[PATCH 1/2] ARM: tegra: add Acer Chromebook 13 device tree
Stephen Warren
swarren at wwwdotorg.org
Wed Aug 13 12:56:28 PDT 2014
On 08/13/2014 01:07 PM, Dylan Reid wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 10:10 AM, Stephen Warren <swarren at wwwdotorg.org> wrote:
>> On 08/12/2014 07:56 PM, Dylan Reid wrote:
>>>
>>> The Acer Chromebook 13, codenamed "Big", contains an NVIDIA tegra124
>>> processor and is similar to the Venice2 reference platform.
>>>
>>> The keyboard, USB 2, audio, HDMI, sdcard and emmc have been tested
>>> and work on the 1366x768 models. I haven't tried on the HD systems
>>> yet.
>>>
>>> WiFi does not yet work, it needs at least some PMIC changes to enable
>>> the 32k clock.
>>>
>>> The elan trackpad is not yet functional but hopefully will be soon as
>>> there are patches under review.
>>>
>>> There is also an issue on reboot because the TPM isn't reset. It will
>>> cause the stock firmware to enter recovery mode. This can be worked
>>> around by an EC-reset, press refresh and power at the same time.
>>
>>
>>> diff --git a/arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra124-big.dts
>>> b/arch/arm/boot/dts/tegra124-big.dts
>>
>>
>> I think we need to include the SKU name in the filename and compatible value
>> below, or at least plan out that for other SKUs, we'll add the SKU name on.
>>
>>
>>> +/ {
>>> + model = "Google Big";
>>> + compatible = "google,nyan-big", "nvidia,tegra124";
>>
>>
>> I think it'd be more user-friendly if the filename and compatible value more
>> obviously tied to the end-user-visible product name.
>
> I'll change the model to "Acer Chromebook 13"
Would mentioning "CB5" in the model be a good idea; that's what it's
sold as.
> If we need a separate DT for the FullHD skew, then can we add a file
> 'tegra124-nyan-big-full-hd.dtsi'? We may also add
> 'tegra124-nyan-big-full-hd-touch.dtsi' as well. They would just
> override the necessary things from this file.
*.dts rather than *.dtsi I suspect? Yes, having a common include file
and separate top-level files sounds like a good idea.
>>> + gpio-keys {
>>> + compatible = "gpio-keys";
>>> +
>>> + lid {
>>> + label = "Lid";
>>> + gpios = <&gpio TEGRA_GPIO(R, 4) GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
>>> + linux,input-type = <5>;
>>> + linux,code = <0>;
>>
>>
>> Aren't there #defines for the 5 and 0 there?
>
> yes for code, apparently not for input-type. I think 5 means EV_SW,
> maybe that should get added to include/dt-bindings/input somewhere?
Yes, that sounds like a good idea.
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