the pointer value + * here is NULL. This corresponds to a struct device_node * value of + * NULL, or an offset of -1. + * + * There is no ambiguity as to whether ofnode holds an offset or a node + * pointer: when the live tree is active it holds a node pointer, otherwise it + * holds an offset. The value itself does not need to be unique and in theory + * the same value could point to a valid device node or a valid offset. We + * could arrange for a unique value to be used (e.g. by making the pointer + * point to an offset within the flat device tree in the case of an offset) but + * this increases code size slightly due to the subtraction. Since it offers no + * real benefit, the approach described here seems best. + * + * For now these points use constant types, since we don't allow writing + * the DT. + * + * @np: Pointer to device node, used for live tree + * @of_offset: Pointer into flat device tree, used for flat tree. Note that this + * is not a really a pointer to a node: it is an offset value. See above. + */ +typedef union ofnode_union { + const struct device_node *np; + long of_offset; +} ofnode; + +/** + * struct ofprop - reference to a property of a device tree node + * + * This struct hold the reference on one property of one node, + * using struct ofnode and an offset within the flat device tree or either + * a pointer to a struct property in the live device tree. + * + * Thus we can reference arguments in both the live tree and the flat tree. + * + * The property reference can also hold a null reference. This corresponds to + * a struct property NULL pointer or an offset of -1. + * + * @node: Pointer to device node + * @offset: Pointer into flat device tree, used for flat tree. + * @prop: Pointer to property, used for live treee. + */ + +struct ofprop { + ofnode node; + union { + int offset; + const struct property *prop; + }; +}; + +#endif +