[PATCH 1/3] dts: socfpga: Add bindings for Altera SoC SDRAM controller
Steffen Trumtrar
s.trumtrar at pengutronix.de
Tue Apr 8 07:33:27 PDT 2014
On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 09:29:50AM -0500, Thor Thayer wrote:
> On Tue, 2014-04-08 at 15:38 +0200, Steffen Trumtrar wrote:
> > Hi!
> >
> > On Mon, Apr 07, 2014 at 04:54:07PM -0500, tthayer at altera.com wrote:
> > > From: Thor Thayer <tthayer at altera.com>
> > >
> > > Addition of the Altera SDRAM controller bindings and device
> > > tree changes to the Altera SoC project.
> > >
> [snip]
> > > +
> > > +Required properties:
> > > +- compatible : "altr,sdr-ctl", "syscon";
> > > + Note that syscon is invoked for this device to support the FPGA
> > > + bridge driver, EDAC driver and other devices that share the
> > > + registers.
> > > +- reg : Should contain 1 register ranges(address and length)
> >
> > I haven't really thought this through, but why would the FPGA bridge driver
> > access the sdram controller? For releasing the resets in fpgaportrst ? Or is
> > there more?
>
> Hi Steffan. No, not for resets. We need to enable the FPGA to SDRAM
> path. Our SDRAM controller allows FPGA master access to the SDRAM.
>
Yes. But what you have to do to enable the path is let the FPGA port you use
out of reset. And that is it as far as I can see. The rest happens in the
bitstream. Or is there more to enable the path?
The FPGA2SDRAM bridge is the one I didn't use as of yet, so if I miss something
please elaborate.
> > Wouldn't it be more appropriate to represent those bits as a reset-controller to
> > some hypothetical IP core driver?
> > Then you could have something like
> >
> > hps2fpga at c0000000 {
> > ipcore at 0 {
> > resets = <&sdr 1>;
> > reset-names = "foo";
> > resets = <&rst 96>;
> > reset-names = "bar";
> > (...)
> > };
> >
> > ipcore at 1000 {
> > resets = <&rst 96>;
> > reset-names = "baz";
> > (...)
> > };
> > };
> >
> > And you would always have the correct bridges released out of reset for your
> > IP core. Does the FPGA bridge driver do more? I think that is basically it.
> > Where we maybe could run into problems though is the early_init stuff.
> >
> > I think syscon is nice for some things, but we should try not to overuse it.
>
> Understood. In this case, syscon seems to be appropriate.
I'm not convinced yet.
Steffen
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