[PATCH v3 2/5] ARM: NSP: add minimal Northstar Plus device tree

Jon Mason jonmason at broadcom.com
Mon Aug 31 16:00:09 PDT 2015


On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 04:49:10PM -0500, Rob Herring wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 2:44 PM, Jon Mason <jonmason at broadcom.com> wrote:
> > On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 12:18:13AM -0700, Ray Jui wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >> On 8/30/2015 7:24 PM, Jon Mason wrote:
> >> > On Fri, Aug 28, 2015 at 05:20:20PM -0700, Ray Jui wrote:
> >> >>
> >> >>
> >> >> On 8/28/2015 4:47 PM, Jon Mason wrote:
> >> >>> Add a very minimalistic set of Northstar Plus Device Tree files which
> >> >>> describes the SoC and the BCM958625 implementation.  The perpherials
> >> >>> described are:
> >> >>>
> >> >>> ARM Cortex A9 CPU
> >> >>> 2 8250 UARTs
> >> >>> ARM GIC
> >> >>> PL310 L2 Cache
> >> >>> ARM A9 Global timer
> 
> [...]
> 
> >> >>> + apb {
> >> >>> +         compatible = "arm,amba-bus", "simple-bus";
> >> >>
> >> >> Should "arm,amba-bus" has a separate bus node with AMBA compatible
> >> >> devices declared in there (e.g, pl330, spi-pl022, and etc.) in the
> >> >> future after they are brought up? To my best knowledge, "ns16550a" UART
> >> >> is NOT an AMBA compatible device.
> 
> IIRC, "arm,amba-bus" is not documented nor used. It isn't really
> needed as there is no s/w visible feature to an AMBA bus. There are
> also multiple flavors of AMBA buses, so it is pretty meaningless.
> 
> >> > APB is an AMBA bus, so this part is accurate.  The block diagram of
> >> > the SoC has the UARTs (and other perpherials) hanging off of the APB
> >> > bus.  So, this organization follows the block diagram.
> >>
> >> Okay so the "apb" node can be used for amba compatible devices
> >> (arm,amba-bus) and/or simple platform devices (simple-bus). I guess
> >> that's fine and I now see that there are some other dtsi also doing it
> >> this way.
> 
> I think what is meant here by "amba compatible devices" is really ARM
> Primecell peripherals which are the ARM IP with standard ID registers.
> These are designated by "arm,primecell" compatible strings for the
> device not the bus compatible string.

Okay, based on this and the comments above, I'll remove all references
to the amba bus and just make a simple bus called AXI (off which all
of the prepherials will be located).

Thanks,
Jon

> 
> >>
> >> > While the
> >> > UART drivers are not AMBA aware, there appears to be no issues with
> >> > this layout (as the HW/drivers come up without issue). Unless there
> >> > is an unforeseen issue with having non-AMBA aware devices on the DT
> >> > AMBA bus, I would think it best to organize it to match the block
> >> > disgram.
> >> >
> >>
> >> UART runs fine because you also have "simple-bus" listed as the
> >> compatible string so uart is populated as standard platform device.
> >>
> >> >>> +         interrupt-parent = <&gic>;
> >> >>> +         ranges = <0x00000000 0x18000000 0x00001000>;
> >> >>
> >> >> Does the 'apb' bus mean to cover all peripherals connected through APB?
> >> >> If so, the size is only 0x1000 and that seems to be too small...
> >> >
> >> > This is all that is currently needed.  I was planning on expanding it
> >> > as I added more devices.
> >>
> >> Sure.
> >>
> >> I haven't checked the datahsheet but based on the layout (which seems
> >> quite similar to Cygnus), I assume the range for these devices should be
> >> 0x18000000 - 0x18ffffff? Just want to make sure there are no other
> >> devices come before 0x18000000 so you don't need to change all these reg
> >> offsets in the future.
> >
> > Based on the devices listed in the block diagram (and not including
> > those on the AXI bus):
> > i2c 0x18038000
> > spi 0x18027200
> > gpio 0x18000060
> > pwm 0x18031000
> > wdt 0x18039000
> >
> > and a few others.
> >
> > Looking at the sources, all the ARM IP is 0x19000000 and the rest is
> > 0x18000000.  The only part that is a little harry is the clocks, which
> > have BCM and ARM (which causes the addresses to be both 0x19000000 and
> > 0x18000000).  But, we can handle that when we upstream that part (which
> > should be very soon).
> 
> If you can tell that 0x19000000 is a separate bus at some level, then
> it makes sense to separate it. You can't always tell without detailed
> internal bus diagrams.
> 
> Rob



More information about the linux-arm-kernel mailing list