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-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory.txt168
-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mmc/tmio_mmc.txt17
-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/fsl-tsec-phy.txt18
3 files changed, 27 insertions, 176 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index eb2469365593..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,168 +0,0 @@
-*** Memory binding ***
-
-The /memory node provides basic information about the address and size
-of the physical memory. This node is usually filled or updated by the
-bootloader, depending on the actual memory configuration of the given
-hardware.
-
-The memory layout is described by the following node:
-
-/ {
- #address-cells = <(n)>;
- #size-cells = <(m)>;
- memory {
- device_type = "memory";
- reg = <(baseaddr1) (size1)
- (baseaddr2) (size2)
- ...
- (baseaddrN) (sizeN)>;
- };
- ...
-};
-
-A memory node follows the typical device tree rules for "reg" property:
-n: number of cells used to store base address value
-m: number of cells used to store size value
-baseaddrX: defines a base address of the defined memory bank
-sizeX: the size of the defined memory bank
-
-
-More than one memory bank can be defined.
-
-
-*** Reserved memory regions ***
-
-In /memory/reserved-memory node one can create child nodes describing
-particular reserved (excluded from normal use) memory regions. Such
-memory regions are usually designed for the special usage by various
-device drivers. A good example are contiguous memory allocations or
-memory sharing with other operating system on the same hardware board.
-Those special memory regions might depend on the board configuration and
-devices used on the target system.
-
-Parameters for each memory region can be encoded into the device tree
-with the following convention:
-
-[(label):] (name) {
- compatible = "linux,contiguous-memory-region", "reserved-memory-region";
- reg = <(address) (size)>;
- (linux,default-contiguous-region);
-};
-
-compatible: one or more of:
- - "linux,contiguous-memory-region" - enables binding of this
- region to Contiguous Memory Allocator (special region for
- contiguous memory allocations, shared with movable system
- memory, Linux kernel-specific).
- - "reserved-memory-region" - compatibility is defined, given
- region is assigned for exclusive usage for by the respective
- devices.
-
-reg: standard property defining the base address and size of
- the memory region
-
-linux,default-contiguous-region: property indicating that the region
- is the default region for all contiguous memory
- allocations, Linux specific (optional)
-
-It is optional to specify the base address, so if one wants to use
-autoconfiguration of the base address, '0' can be specified as a base
-address in the 'reg' property.
-
-The /memory/reserved-memory node must contain the same #address-cells
-and #size-cells value as the root node.
-
-
-*** Device node's properties ***
-
-Once regions in the /memory/reserved-memory node have been defined, they
-may be referenced by other device nodes. Bindings that wish to reference
-memory regions should explicitly document their use of the following
-property:
-
-memory-region = <&phandle_to_defined_region>;
-
-This property indicates that the device driver should use the memory
-region pointed by the given phandle.
-
-
-*** Example ***
-
-This example defines a memory consisting of 4 memory banks. 3 contiguous
-regions are defined for Linux kernel, one default of all device drivers
-(named contig_mem, placed at 0x72000000, 64MiB), one dedicated to the
-framebuffer device (labelled display_mem, placed at 0x78000000, 8MiB)
-and one for multimedia processing (labelled multimedia_mem, placed at
-0x77000000, 64MiB). 'display_mem' region is then assigned to fb@12300000
-device for DMA memory allocations (Linux kernel drivers will use CMA is
-available or dma-exclusive usage otherwise). 'multimedia_mem' is
-assigned to scaler@12500000 and codec@12600000 devices for contiguous
-memory allocations when CMA driver is enabled.
-
-The reason for creating a separate region for framebuffer device is to
-match the framebuffer base address to the one configured by bootloader,
-so once Linux kernel drivers starts no glitches on the displayed boot
-logo appears. Scaller and codec drivers should share the memory
-allocations.
-
-/ {
- #address-cells = <1>;
- #size-cells = <1>;
-
- /* ... */
-
- memory {
- reg = <0x40000000 0x10000000
- 0x50000000 0x10000000
- 0x60000000 0x10000000
- 0x70000000 0x10000000>;
-
- reserved-memory {
- #address-cells = <1>;
- #size-cells = <1>;
-
- /*
- * global autoconfigured region for contiguous allocations
- * (used only with Contiguous Memory Allocator)
- */
- contig_region@0 {
- compatible = "linux,contiguous-memory-region";
- reg = <0x0 0x4000000>;
- linux,default-contiguous-region;
- };
-
- /*
- * special region for framebuffer
- */
- display_region: region@78000000 {
- compatible = "linux,contiguous-memory-region", "reserved-memory-region";
- reg = <0x78000000 0x800000>;
- };
-
- /*
- * special region for multimedia processing devices
- */
- multimedia_region: region@77000000 {
- compatible = "linux,contiguous-memory-region";
- reg = <0x77000000 0x4000000>;
- };
- };
- };
-
- /* ... */
-
- fb0: fb@12300000 {
- status = "okay";
- memory-region = <&display_region>;
- };
-
- scaler: scaler@12500000 {
- status = "okay";
- memory-region = <&multimedia_region>;
- };
-
- codec: codec@12600000 {
- status = "okay";
- memory-region = <&multimedia_region>;
- };
-};
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mmc/tmio_mmc.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mmc/tmio_mmc.txt
index df204e18e030..6a2a1160a70d 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mmc/tmio_mmc.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mmc/tmio_mmc.txt
@@ -9,12 +9,15 @@ compulsory and any optional properties, common to all SD/MMC drivers, as
described in mmc.txt, can be used. Additionally the following tmio_mmc-specific
optional bindings can be used.
+Required properties:
+- compatible: "renesas,sdhi-shmobile" - a generic sh-mobile SDHI unit
+ "renesas,sdhi-sh7372" - SDHI IP on SH7372 SoC
+ "renesas,sdhi-sh73a0" - SDHI IP on SH73A0 SoC
+ "renesas,sdhi-r8a73a4" - SDHI IP on R8A73A4 SoC
+ "renesas,sdhi-r8a7740" - SDHI IP on R8A7740 SoC
+ "renesas,sdhi-r8a7778" - SDHI IP on R8A7778 SoC
+ "renesas,sdhi-r8a7779" - SDHI IP on R8A7779 SoC
+ "renesas,sdhi-r8a7790" - SDHI IP on R8A7790 SoC
+
Optional properties:
- toshiba,mmc-wrprotect-disable: write-protect detection is unavailable
-
-When used with Renesas SDHI hardware, the following compatibility strings
-configure various model-specific properties:
-
-"renesas,sh7372-sdhi": (default) compatible with SH7372
-"renesas,r8a7740-sdhi": compatible with R8A7740: certain MMC/SD commands have to
- wait for the interface to become idle.
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/fsl-tsec-phy.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/fsl-tsec-phy.txt
index 2c6be0377f55..d2ea4605d078 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/fsl-tsec-phy.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/fsl-tsec-phy.txt
@@ -86,6 +86,7 @@ General Properties:
Clock Properties:
+ - fsl,cksel Timer reference clock source.
- fsl,tclk-period Timer reference clock period in nanoseconds.
- fsl,tmr-prsc Prescaler, divides the output clock.
- fsl,tmr-add Frequency compensation value.
@@ -97,7 +98,7 @@ Clock Properties:
clock. You must choose these carefully for the clock to work right.
Here is how to figure good values:
- TimerOsc = system clock MHz
+ TimerOsc = selected reference clock MHz
tclk_period = desired clock period nanoseconds
NominalFreq = 1000 / tclk_period MHz
FreqDivRatio = TimerOsc / NominalFreq (must be greater that 1.0)
@@ -114,6 +115,20 @@ Clock Properties:
Pulse Per Second (PPS) signal, since this will be offered to the PPS
subsystem to synchronize the Linux clock.
+ Reference clock source is determined by the value, which is holded
+ in CKSEL bits in TMR_CTRL register. "fsl,cksel" property keeps the
+ value, which will be directly written in those bits, that is why,
+ according to reference manual, the next clock sources can be used:
+
+ <0> - external high precision timer reference clock (TSEC_TMR_CLK
+ input is used for this purpose);
+ <1> - eTSEC system clock;
+ <2> - eTSEC1 transmit clock;
+ <3> - RTC clock input.
+
+ When this attribute is not used, eTSEC system clock will serve as
+ IEEE 1588 timer reference clock.
+
Example:
ptp_clock@24E00 {
@@ -121,6 +136,7 @@ Example:
reg = <0x24E00 0xB0>;
interrupts = <12 0x8 13 0x8>;
interrupt-parent = < &ipic >;
+ fsl,cksel = <1>;
fsl,tclk-period = <10>;
fsl,tmr-prsc = <100>;
fsl,tmr-add = <0x999999A4>;
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