[PATCH 1/3] ARM: dts: Turn on USB host vbus on rk3288-evb

Doug Anderson dianders at chromium.org
Wed Jul 30 12:54:53 PDT 2014


Heiko,

On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 11:24 AM, Heiko Stübner <heiko at sntech.de> wrote:
> Hi Doug,
>
> Am Mittwoch, 30. Juli 2014, 08:13:52 schrieb Doug Anderson:
>> On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 4:24 AM, Heiko Stübner <heiko at sntech.de> wrote:
>> > Am Dienstag, 29. Juli 2014, 16:24:31 schrieb Doug Anderson:
>> >> There is no phy driver that works on the Rockchip board for either USB
>> >> host port yet.  For now just hardcode the vbus signal to be on all the
>> >> time which makes both the dwc2 host and the EHCI port work.
>> >>
>> >> Signed-off-by: Doug Anderson <dianders at chromium.org>
>> >> ---
>> >>
>> >>  arch/arm/boot/dts/rk3288-evb.dtsi | 18 ++++++++++++++++++
>> >>  1 file changed, 18 insertions(+)
>> >>
>> >> diff --git a/arch/arm/boot/dts/rk3288-evb.dtsi
>> >> b/arch/arm/boot/dts/rk3288-evb.dtsi index 749e20d..efd625e 100644
>> >> --- a/arch/arm/boot/dts/rk3288-evb.dtsi
>> >> +++ b/arch/arm/boot/dts/rk3288-evb.dtsi
>> >> @@ -35,6 +35,18 @@
>> >>
>> >>                       debounce-interval = <100>;
>> >>
>> >>               };
>> >>
>> >>       };
>> >>
>> >> +
>> >> +     /* This turns on vbus for both host0 (ehci) and host1 (dwc2) */
>> >> +     usb_host_vbus_regulator: usb-host-vbus-regulator {
>> >> +             compatible = "regulator-fixed";
>> >> +             enable-active-high;
>> >> +             gpio = <&gpio0 14 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>;
>> >> +             pinctrl-names = "default";
>> >> +             pinctrl-0 = <&usb_host_vbus>;
>> >> +             regulator-name = "usb-host-vbus";
>> >> +             regulator-always-on;
>> >> +             regulator-boot-on;
>> >> +     };
>> >>
>> >>  };
>> >
>> > It seems I have a slightly outdated schematics pdf for the evb ... and
>> > only
>> > see the OTG vbus pin, on <&gpio0 12>, but am missing the whole host vbus.
>>
>> I have schematics that claim to be from January 25, 2014 and claim to
>> be rev 1.0.  On my schematics:
>>
>> * GPIO0_B4 (12) = OTG_VBUS_DRV = pin 233 of the mainboard connector
>> * GPIO0_B6 (14) = HOST_VBUS_DRV = pin 239 of the mainboard connector
>>
>> On the mainboard schematics I have the OTG signal (233) doesn't
>> actually go to the OTG port.  It goes to a debug header and nowhere
>> else.  The HOST VBUS controls VBUS on both of the two "host" ports.
>>
>> > Could you think about finding another name for the handle? For example, in
>> > my incomplete evb-schematics the supply coming from the otg regulator is
>> > called vcc50_usb and there should be something similar for the host
>> > supply, so I'd like something like
>> >
>> >         vcc50_usbhost: usb-host-vbus-regulator { /* or whatever it gets
>> >         called */
>> >         ...
>> >         };
>> >
>> > simply to keep with the supply names defined in the schematics - makes
>> > reading easier.
>>
>> I did!  ;)  ...but I matched my schematics, not yours.  Can you
>> provide the date / version number from your schematics and we can see
>> which is newer?  Just for reference I was emailed schematics last week
>> but that doesn't necessarily guarantee that they're the newest ones.
>
> the schematics I have is "RK3288_BETA", REV 0.2, created in 2014/02/12, last
> changed on 2014/03/04.

OK, yours is clearly newer.


> At least in my schematics on page 16 of 44, the OTG_VBUS_DRV pin leads to a
> switch, that gets supplied by VCC50_BOOST and emits the VCC50_USB .
> So, a later phy node should in the otg case probably have a
>         whatever-supply = <&vcc50_usb>;
> and not
>         whatever-supply = <&usb_otg_vbus_regulator>

Ah, nice.  I wonder if that's the "2.0" mainboard?  I've seen some
people with that.  I have a "1.0 mainboard".


> And there I'd guess the host supply will probably be structured similarly -
> even if I can't see it right now :-) .
>
>
>> Given the above, I'm not planning to spin this patch unless you
>> confirm you want me to.  Thanks!  :)
>
> I'd like the regulator handle to be named after the supply name, not after the
> pin-name :-) .

Got it.  That means I can use the pin name for the pinctrl, which is nice.

One thing I'm always wary of: hardware designers tend to like to
change the names of things from revision to revision.

-Doug



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