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On Wed 20 Aug 2014 18:06:35 Joel Brobecker wrote: > > moxie is the only one that hard requires dtc (it might be limited to > > maintainer mode). but the larger point is to delete a large body of > > custom code that the sim has today for parsing its device tree like > > data format and convert over to the standard format that the rest of > > the world is using now. and longer term, make it so we can share dtc > > files between linux/u-boot/qemu such that you can feed a fdt to the > > sim and it'll automatically bring up hardware in the same way as the > > kernel would have found it. > > > > atm, you have to basically write two different device trees with > > different syntax and names, then feed one to the sim and the other to > > the kernel. and hope they don't get out of sync :). > > > > there's basically no chance of people rewriting the existing sim code > > so that it gains all the same functionality as the public dtc, and > > then keeping it in sync. i'd rather just gut it and be done, and get > > the dtc updates for free. > > My 2 cents: This sounds interesting, but on the other hand, I have > this feeling that requiring dtc might be a big ask. I'm not sure > how portable the dtc project is, and how easy it is to get it > installed. I went to the "Device Tree Compiler" page you referenced, > and it doesn't give at all the impression of being a mature and > widespread project... For instance, I was looking for the documentation > in order to check for things like installation, OS support, > requirements, etc. I ended up looking inside the source tree itself, > and found Documentation/manual.txt and README, but none of them answered > any of these questions. I am also wondering about releases and such, > but couldn't really find much about it. it's pretty mature imo. lemme phrase it this way: it's a hard requirement nowadays for ARM on Linux, so it's def viable. i think a lot of the docs you're referring to is because the library aims to be used literally everywhere -- vendor BIOS, vendor kernels, etc... the license readme explains this a bit more: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/utils/dtc/dtc.git/tree/README.license > I hope this explains why I would personally feel a little more > comfortable if that dependency remained optional. > > Now, if the project was really super easy to install and completely > portable (think Linux & Windows, of course, but also Darwin, > Solaris...), I would consider making it mandatory. i'd be willing to make sure it builds everywhere. the external dependencies in libfdt are extremely light (by design -- it wants to work in your typical BIOS). basically it needs str/mem funcs and not ancient stdint.h. -mike
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