On Fri, Apr 12, 2024 at 02:31:42PM -0700, Charlie Jenkins wrote:
On Fri, Apr 12, 2024 at 10:27:47PM +0100, Conor Dooley wrote:
On Fri, Apr 12, 2024 at 01:48:46PM -0700, Charlie Jenkins wrote:
On Fri, Apr 12, 2024 at 07:47:48PM +0100, Conor Dooley wrote:
On Fri, Apr 12, 2024 at 10:12:20AM -0700, Charlie Jenkins wrote:
This is already falling back on the boot CPU, but that is not a solution that scales. Even though all systems currently have homogenous marchid/mvendorid I am hesitant to assert that all systems are homogenous without providing an option to override this.
There are already is an option. Use the non-deprecated property in your new system for describing what extesions you support. We don't need to add any more properties (for now at least).
The issue is that it is not possible to know which vendor extensions are associated with a vendor. That requires a global namespace where each extension can be looked up in a table. I have opted to have a vendor-specific namespace so that vendors don't have to worry about stepping on other vendor's toes (or the other way around). In order to support that, the vendorid of the hart needs to be known prior.
Nah, I think you're mixing up something like hwprobe and having namespaces there with needing namespacing on the devicetree probing side too. You don't need any vendor namespacing, it's perfectly fine (IMO) for a vendor to implement someone else's extension and I think we should allow probing any vendors extension on any CPU.
I am not mixing it up. Sure a vendor can implement somebody else's extension, they just need to add it to their namespace too.
I didn't mean that you were mixing up how your implementation worked, my point was that you're mixing up the hwprobe stuff which may need namespacing for $a{b,p}i_reason and probing from DT which does not. I don't think that the kernel should need to be changed at all if someone shows up and implements another vendor's extension - we already have far too many kernel changes required to display support for extensions and I don't welcome potential for more.
Another thing I just thought of was systems where the SoC vendor implements some extension that gets communicated in the ISA string but is not the vendor in mvendorid in their various CPUs. I wouldn't want to see several different entries in structs (or several different hwprobe keys, but that's another story) for this situation because you're only allowing probing what's in the struct matching the vendorid.