docs: dt: submitting-patches: drop outdated points to TXT format

New bindings in TXT format are not accepted and DT schema format expects
all compatibles to be explicitly defined, thus guidance about "wildcard
<chip>" is not correct anymore.  Drop that paragraph and update one more
place which still mentions TXT files.

Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski@linaro.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240108083750.16350-1-krzysztof.kozlowski@linaro.org
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Krzysztof Kozlowski 2024-01-08 09:37:49 +01:00 committed by Rob Herring
parent 9f8bbb531a
commit ed3648d264

View file

@ -42,28 +42,18 @@ I. For patch submitters
the code implementing the binding.
6) Any compatible strings used in a chip or board DTS file must be
previously documented in the corresponding DT binding text file
previously documented in the corresponding DT binding file
in Documentation/devicetree/bindings. This rule applies even if
the Linux device driver does not yet match on the compatible
string. [ checkpatch will emit warnings if this step is not
followed as of commit bff5da4335256513497cc8c79f9a9d1665e09864
("checkpatch: add DT compatible string documentation checks"). ]
7) The wildcard "<chip>" may be used in compatible strings, as in
the following example:
- compatible: Must contain '"nvidia,<chip>-pcie",
"nvidia,tegra20-pcie"' where <chip> is tegra30, tegra132, ...
As in the above example, the known values of "<chip>" should be
documented if it is used.
8) If a documented compatible string is not yet matched by the
7) If a documented compatible string is not yet matched by the
driver, the documentation should also include a compatible
string that is matched by the driver (as in the "nvidia,tegra20-pcie"
example above).
string that is matched by the driver.
9) Bindings are actively used by multiple projects other than the Linux
8) Bindings are actively used by multiple projects other than the Linux
Kernel, extra care and consideration may need to be taken when making changes
to existing bindings.