'cell_string' yaml attribute has been introduced in order to
help enforcement of specific string during defines generation.
This adds complexity in understanding script behavior as a black
box and create additional dependency which is not strictly required.
For node specific generation functions (pinctrl and interrupts),
this could be replaced directly by an hardcoded version
(as everyone used the same 'cell_string' anyway).
For extract_cells functions, string could be replaced by extracted
property name. As a consequence, we're now able to generate defines
for properties refering to these controllers via phandle.
For instance, in following node
spbtle-rf@0 {
compatible = "st,spbtle-rf";
reg = <0>;
reset-gpios = <&gpioa 8 0>;
};
We'll be able to generate:
#define ST_STM32_SPI_...LE_RF_0_RESET_GPIOS_CONTROLLER "GPIOA"
#define ST_STM32_SPI_...PBTLE_RF_0_RESET_GPIOS_FLAGS_0 0
#define ST_STM32_SPI_..._SPBTLE_RF_0_RESET_GPIOS_PIN_0 8
Only impact for this whole change is for NXP clocks which were the
only ones using 'cell_string' attribute with a value different than
the default one.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
According to yaml syntaxic rules, 'properties' described in dts
bindings yaml files could be seen as 'mapping'(key/value couple),
instead of 'series' (list of single elements).
yaml 'mappings' will then be converted by yaml python library as
python 'dict' which will ease treatment (instead of current list
as were before this commit).
Same treatment is applied to 'inherits'.
script extract_dts_inlcude is updated to take change of yaml_list
structre into account. This allows some code simplification. Largest
impact is yaml_collapse function which works now allow complete
overload method on all the attributes of a yaml nodes.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Moved yaml files to be under dts/bindings and have the bindings try
and match the linux doc device tree binding dir structure as the
canonical binding reference.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>