linux_dsm_epyc7002/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/writing-bindings.txt
Rob Herring b06ce8218c dt-bindings: Add a guide of do's and don't's for writing bindings
Devicetree binding reviews have a lot of repeated review comments. Much
of the guidelines aren't written down. This list of do's and don't's is
by no means an exhaustive guide for how to write bindings, but at least
the "rules" are written down in some form.

Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
2019-04-10 09:03:02 -05:00

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DOs and DON'Ts for designing and writing Devicetree bindings
This is a list of common review feedback items focused on binding design. With
every rule, there are exceptions and bindings have many gray areas.
For guidelines related to patches, see
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/submitting-patches.txt
Overall design
- DO attempt to make bindings complete even if a driver doesn't support some
features. For example, if a device has an interrupt, then include the
'interrupts' property even if the driver is only polled mode.
- DON'T refer to Linux or "device driver" in bindings. Bindings should be
based on what the hardware has, not what an OS and driver currently support.
- DO use node names matching the class of the device. Many standard names are
defined in the DT Spec. If there isn't one, consider adding it.
- DO check that the example matches the documentation especially after making
review changes.
- DON'T create nodes just for the sake of instantiating drivers. Multi-function
devices only need child nodes when the child nodes have their own DT
resources. A single node can be multiple providers (e.g. clocks and resets).
- DON'T use 'syscon' alone without a specific compatible string. A 'syscon'
hardware block should have a compatible string unique enough to infer the
register layout of the entire block (at a minimum).
Properties
- DO make 'compatible' properties specific. DON'T use wildcards in compatible
strings. DO use fallback compatibles when devices are the same as or a subset
of prior implementations. DO add new compatibles in case there are new
features or bugs.
- DO use a vendor prefix on device specific property names. Consider if
properties could be common among devices of the same class. Check other
existing bindings for similar devices.
- DON'T redefine common properties. Just reference the definition and define
constraints specific to the device.
- DO use common property unit suffixes for properties with scientific units.
See property-units.txt.
- DO define properties in terms of constraints. How many entries? What are
possible values? What is the order?
Board/SoC .dts Files
- DO put all MMIO devices under a bus node and not at the top-level.
- DO use non-empty 'ranges' to limit the size of child buses/devices. 64-bit
platforms don't need all devices to have 64-bit address and size.