| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1 |            Booting the Linux/ppc kernel without Open Firmware | 
 | 2 |            -------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 3 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 4 | (c) 2005 Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh at kernel.crashing.org>, | 
 | 5 |     IBM Corp. | 
 | 6 | (c) 2005 Becky Bruce <becky.bruce at freescale.com>, | 
 | 7 |     Freescale Semiconductor, FSL SOC and 32-bit additions | 
| Vitaly Wool | 28f9ec3 | 2006-11-20 16:32:39 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 8 | (c) 2006 MontaVista Software, Inc. | 
 | 9 |     Flash chip node definition | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 10 |  | 
| Stuart Yoder | 5e1e9ba | 2007-06-06 04:29:14 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 11 | Table of Contents | 
 | 12 | ================= | 
 | 13 |  | 
 | 14 |   I - Introduction | 
 | 15 |     1) Entry point for arch/powerpc | 
 | 16 |     2) Board support | 
 | 17 |  | 
 | 18 |   II - The DT block format | 
 | 19 |     1) Header | 
 | 20 |     2) Device tree generalities | 
 | 21 |     3) Device tree "structure" block | 
 | 22 |     4) Device tree "strings" block | 
 | 23 |  | 
 | 24 |   III - Required content of the device tree | 
 | 25 |     1) Note about cells and address representation | 
 | 26 |     2) Note about "compatible" properties | 
 | 27 |     3) Note about "name" properties | 
 | 28 |     4) Note about node and property names and character set | 
 | 29 |     5) Required nodes and properties | 
 | 30 |       a) The root node | 
 | 31 |       b) The /cpus node | 
 | 32 |       c) The /cpus/* nodes | 
 | 33 |       d) the /memory node(s) | 
 | 34 |       e) The /chosen node | 
 | 35 |       f) the /soc<SOCname> node | 
 | 36 |  | 
 | 37 |   IV - "dtc", the device tree compiler | 
 | 38 |  | 
 | 39 |   V - Recommendations for a bootloader | 
 | 40 |  | 
 | 41 |   VI - System-on-a-chip devices and nodes | 
 | 42 |     1) Defining child nodes of an SOC | 
 | 43 |     2) Representing devices without a current OF specification | 
 | 44 |       a) MDIO IO device | 
| Stuart Yoder | 5e1e9ba | 2007-06-06 04:29:14 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 45 |       b) Gianfar-compatible ethernet nodes | 
| Roy Zang | a4ecaba | 2007-06-19 15:19:31 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 46 |       c) PHY nodes | 
| Stuart Yoder | 5e1e9ba | 2007-06-06 04:29:14 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 47 |       d) Interrupt controllers | 
 | 48 |       e) I2C | 
 | 49 |       f) Freescale SOC USB controllers | 
 | 50 |       g) Freescale SOC SEC Security Engines | 
 | 51 |       h) Board Control and Status (BCSR) | 
 | 52 |       i) Freescale QUICC Engine module (QE) | 
| David Gibson | 2099172 | 2007-09-07 13:23:53 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 53 |       j) CFI or JEDEC memory-mapped NOR flash | 
| Roy Zang | 3b824f8 | 2007-06-19 15:19:18 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 54 |       k) Global Utilities Block | 
| Timur Tabi | bc556ba | 2008-01-08 10:30:58 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 55 |       l) Freescale Communications Processor Module | 
 | 56 |       m) Chipselect/Local Bus | 
 | 57 |       n) 4xx/Axon EMAC ethernet nodes | 
 | 58 |       o) Xilinx IP cores | 
| Timur Tabi | c7d24a2 | 2008-01-18 09:24:53 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 59 |       p) Freescale Synchronous Serial Interface | 
| Valentine Barshak | 41abd68 | 2007-09-25 05:27:56 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 60 | 	  q) USB EHCI controllers | 
| Stuart Yoder | 5e1e9ba | 2007-06-06 04:29:14 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 61 |  | 
 | 62 |   VII - Specifying interrupt information for devices | 
 | 63 |     1) interrupts property | 
 | 64 |     2) interrupt-parent property | 
 | 65 |     3) OpenPIC Interrupt Controllers | 
 | 66 |     4) ISA Interrupt Controllers | 
 | 67 |  | 
 | 68 |   Appendix A - Sample SOC node for MPC8540 | 
 | 69 |  | 
 | 70 |  | 
 | 71 | Revision Information | 
 | 72 | ==================== | 
 | 73 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 74 |    May 18, 2005: Rev 0.1 - Initial draft, no chapter III yet. | 
 | 75 |  | 
 | 76 |    May 19, 2005: Rev 0.2 - Add chapter III and bits & pieces here or | 
 | 77 |                            clarifies the fact that a lot of things are | 
 | 78 |                            optional, the kernel only requires a very | 
 | 79 |                            small device tree, though it is encouraged | 
 | 80 |                            to provide an as complete one as possible. | 
 | 81 |  | 
 | 82 |    May 24, 2005: Rev 0.3 - Precise that DT block has to be in RAM | 
 | 83 | 			 - Misc fixes | 
 | 84 | 			 - Define version 3 and new format version 16 | 
 | 85 | 			   for the DT block (version 16 needs kernel | 
 | 86 | 			   patches, will be fwd separately). | 
 | 87 | 			   String block now has a size, and full path | 
 | 88 | 			   is replaced by unit name for more | 
 | 89 | 			   compactness. | 
 | 90 | 			   linux,phandle is made optional, only nodes | 
 | 91 | 			   that are referenced by other nodes need it. | 
 | 92 | 			   "name" property is now automatically | 
 | 93 | 			   deduced from the unit name | 
 | 94 |  | 
 | 95 |    June 1, 2005: Rev 0.4 - Correct confusion between OF_DT_END and | 
 | 96 |                            OF_DT_END_NODE in structure definition. | 
 | 97 |                          - Change version 16 format to always align | 
 | 98 |                            property data to 4 bytes. Since tokens are | 
 | 99 |                            already aligned, that means no specific | 
| Matt LaPlante | 5d3f083 | 2006-11-30 05:21:10 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 100 |                            required alignment between property size | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 101 |                            and property data. The old style variable | 
 | 102 |                            alignment would make it impossible to do | 
 | 103 |                            "simple" insertion of properties using | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 104 |                            memmove (thanks Milton for | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 105 |                            noticing). Updated kernel patch as well | 
| Matt LaPlante | 5d3f083 | 2006-11-30 05:21:10 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 106 | 			 - Correct a few more alignment constraints | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 107 | 			 - Add a chapter about the device-tree | 
 | 108 |                            compiler and the textural representation of | 
 | 109 |                            the tree that can be "compiled" by dtc. | 
 | 110 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 111 |    November 21, 2005: Rev 0.5 | 
 | 112 | 			 - Additions/generalizations for 32-bit | 
 | 113 | 			 - Changed to reflect the new arch/powerpc | 
 | 114 | 			   structure | 
 | 115 | 			 - Added chapter VI | 
 | 116 |  | 
 | 117 |  | 
 | 118 |  ToDo: | 
 | 119 | 	- Add some definitions of interrupt tree (simple/complex) | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 120 | 	- Add some definitions for PCI host bridges | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 121 | 	- Add some common address format examples | 
 | 122 | 	- Add definitions for standard properties and "compatible" | 
 | 123 | 	  names for cells that are not already defined by the existing | 
 | 124 | 	  OF spec. | 
 | 125 | 	- Compare FSL SOC use of PCI to standard and make sure no new | 
 | 126 | 	  node definition required. | 
 | 127 | 	- Add more information about node definitions for SOC devices | 
 | 128 |   	  that currently have no standard, like the FSL CPM. | 
 | 129 |  | 
 | 130 |  | 
 | 131 | I - Introduction | 
 | 132 | ================ | 
 | 133 |  | 
 | 134 | During the recent development of the Linux/ppc64 kernel, and more | 
 | 135 | specifically, the addition of new platform types outside of the old | 
 | 136 | IBM pSeries/iSeries pair, it was decided to enforce some strict rules | 
 | 137 | regarding the kernel entry and bootloader <-> kernel interfaces, in | 
 | 138 | order to avoid the degeneration that had become the ppc32 kernel entry | 
 | 139 | point and the way a new platform should be added to the kernel. The | 
 | 140 | legacy iSeries platform breaks those rules as it predates this scheme, | 
 | 141 | but no new board support will be accepted in the main tree that | 
 | 142 | doesn't follows them properly.  In addition, since the advent of the | 
 | 143 | arch/powerpc merged architecture for ppc32 and ppc64, new 32-bit | 
 | 144 | platforms and 32-bit platforms which move into arch/powerpc will be | 
 | 145 | required to use these rules as well. | 
 | 146 |  | 
 | 147 | The main requirement that will be defined in more detail below is | 
 | 148 | the presence of a device-tree whose format is defined after Open | 
 | 149 | Firmware specification. However, in order to make life easier | 
 | 150 | to embedded board vendors, the kernel doesn't require the device-tree | 
 | 151 | to represent every device in the system and only requires some nodes | 
 | 152 | and properties to be present. This will be described in detail in | 
 | 153 | section III, but, for example, the kernel does not require you to | 
 | 154 | create a node for every PCI device in the system. It is a requirement | 
 | 155 | to have a node for PCI host bridges in order to provide interrupt | 
 | 156 | routing informations and memory/IO ranges, among others. It is also | 
 | 157 | recommended to define nodes for on chip devices and other busses that | 
 | 158 | don't specifically fit in an existing OF specification. This creates a | 
 | 159 | great flexibility in the way the kernel can then probe those and match | 
 | 160 | drivers to device, without having to hard code all sorts of tables. It | 
 | 161 | also makes it more flexible for board vendors to do minor hardware | 
 | 162 | upgrades without significantly impacting the kernel code or cluttering | 
 | 163 | it with special cases. | 
 | 164 |  | 
 | 165 |  | 
 | 166 | 1) Entry point for arch/powerpc | 
 | 167 | ------------------------------- | 
 | 168 |  | 
 | 169 |    There is one and one single entry point to the kernel, at the start | 
 | 170 |    of the kernel image. That entry point supports two calling | 
 | 171 |    conventions: | 
 | 172 |  | 
 | 173 |         a) Boot from Open Firmware. If your firmware is compatible | 
 | 174 |         with Open Firmware (IEEE 1275) or provides an OF compatible | 
 | 175 |         client interface API (support for "interpret" callback of | 
 | 176 |         forth words isn't required), you can enter the kernel with: | 
 | 177 |  | 
 | 178 |               r5 : OF callback pointer as defined by IEEE 1275 | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 179 |               bindings to powerpc. Only the 32-bit client interface | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 180 |               is currently supported | 
 | 181 |  | 
 | 182 |               r3, r4 : address & length of an initrd if any or 0 | 
 | 183 |  | 
 | 184 |               The MMU is either on or off; the kernel will run the | 
 | 185 |               trampoline located in arch/powerpc/kernel/prom_init.c to | 
 | 186 |               extract the device-tree and other information from open | 
 | 187 |               firmware and build a flattened device-tree as described | 
 | 188 |               in b). prom_init() will then re-enter the kernel using | 
 | 189 |               the second method. This trampoline code runs in the | 
 | 190 |               context of the firmware, which is supposed to handle all | 
 | 191 |               exceptions during that time. | 
 | 192 |  | 
 | 193 |         b) Direct entry with a flattened device-tree block. This entry | 
 | 194 |         point is called by a) after the OF trampoline and can also be | 
 | 195 |         called directly by a bootloader that does not support the Open | 
 | 196 |         Firmware client interface. It is also used by "kexec" to | 
 | 197 |         implement "hot" booting of a new kernel from a previous | 
 | 198 |         running one. This method is what I will describe in more | 
 | 199 |         details in this document, as method a) is simply standard Open | 
 | 200 |         Firmware, and thus should be implemented according to the | 
 | 201 |         various standard documents defining it and its binding to the | 
 | 202 |         PowerPC platform. The entry point definition then becomes: | 
 | 203 |  | 
 | 204 |                 r3 : physical pointer to the device-tree block | 
 | 205 |                 (defined in chapter II) in RAM | 
 | 206 |  | 
 | 207 |                 r4 : physical pointer to the kernel itself. This is | 
 | 208 |                 used by the assembly code to properly disable the MMU | 
 | 209 |                 in case you are entering the kernel with MMU enabled | 
 | 210 |                 and a non-1:1 mapping. | 
 | 211 |  | 
| Matt LaPlante | 2fe0ae7 | 2006-10-03 22:50:39 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 212 |                 r5 : NULL (as to differentiate with method a) | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 213 |  | 
 | 214 |         Note about SMP entry: Either your firmware puts your other | 
 | 215 |         CPUs in some sleep loop or spin loop in ROM where you can get | 
 | 216 |         them out via a soft reset or some other means, in which case | 
 | 217 |         you don't need to care, or you'll have to enter the kernel | 
 | 218 |         with all CPUs. The way to do that with method b) will be | 
 | 219 |         described in a later revision of this document. | 
 | 220 |  | 
 | 221 |  | 
 | 222 | 2) Board support | 
 | 223 | ---------------- | 
 | 224 |  | 
 | 225 | 64-bit kernels: | 
 | 226 |  | 
 | 227 |    Board supports (platforms) are not exclusive config options. An | 
 | 228 |    arbitrary set of board supports can be built in a single kernel | 
 | 229 |    image. The kernel will "know" what set of functions to use for a | 
 | 230 |    given platform based on the content of the device-tree. Thus, you | 
 | 231 |    should: | 
 | 232 |  | 
 | 233 |         a) add your platform support as a _boolean_ option in | 
 | 234 |         arch/powerpc/Kconfig, following the example of PPC_PSERIES, | 
 | 235 |         PPC_PMAC and PPC_MAPLE. The later is probably a good | 
 | 236 |         example of a board support to start from. | 
 | 237 |  | 
 | 238 |         b) create your main platform file as | 
 | 239 |         "arch/powerpc/platforms/myplatform/myboard_setup.c" and add it | 
 | 240 |         to the Makefile under the condition of your CONFIG_ | 
 | 241 |         option. This file will define a structure of type "ppc_md" | 
 | 242 |         containing the various callbacks that the generic code will | 
 | 243 |         use to get to your platform specific code | 
 | 244 |  | 
 | 245 |         c) Add a reference to your "ppc_md" structure in the | 
 | 246 |         "machines" table in arch/powerpc/kernel/setup_64.c if you are | 
 | 247 |         a 64-bit platform. | 
 | 248 |  | 
 | 249 |         d) request and get assigned a platform number (see PLATFORM_* | 
 | 250 |         constants in include/asm-powerpc/processor.h | 
 | 251 |  | 
 | 252 | 32-bit embedded kernels: | 
 | 253 |  | 
 | 254 |   Currently, board support is essentially an exclusive config option. | 
 | 255 |   The kernel is configured for a single platform.  Part of the reason | 
 | 256 |   for this is to keep kernels on embedded systems small and efficient; | 
 | 257 |   part of this is due to the fact the code is already that way. In the | 
 | 258 |   future, a kernel may support multiple platforms, but only if the | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 259 |   platforms feature the same core architecture.  A single kernel build | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 260 |   cannot support both configurations with Book E and configurations | 
 | 261 |   with classic Powerpc architectures. | 
 | 262 |  | 
 | 263 |   32-bit embedded platforms that are moved into arch/powerpc using a | 
 | 264 |   flattened device tree should adopt the merged tree practice of | 
 | 265 |   setting ppc_md up dynamically, even though the kernel is currently | 
 | 266 |   built with support for only a single platform at a time.  This allows | 
 | 267 |   unification of the setup code, and will make it easier to go to a | 
 | 268 |   multiple-platform-support model in the future. | 
 | 269 |  | 
 | 270 | NOTE: I believe the above will be true once Ben's done with the merge | 
 | 271 | of the boot sequences.... someone speak up if this is wrong! | 
 | 272 |  | 
 | 273 |   To add a 32-bit embedded platform support, follow the instructions | 
 | 274 |   for 64-bit platforms above, with the exception that the Kconfig | 
 | 275 |   option should be set up such that the kernel builds exclusively for | 
 | 276 |   the platform selected.  The processor type for the platform should | 
 | 277 |   enable another config option to select the specific board | 
 | 278 |   supported. | 
 | 279 |  | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 280 | NOTE: If Ben doesn't merge the setup files, may need to change this to | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 281 | point to setup_32.c | 
 | 282 |  | 
 | 283 |  | 
 | 284 |    I will describe later the boot process and various callbacks that | 
 | 285 |    your platform should implement. | 
 | 286 |  | 
 | 287 |  | 
 | 288 | II - The DT block format | 
 | 289 | ======================== | 
 | 290 |  | 
 | 291 |  | 
 | 292 | This chapter defines the actual format of the flattened device-tree | 
 | 293 | passed to the kernel. The actual content of it and kernel requirements | 
 | 294 | are described later. You can find example of code manipulating that | 
 | 295 | format in various places, including arch/powerpc/kernel/prom_init.c | 
 | 296 | which will generate a flattened device-tree from the Open Firmware | 
 | 297 | representation, or the fs2dt utility which is part of the kexec tools | 
 | 298 | which will generate one from a filesystem representation. It is | 
 | 299 | expected that a bootloader like uboot provides a bit more support, | 
 | 300 | that will be discussed later as well. | 
 | 301 |  | 
 | 302 | Note: The block has to be in main memory. It has to be accessible in | 
 | 303 | both real mode and virtual mode with no mapping other than main | 
 | 304 | memory. If you are writing a simple flash bootloader, it should copy | 
 | 305 | the block to RAM before passing it to the kernel. | 
 | 306 |  | 
 | 307 |  | 
 | 308 | 1) Header | 
 | 309 | --------- | 
 | 310 |  | 
 | 311 |    The kernel is entered with r3 pointing to an area of memory that is | 
| Matt LaPlante | d6bc8ac | 2006-10-03 22:54:15 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 312 |    roughly described in include/asm-powerpc/prom.h by the structure | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 313 |    boot_param_header: | 
 | 314 |  | 
 | 315 | struct boot_param_header { | 
 | 316 |         u32     magic;                  /* magic word OF_DT_HEADER */ | 
 | 317 |         u32     totalsize;              /* total size of DT block */ | 
 | 318 |         u32     off_dt_struct;          /* offset to structure */ | 
 | 319 |         u32     off_dt_strings;         /* offset to strings */ | 
 | 320 |         u32     off_mem_rsvmap;         /* offset to memory reserve map | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 321 |                                            */ | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 322 |         u32     version;                /* format version */ | 
 | 323 |         u32     last_comp_version;      /* last compatible version */ | 
 | 324 |  | 
 | 325 |         /* version 2 fields below */ | 
 | 326 |         u32     boot_cpuid_phys;        /* Which physical CPU id we're | 
 | 327 |                                            booting on */ | 
 | 328 |         /* version 3 fields below */ | 
 | 329 |         u32     size_dt_strings;        /* size of the strings block */ | 
| David Gibson | 0e0293c | 2007-03-14 11:50:40 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 330 |  | 
 | 331 |         /* version 17 fields below */ | 
 | 332 |         u32	size_dt_struct;		/* size of the DT structure block */ | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 333 | }; | 
 | 334 |  | 
 | 335 |    Along with the constants: | 
 | 336 |  | 
 | 337 | /* Definitions used by the flattened device tree */ | 
 | 338 | #define OF_DT_HEADER            0xd00dfeed      /* 4: version, | 
 | 339 | 						   4: total size */ | 
 | 340 | #define OF_DT_BEGIN_NODE        0x1             /* Start node: full name | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 341 | 						   */ | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 342 | #define OF_DT_END_NODE          0x2             /* End node */ | 
 | 343 | #define OF_DT_PROP              0x3             /* Property: name off, | 
 | 344 |                                                    size, content */ | 
 | 345 | #define OF_DT_END               0x9 | 
 | 346 |  | 
 | 347 |    All values in this header are in big endian format, the various | 
 | 348 |    fields in this header are defined more precisely below. All | 
 | 349 |    "offset" values are in bytes from the start of the header; that is | 
 | 350 |    from the value of r3. | 
 | 351 |  | 
 | 352 |    - magic | 
 | 353 |  | 
 | 354 |      This is a magic value that "marks" the beginning of the | 
 | 355 |      device-tree block header. It contains the value 0xd00dfeed and is | 
 | 356 |      defined by the constant OF_DT_HEADER | 
 | 357 |  | 
 | 358 |    - totalsize | 
 | 359 |  | 
 | 360 |      This is the total size of the DT block including the header. The | 
 | 361 |      "DT" block should enclose all data structures defined in this | 
 | 362 |      chapter (who are pointed to by offsets in this header). That is, | 
 | 363 |      the device-tree structure, strings, and the memory reserve map. | 
 | 364 |  | 
 | 365 |    - off_dt_struct | 
 | 366 |  | 
 | 367 |      This is an offset from the beginning of the header to the start | 
 | 368 |      of the "structure" part the device tree. (see 2) device tree) | 
 | 369 |  | 
 | 370 |    - off_dt_strings | 
 | 371 |  | 
 | 372 |      This is an offset from the beginning of the header to the start | 
 | 373 |      of the "strings" part of the device-tree | 
 | 374 |  | 
 | 375 |    - off_mem_rsvmap | 
 | 376 |  | 
 | 377 |      This is an offset from the beginning of the header to the start | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 378 |      of the reserved memory map. This map is a list of pairs of 64- | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 379 |      bit integers. Each pair is a physical address and a size. The | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 380 |      list is terminated by an entry of size 0. This map provides the | 
 | 381 |      kernel with a list of physical memory areas that are "reserved" | 
 | 382 |      and thus not to be used for memory allocations, especially during | 
 | 383 |      early initialization. The kernel needs to allocate memory during | 
 | 384 |      boot for things like un-flattening the device-tree, allocating an | 
 | 385 |      MMU hash table, etc... Those allocations must be done in such a | 
 | 386 |      way to avoid overriding critical things like, on Open Firmware | 
 | 387 |      capable machines, the RTAS instance, or on some pSeries, the TCE | 
 | 388 |      tables used for the iommu. Typically, the reserve map should | 
 | 389 |      contain _at least_ this DT block itself (header,total_size). If | 
 | 390 |      you are passing an initrd to the kernel, you should reserve it as | 
 | 391 |      well. You do not need to reserve the kernel image itself. The map | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 392 |      should be 64-bit aligned. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 393 |  | 
 | 394 |    - version | 
 | 395 |  | 
 | 396 |      This is the version of this structure. Version 1 stops | 
 | 397 |      here. Version 2 adds an additional field boot_cpuid_phys. | 
 | 398 |      Version 3 adds the size of the strings block, allowing the kernel | 
 | 399 |      to reallocate it easily at boot and free up the unused flattened | 
 | 400 |      structure after expansion. Version 16 introduces a new more | 
 | 401 |      "compact" format for the tree itself that is however not backward | 
| David Gibson | 0e0293c | 2007-03-14 11:50:40 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 402 |      compatible. Version 17 adds an additional field, size_dt_struct, | 
 | 403 |      allowing it to be reallocated or moved more easily (this is | 
 | 404 |      particularly useful for bootloaders which need to make | 
 | 405 |      adjustments to a device tree based on probed information). You | 
 | 406 |      should always generate a structure of the highest version defined | 
 | 407 |      at the time of your implementation. Currently that is version 17, | 
 | 408 |      unless you explicitly aim at being backward compatible. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 409 |  | 
 | 410 |    - last_comp_version | 
 | 411 |  | 
 | 412 |      Last compatible version. This indicates down to what version of | 
 | 413 |      the DT block you are backward compatible. For example, version 2 | 
 | 414 |      is backward compatible with version 1 (that is, a kernel build | 
 | 415 |      for version 1 will be able to boot with a version 2 format). You | 
 | 416 |      should put a 1 in this field if you generate a device tree of | 
| David Gibson | 0e0293c | 2007-03-14 11:50:40 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 417 |      version 1 to 3, or 16 if you generate a tree of version 16 or 17 | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 418 |      using the new unit name format. | 
 | 419 |  | 
 | 420 |    - boot_cpuid_phys | 
 | 421 |  | 
 | 422 |      This field only exist on version 2 headers. It indicate which | 
 | 423 |      physical CPU ID is calling the kernel entry point. This is used, | 
 | 424 |      among others, by kexec. If you are on an SMP system, this value | 
 | 425 |      should match the content of the "reg" property of the CPU node in | 
 | 426 |      the device-tree corresponding to the CPU calling the kernel entry | 
 | 427 |      point (see further chapters for more informations on the required | 
 | 428 |      device-tree contents) | 
 | 429 |  | 
| David Gibson | 0e0293c | 2007-03-14 11:50:40 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 430 |    - size_dt_strings | 
 | 431 |  | 
 | 432 |      This field only exists on version 3 and later headers.  It | 
 | 433 |      gives the size of the "strings" section of the device tree (which | 
 | 434 |      starts at the offset given by off_dt_strings). | 
 | 435 |  | 
 | 436 |    - size_dt_struct | 
 | 437 |  | 
 | 438 |      This field only exists on version 17 and later headers.  It gives | 
 | 439 |      the size of the "structure" section of the device tree (which | 
 | 440 |      starts at the offset given by off_dt_struct). | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 441 |  | 
 | 442 |    So the typical layout of a DT block (though the various parts don't | 
 | 443 |    need to be in that order) looks like this (addresses go from top to | 
 | 444 |    bottom): | 
 | 445 |  | 
 | 446 |  | 
 | 447 |              ------------------------------ | 
 | 448 |        r3 -> |  struct boot_param_header  | | 
 | 449 |              ------------------------------ | 
 | 450 |              |      (alignment gap) (*)   | | 
 | 451 |              ------------------------------ | 
 | 452 |              |      memory reserve map    | | 
 | 453 |              ------------------------------ | 
 | 454 |              |      (alignment gap)       | | 
 | 455 |              ------------------------------ | 
 | 456 |              |                            | | 
 | 457 |              |    device-tree structure   | | 
 | 458 |              |                            | | 
 | 459 |              ------------------------------ | 
 | 460 |              |      (alignment gap)       | | 
 | 461 |              ------------------------------ | 
 | 462 |              |                            | | 
 | 463 |              |     device-tree strings    | | 
 | 464 |              |                            | | 
 | 465 |       -----> ------------------------------ | 
 | 466 |       | | 
 | 467 |       | | 
 | 468 |       --- (r3 + totalsize) | 
 | 469 |  | 
 | 470 |   (*) The alignment gaps are not necessarily present; their presence | 
 | 471 |       and size are dependent on the various alignment requirements of | 
 | 472 |       the individual data blocks. | 
 | 473 |  | 
 | 474 |  | 
 | 475 | 2) Device tree generalities | 
 | 476 | --------------------------- | 
 | 477 |  | 
 | 478 | This device-tree itself is separated in two different blocks, a | 
 | 479 | structure block and a strings block. Both need to be aligned to a 4 | 
 | 480 | byte boundary. | 
 | 481 |  | 
 | 482 | First, let's quickly describe the device-tree concept before detailing | 
 | 483 | the storage format. This chapter does _not_ describe the detail of the | 
 | 484 | required types of nodes & properties for the kernel, this is done | 
 | 485 | later in chapter III. | 
 | 486 |  | 
 | 487 | The device-tree layout is strongly inherited from the definition of | 
 | 488 | the Open Firmware IEEE 1275 device-tree. It's basically a tree of | 
 | 489 | nodes, each node having two or more named properties. A property can | 
 | 490 | have a value or not. | 
 | 491 |  | 
 | 492 | It is a tree, so each node has one and only one parent except for the | 
 | 493 | root node who has no parent. | 
 | 494 |  | 
 | 495 | A node has 2 names. The actual node name is generally contained in a | 
 | 496 | property of type "name" in the node property list whose value is a | 
 | 497 | zero terminated string and is mandatory for version 1 to 3 of the | 
| David Gibson | 0e0293c | 2007-03-14 11:50:40 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 498 | format definition (as it is in Open Firmware). Version 16 makes it | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 499 | optional as it can generate it from the unit name defined below. | 
 | 500 |  | 
| Matt LaPlante | 2fe0ae7 | 2006-10-03 22:50:39 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 501 | There is also a "unit name" that is used to differentiate nodes with | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 502 | the same name at the same level, it is usually made of the node | 
| Matt LaPlante | 2fe0ae7 | 2006-10-03 22:50:39 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 503 | names, the "@" sign, and a "unit address", which definition is | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 504 | specific to the bus type the node sits on. | 
 | 505 |  | 
 | 506 | The unit name doesn't exist as a property per-se but is included in | 
 | 507 | the device-tree structure. It is typically used to represent "path" in | 
 | 508 | the device-tree. More details about the actual format of these will be | 
 | 509 | below. | 
 | 510 |  | 
 | 511 | The kernel powerpc generic code does not make any formal use of the | 
 | 512 | unit address (though some board support code may do) so the only real | 
 | 513 | requirement here for the unit address is to ensure uniqueness of | 
 | 514 | the node unit name at a given level of the tree. Nodes with no notion | 
 | 515 | of address and no possible sibling of the same name (like /memory or | 
 | 516 | /cpus) may omit the unit address in the context of this specification, | 
 | 517 | or use the "@0" default unit address. The unit name is used to define | 
 | 518 | a node "full path", which is the concatenation of all parent node | 
 | 519 | unit names separated with "/". | 
 | 520 |  | 
 | 521 | The root node doesn't have a defined name, and isn't required to have | 
 | 522 | a name property either if you are using version 3 or earlier of the | 
 | 523 | format. It also has no unit address (no @ symbol followed by a unit | 
 | 524 | address). The root node unit name is thus an empty string. The full | 
 | 525 | path to the root node is "/". | 
 | 526 |  | 
 | 527 | Every node which actually represents an actual device (that is, a node | 
 | 528 | which isn't only a virtual "container" for more nodes, like "/cpus" | 
 | 529 | is) is also required to have a "device_type" property indicating the | 
 | 530 | type of node . | 
 | 531 |  | 
 | 532 | Finally, every node that can be referenced from a property in another | 
 | 533 | node is required to have a "linux,phandle" property. Real open | 
 | 534 | firmware implementations provide a unique "phandle" value for every | 
 | 535 | node that the "prom_init()" trampoline code turns into | 
 | 536 | "linux,phandle" properties. However, this is made optional if the | 
 | 537 | flattened device tree is used directly. An example of a node | 
 | 538 | referencing another node via "phandle" is when laying out the | 
 | 539 | interrupt tree which will be described in a further version of this | 
 | 540 | document. | 
 | 541 |  | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 542 | This "linux, phandle" property is a 32-bit value that uniquely | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 543 | identifies a node. You are free to use whatever values or system of | 
 | 544 | values, internal pointers, or whatever to generate these, the only | 
 | 545 | requirement is that every node for which you provide that property has | 
 | 546 | a unique value for it. | 
 | 547 |  | 
 | 548 | Here is an example of a simple device-tree. In this example, an "o" | 
 | 549 | designates a node followed by the node unit name. Properties are | 
 | 550 | presented with their name followed by their content. "content" | 
 | 551 | represents an ASCII string (zero terminated) value, while <content> | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 552 | represents a 32-bit hexadecimal value. The various nodes in this | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 553 | example will be discussed in a later chapter. At this point, it is | 
 | 554 | only meant to give you a idea of what a device-tree looks like. I have | 
 | 555 | purposefully kept the "name" and "linux,phandle" properties which | 
 | 556 | aren't necessary in order to give you a better idea of what the tree | 
 | 557 | looks like in practice. | 
 | 558 |  | 
 | 559 |   / o device-tree | 
 | 560 |       |- name = "device-tree" | 
 | 561 |       |- model = "MyBoardName" | 
 | 562 |       |- compatible = "MyBoardFamilyName" | 
 | 563 |       |- #address-cells = <2> | 
 | 564 |       |- #size-cells = <2> | 
 | 565 |       |- linux,phandle = <0> | 
 | 566 |       | | 
 | 567 |       o cpus | 
 | 568 |       | | - name = "cpus" | 
 | 569 |       | | - linux,phandle = <1> | 
 | 570 |       | | - #address-cells = <1> | 
 | 571 |       | | - #size-cells = <0> | 
 | 572 |       | | | 
 | 573 |       | o PowerPC,970@0 | 
 | 574 |       |   |- name = "PowerPC,970" | 
 | 575 |       |   |- device_type = "cpu" | 
 | 576 |       |   |- reg = <0> | 
 | 577 |       |   |- clock-frequency = <5f5e1000> | 
| Timur Tabi | 32aed2a | 2007-02-14 15:29:07 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 578 |       |   |- 64-bit | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 579 |       |   |- linux,phandle = <2> | 
 | 580 |       | | 
 | 581 |       o memory@0 | 
 | 582 |       | |- name = "memory" | 
 | 583 |       | |- device_type = "memory" | 
 | 584 |       | |- reg = <00000000 00000000 00000000 20000000> | 
 | 585 |       | |- linux,phandle = <3> | 
 | 586 |       | | 
 | 587 |       o chosen | 
 | 588 |         |- name = "chosen" | 
 | 589 |         |- bootargs = "root=/dev/sda2" | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 590 |         |- linux,phandle = <4> | 
 | 591 |  | 
 | 592 | This tree is almost a minimal tree. It pretty much contains the | 
 | 593 | minimal set of required nodes and properties to boot a linux kernel; | 
 | 594 | that is, some basic model informations at the root, the CPUs, and the | 
 | 595 | physical memory layout.  It also includes misc information passed | 
 | 596 | through /chosen, like in this example, the platform type (mandatory) | 
 | 597 | and the kernel command line arguments (optional). | 
 | 598 |  | 
| Timur Tabi | 32aed2a | 2007-02-14 15:29:07 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 599 | The /cpus/PowerPC,970@0/64-bit property is an example of a | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 600 | property without a value. All other properties have a value. The | 
 | 601 | significance of the #address-cells and #size-cells properties will be | 
 | 602 | explained in chapter IV which defines precisely the required nodes and | 
 | 603 | properties and their content. | 
 | 604 |  | 
 | 605 |  | 
 | 606 | 3) Device tree "structure" block | 
 | 607 |  | 
 | 608 | The structure of the device tree is a linearized tree structure. The | 
 | 609 | "OF_DT_BEGIN_NODE" token starts a new node, and the "OF_DT_END_NODE" | 
 | 610 | ends that node definition. Child nodes are simply defined before | 
 | 611 | "OF_DT_END_NODE" (that is nodes within the node). A 'token' is a 32 | 
 | 612 | bit value. The tree has to be "finished" with a OF_DT_END token | 
 | 613 |  | 
 | 614 | Here's the basic structure of a single node: | 
 | 615 |  | 
 | 616 |      * token OF_DT_BEGIN_NODE (that is 0x00000001) | 
 | 617 |      * for version 1 to 3, this is the node full path as a zero | 
 | 618 |        terminated string, starting with "/". For version 16 and later, | 
 | 619 |        this is the node unit name only (or an empty string for the | 
 | 620 |        root node) | 
 | 621 |      * [align gap to next 4 bytes boundary] | 
 | 622 |      * for each property: | 
 | 623 |         * token OF_DT_PROP (that is 0x00000003) | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 624 |         * 32-bit value of property value size in bytes (or 0 if no | 
 | 625 |           value) | 
 | 626 |         * 32-bit value of offset in string block of property name | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 627 |         * property value data if any | 
 | 628 |         * [align gap to next 4 bytes boundary] | 
 | 629 |      * [child nodes if any] | 
 | 630 |      * token OF_DT_END_NODE (that is 0x00000002) | 
 | 631 |  | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 632 | So the node content can be summarized as a start token, a full path, | 
| Matt LaPlante | 53cb472 | 2006-10-03 22:55:17 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 633 | a list of properties, a list of child nodes, and an end token. Every | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 634 | child node is a full node structure itself as defined above. | 
 | 635 |  | 
| David Gibson | eff2ebd | 2007-06-28 15:56:26 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 636 | NOTE: The above definition requires that all property definitions for | 
 | 637 | a particular node MUST precede any subnode definitions for that node. | 
 | 638 | Although the structure would not be ambiguous if properties and | 
 | 639 | subnodes were intermingled, the kernel parser requires that the | 
 | 640 | properties come first (up until at least 2.6.22).  Any tools | 
 | 641 | manipulating a flattened tree must take care to preserve this | 
 | 642 | constraint. | 
 | 643 |  | 
| Matt LaPlante | 53cb472 | 2006-10-03 22:55:17 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 644 | 4) Device tree "strings" block | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 645 |  | 
 | 646 | In order to save space, property names, which are generally redundant, | 
 | 647 | are stored separately in the "strings" block. This block is simply the | 
 | 648 | whole bunch of zero terminated strings for all property names | 
 | 649 | concatenated together. The device-tree property definitions in the | 
 | 650 | structure block will contain offset values from the beginning of the | 
 | 651 | strings block. | 
 | 652 |  | 
 | 653 |  | 
 | 654 | III - Required content of the device tree | 
 | 655 | ========================================= | 
 | 656 |  | 
 | 657 | WARNING: All "linux,*" properties defined in this document apply only | 
 | 658 | to a flattened device-tree. If your platform uses a real | 
 | 659 | implementation of Open Firmware or an implementation compatible with | 
 | 660 | the Open Firmware client interface, those properties will be created | 
 | 661 | by the trampoline code in the kernel's prom_init() file. For example, | 
 | 662 | that's where you'll have to add code to detect your board model and | 
| Matt LaPlante | a2ffd27 | 2006-10-03 22:49:15 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 663 | set the platform number. However, when using the flattened device-tree | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 664 | entry point, there is no prom_init() pass, and thus you have to | 
 | 665 | provide those properties yourself. | 
 | 666 |  | 
 | 667 |  | 
 | 668 | 1) Note about cells and address representation | 
 | 669 | ---------------------------------------------- | 
 | 670 |  | 
 | 671 | The general rule is documented in the various Open Firmware | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 672 | documentations. If you choose to describe a bus with the device-tree | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 673 | and there exist an OF bus binding, then you should follow the | 
 | 674 | specification. However, the kernel does not require every single | 
 | 675 | device or bus to be described by the device tree. | 
 | 676 |  | 
 | 677 | In general, the format of an address for a device is defined by the | 
 | 678 | parent bus type, based on the #address-cells and #size-cells | 
| Mark A. Greer | 5b14e5f | 2008-01-04 02:40:47 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 679 | properties.  Note that the parent's parent definitions of #address-cells | 
 | 680 | and #size-cells are not inhereted so every node with children must specify | 
 | 681 | them.  The kernel requires the root node to have those properties defining | 
 | 682 | addresses format for devices directly mapped on the processor bus. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 683 |  | 
 | 684 | Those 2 properties define 'cells' for representing an address and a | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 685 | size. A "cell" is a 32-bit number. For example, if both contain 2 | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 686 | like the example tree given above, then an address and a size are both | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 687 | composed of 2 cells, and each is a 64-bit number (cells are | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 688 | concatenated and expected to be in big endian format). Another example | 
 | 689 | is the way Apple firmware defines them, with 2 cells for an address | 
 | 690 | and one cell for a size.  Most 32-bit implementations should define | 
 | 691 | #address-cells and #size-cells to 1, which represents a 32-bit value. | 
 | 692 | Some 32-bit processors allow for physical addresses greater than 32 | 
 | 693 | bits; these processors should define #address-cells as 2. | 
 | 694 |  | 
 | 695 | "reg" properties are always a tuple of the type "address size" where | 
 | 696 | the number of cells of address and size is specified by the bus | 
 | 697 | #address-cells and #size-cells. When a bus supports various address | 
 | 698 | spaces and other flags relative to a given address allocation (like | 
 | 699 | prefetchable, etc...) those flags are usually added to the top level | 
 | 700 | bits of the physical address. For example, a PCI physical address is | 
 | 701 | made of 3 cells, the bottom two containing the actual address itself | 
 | 702 | while the top cell contains address space indication, flags, and pci | 
 | 703 | bus & device numbers. | 
 | 704 |  | 
 | 705 | For busses that support dynamic allocation, it's the accepted practice | 
 | 706 | to then not provide the address in "reg" (keep it 0) though while | 
 | 707 | providing a flag indicating the address is dynamically allocated, and | 
 | 708 | then, to provide a separate "assigned-addresses" property that | 
 | 709 | contains the fully allocated addresses. See the PCI OF bindings for | 
 | 710 | details. | 
 | 711 |  | 
 | 712 | In general, a simple bus with no address space bits and no dynamic | 
 | 713 | allocation is preferred if it reflects your hardware, as the existing | 
 | 714 | kernel address parsing functions will work out of the box. If you | 
 | 715 | define a bus type with a more complex address format, including things | 
 | 716 | like address space bits, you'll have to add a bus translator to the | 
 | 717 | prom_parse.c file of the recent kernels for your bus type. | 
 | 718 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | e1fd186 | 2007-12-04 12:08:57 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 719 | The "reg" property only defines addresses and sizes (if #size-cells is | 
 | 720 | non-0) within a given bus. In order to translate addresses upward | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 721 | (that is into parent bus addresses, and possibly into CPU physical | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 722 | addresses), all busses must contain a "ranges" property. If the | 
 | 723 | "ranges" property is missing at a given level, it's assumed that | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | e1fd186 | 2007-12-04 12:08:57 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 724 | translation isn't possible, i.e., the registers are not visible on the | 
 | 725 | parent bus.  The format of the "ranges" property for a bus is a list | 
 | 726 | of: | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 727 |  | 
 | 728 | 	bus address, parent bus address, size | 
 | 729 |  | 
 | 730 | "bus address" is in the format of the bus this bus node is defining, | 
 | 731 | that is, for a PCI bridge, it would be a PCI address. Thus, (bus | 
 | 732 | address, size) defines a range of addresses for child devices. "parent | 
 | 733 | bus address" is in the format of the parent bus of this bus. For | 
 | 734 | example, for a PCI host controller, that would be a CPU address. For a | 
 | 735 | PCI<->ISA bridge, that would be a PCI address. It defines the base | 
 | 736 | address in the parent bus where the beginning of that range is mapped. | 
 | 737 |  | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 738 | For a new 64-bit powerpc board, I recommend either the 2/2 format or | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 739 | Apple's 2/1 format which is slightly more compact since sizes usually | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 740 | fit in a single 32-bit word.   New 32-bit powerpc boards should use a | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 741 | 1/1 format, unless the processor supports physical addresses greater | 
 | 742 | than 32-bits, in which case a 2/1 format is recommended. | 
 | 743 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | e1fd186 | 2007-12-04 12:08:57 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 744 | Alternatively, the "ranges" property may be empty, indicating that the | 
 | 745 | registers are visible on the parent bus using an identity mapping | 
 | 746 | translation.  In other words, the parent bus address space is the same | 
 | 747 | as the child bus address space. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 748 |  | 
 | 749 | 2) Note about "compatible" properties | 
 | 750 | ------------------------------------- | 
 | 751 |  | 
 | 752 | These properties are optional, but recommended in devices and the root | 
 | 753 | node. The format of a "compatible" property is a list of concatenated | 
 | 754 | zero terminated strings. They allow a device to express its | 
 | 755 | compatibility with a family of similar devices, in some cases, | 
 | 756 | allowing a single driver to match against several devices regardless | 
 | 757 | of their actual names. | 
 | 758 |  | 
 | 759 | 3) Note about "name" properties | 
 | 760 | ------------------------------- | 
 | 761 |  | 
 | 762 | While earlier users of Open Firmware like OldWorld macintoshes tended | 
 | 763 | to use the actual device name for the "name" property, it's nowadays | 
 | 764 | considered a good practice to use a name that is closer to the device | 
 | 765 | class (often equal to device_type). For example, nowadays, ethernet | 
 | 766 | controllers are named "ethernet", an additional "model" property | 
 | 767 | defining precisely the chip type/model, and "compatible" property | 
 | 768 | defining the family in case a single driver can driver more than one | 
 | 769 | of these chips. However, the kernel doesn't generally put any | 
 | 770 | restriction on the "name" property; it is simply considered good | 
 | 771 | practice to follow the standard and its evolutions as closely as | 
 | 772 | possible. | 
 | 773 |  | 
 | 774 | Note also that the new format version 16 makes the "name" property | 
 | 775 | optional. If it's absent for a node, then the node's unit name is then | 
 | 776 | used to reconstruct the name. That is, the part of the unit name | 
 | 777 | before the "@" sign is used (or the entire unit name if no "@" sign | 
 | 778 | is present). | 
 | 779 |  | 
 | 780 | 4) Note about node and property names and character set | 
 | 781 | ------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 782 |  | 
| Matt LaPlante | a2ffd27 | 2006-10-03 22:49:15 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 783 | While open firmware provides more flexible usage of 8859-1, this | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 784 | specification enforces more strict rules. Nodes and properties should | 
 | 785 | be comprised only of ASCII characters 'a' to 'z', '0' to | 
 | 786 | '9', ',', '.', '_', '+', '#', '?', and '-'. Node names additionally | 
 | 787 | allow uppercase characters 'A' to 'Z' (property names should be | 
 | 788 | lowercase. The fact that vendors like Apple don't respect this rule is | 
 | 789 | irrelevant here). Additionally, node and property names should always | 
 | 790 | begin with a character in the range 'a' to 'z' (or 'A' to 'Z' for node | 
 | 791 | names). | 
 | 792 |  | 
 | 793 | The maximum number of characters for both nodes and property names | 
 | 794 | is 31. In the case of node names, this is only the leftmost part of | 
 | 795 | a unit name (the pure "name" property), it doesn't include the unit | 
 | 796 | address which can extend beyond that limit. | 
 | 797 |  | 
 | 798 |  | 
 | 799 | 5) Required nodes and properties | 
 | 800 | -------------------------------- | 
 | 801 |   These are all that are currently required. However, it is strongly | 
 | 802 |   recommended that you expose PCI host bridges as documented in the | 
 | 803 |   PCI binding to open firmware, and your interrupt tree as documented | 
 | 804 |   in OF interrupt tree specification. | 
 | 805 |  | 
 | 806 |   a) The root node | 
 | 807 |  | 
 | 808 |   The root node requires some properties to be present: | 
 | 809 |  | 
 | 810 |     - model : this is your board name/model | 
 | 811 |     - #address-cells : address representation for "root" devices | 
 | 812 |     - #size-cells: the size representation for "root" devices | 
| Benjamin Herrenschmidt | e822250 | 2006-03-28 23:15:54 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 813 |     - device_type : This property shouldn't be necessary. However, if | 
 | 814 |       you decide to create a device_type for your root node, make sure it | 
 | 815 |       is _not_ "chrp" unless your platform is a pSeries or PAPR compliant | 
 | 816 |       one for 64-bit, or a CHRP-type machine for 32-bit as this will | 
 | 817 |       matched by the kernel this way. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 818 |  | 
 | 819 |   Additionally, some recommended properties are: | 
 | 820 |  | 
 | 821 |     - compatible : the board "family" generally finds its way here, | 
 | 822 |       for example, if you have 2 board models with a similar layout, | 
 | 823 |       that typically get driven by the same platform code in the | 
 | 824 |       kernel, you would use a different "model" property but put a | 
 | 825 |       value in "compatible". The kernel doesn't directly use that | 
| Stuart Yoder | 143a42d | 2007-02-16 11:30:29 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 826 |       value but it is generally useful. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 827 |  | 
 | 828 |   The root node is also generally where you add additional properties | 
 | 829 |   specific to your board like the serial number if any, that sort of | 
| Matt LaPlante | 6c28f2c | 2006-10-03 22:46:31 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 830 |   thing. It is recommended that if you add any "custom" property whose | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 831 |   name may clash with standard defined ones, you prefix them with your | 
 | 832 |   vendor name and a comma. | 
 | 833 |  | 
 | 834 |   b) The /cpus node | 
 | 835 |  | 
 | 836 |   This node is the parent of all individual CPU nodes. It doesn't | 
 | 837 |   have any specific requirements, though it's generally good practice | 
 | 838 |   to have at least: | 
 | 839 |  | 
 | 840 |                #address-cells = <00000001> | 
 | 841 |                #size-cells    = <00000000> | 
 | 842 |  | 
 | 843 |   This defines that the "address" for a CPU is a single cell, and has | 
 | 844 |   no meaningful size. This is not necessary but the kernel will assume | 
 | 845 |   that format when reading the "reg" properties of a CPU node, see | 
 | 846 |   below | 
 | 847 |  | 
 | 848 |   c) The /cpus/* nodes | 
 | 849 |  | 
 | 850 |   So under /cpus, you are supposed to create a node for every CPU on | 
 | 851 |   the machine. There is no specific restriction on the name of the | 
 | 852 |   CPU, though It's common practice to call it PowerPC,<name>. For | 
 | 853 |   example, Apple uses PowerPC,G5 while IBM uses PowerPC,970FX. | 
 | 854 |  | 
 | 855 |   Required properties: | 
 | 856 |  | 
 | 857 |     - device_type : has to be "cpu" | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 858 |     - reg : This is the physical CPU number, it's a single 32-bit cell | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 859 |       and is also used as-is as the unit number for constructing the | 
 | 860 |       unit name in the full path. For example, with 2 CPUs, you would | 
 | 861 |       have the full path: | 
 | 862 |         /cpus/PowerPC,970FX@0 | 
 | 863 |         /cpus/PowerPC,970FX@1 | 
 | 864 |       (unit addresses do not require leading zeroes) | 
| Benjamin Herrenschmidt | 20474ab | 2007-10-28 08:49:28 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 865 |     - d-cache-block-size : one cell, L1 data cache block size in bytes (*) | 
 | 866 |     - i-cache-block-size : one cell, L1 instruction cache block size in | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 867 |       bytes | 
 | 868 |     - d-cache-size : one cell, size of L1 data cache in bytes | 
 | 869 |     - i-cache-size : one cell, size of L1 instruction cache in bytes | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 870 |  | 
| Benjamin Herrenschmidt | 20474ab | 2007-10-28 08:49:28 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 871 | (*) The cache "block" size is the size on which the cache management | 
 | 872 | instructions operate. Historically, this document used the cache | 
 | 873 | "line" size here which is incorrect. The kernel will prefer the cache | 
 | 874 | block size and will fallback to cache line size for backward | 
 | 875 | compatibility. | 
 | 876 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 877 |   Recommended properties: | 
 | 878 |  | 
 | 879 |     - timebase-frequency : a cell indicating the frequency of the | 
 | 880 |       timebase in Hz. This is not directly used by the generic code, | 
 | 881 |       but you are welcome to copy/paste the pSeries code for setting | 
 | 882 |       the kernel timebase/decrementer calibration based on this | 
 | 883 |       value. | 
 | 884 |     - clock-frequency : a cell indicating the CPU core clock frequency | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 885 |       in Hz. A new property will be defined for 64-bit values, but if | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 886 |       your frequency is < 4Ghz, one cell is enough. Here as well as | 
 | 887 |       for the above, the common code doesn't use that property, but | 
 | 888 |       you are welcome to re-use the pSeries or Maple one. A future | 
 | 889 |       kernel version might provide a common function for this. | 
| Benjamin Herrenschmidt | 20474ab | 2007-10-28 08:49:28 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 890 |     - d-cache-line-size : one cell, L1 data cache line size in bytes | 
 | 891 |       if different from the block size | 
 | 892 |     - i-cache-line-size : one cell, L1 instruction cache line size in | 
 | 893 |       bytes if different from the block size | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 894 |  | 
 | 895 |   You are welcome to add any property you find relevant to your board, | 
 | 896 |   like some information about the mechanism used to soft-reset the | 
 | 897 |   CPUs. For example, Apple puts the GPIO number for CPU soft reset | 
 | 898 |   lines in there as a "soft-reset" property since they start secondary | 
 | 899 |   CPUs by soft-resetting them. | 
 | 900 |  | 
 | 901 |  | 
 | 902 |   d) the /memory node(s) | 
 | 903 |  | 
 | 904 |   To define the physical memory layout of your board, you should | 
 | 905 |   create one or more memory node(s). You can either create a single | 
 | 906 |   node with all memory ranges in its reg property, or you can create | 
 | 907 |   several nodes, as you wish. The unit address (@ part) used for the | 
 | 908 |   full path is the address of the first range of memory defined by a | 
 | 909 |   given node. If you use a single memory node, this will typically be | 
 | 910 |   @0. | 
 | 911 |  | 
 | 912 |   Required properties: | 
 | 913 |  | 
 | 914 |     - device_type : has to be "memory" | 
 | 915 |     - reg : This property contains all the physical memory ranges of | 
 | 916 |       your board. It's a list of addresses/sizes concatenated | 
 | 917 |       together, with the number of cells of each defined by the | 
 | 918 |       #address-cells and #size-cells of the root node. For example, | 
| Matt LaPlante | 6c28f2c | 2006-10-03 22:46:31 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 919 |       with both of these properties being 2 like in the example given | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 920 |       earlier, a 970 based machine with 6Gb of RAM could typically | 
 | 921 |       have a "reg" property here that looks like: | 
 | 922 |  | 
 | 923 |       00000000 00000000 00000000 80000000 | 
 | 924 |       00000001 00000000 00000001 00000000 | 
 | 925 |  | 
 | 926 |       That is a range starting at 0 of 0x80000000 bytes and a range | 
 | 927 |       starting at 0x100000000 and of 0x100000000 bytes. You can see | 
 | 928 |       that there is no memory covering the IO hole between 2Gb and | 
 | 929 |       4Gb. Some vendors prefer splitting those ranges into smaller | 
 | 930 |       segments, but the kernel doesn't care. | 
 | 931 |  | 
 | 932 |   e) The /chosen node | 
 | 933 |  | 
 | 934 |   This node is a bit "special". Normally, that's where open firmware | 
 | 935 |   puts some variable environment information, like the arguments, or | 
| Stuart Yoder | d1bff9e | 2007-02-19 11:25:05 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 936 |   the default input/output devices. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 937 |  | 
 | 938 |   This specification makes a few of these mandatory, but also defines | 
 | 939 |   some linux-specific properties that would be normally constructed by | 
 | 940 |   the prom_init() trampoline when booting with an OF client interface, | 
 | 941 |   but that you have to provide yourself when using the flattened format. | 
 | 942 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 943 |   Recommended properties: | 
 | 944 |  | 
 | 945 |     - bootargs : This zero-terminated string is passed as the kernel | 
 | 946 |       command line | 
 | 947 |     - linux,stdout-path : This is the full path to your standard | 
 | 948 |       console device if any. Typically, if you have serial devices on | 
 | 949 |       your board, you may want to put the full path to the one set as | 
 | 950 |       the default console in the firmware here, for the kernel to pick | 
| Matt LaPlante | 5d3f083 | 2006-11-30 05:21:10 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 951 |       it up as its own default console. If you look at the function | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 952 |       set_preferred_console() in arch/ppc64/kernel/setup.c, you'll see | 
 | 953 |       that the kernel tries to find out the default console and has | 
 | 954 |       knowledge of various types like 8250 serial ports. You may want | 
 | 955 |       to extend this function to add your own. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 956 |  | 
 | 957 |   Note that u-boot creates and fills in the chosen node for platforms | 
 | 958 |   that use it. | 
 | 959 |  | 
| Stuart Yoder | d1bff9e | 2007-02-19 11:25:05 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 960 |   (Note: a practice that is now obsolete was to include a property | 
 | 961 |   under /chosen called interrupt-controller which had a phandle value | 
 | 962 |   that pointed to the main interrupt controller) | 
 | 963 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 964 |   f) the /soc<SOCname> node | 
 | 965 |  | 
 | 966 |   This node is used to represent a system-on-a-chip (SOC) and must be | 
 | 967 |   present if the processor is a SOC. The top-level soc node contains | 
 | 968 |   information that is global to all devices on the SOC. The node name | 
 | 969 |   should contain a unit address for the SOC, which is the base address | 
 | 970 |   of the memory-mapped register set for the SOC. The name of an soc | 
 | 971 |   node should start with "soc", and the remainder of the name should | 
 | 972 |   represent the part number for the soc.  For example, the MPC8540's | 
 | 973 |   soc node would be called "soc8540". | 
 | 974 |  | 
 | 975 |   Required properties: | 
 | 976 |  | 
 | 977 |     - device_type : Should be "soc" | 
 | 978 |     - ranges : Should be defined as specified in 1) to describe the | 
 | 979 |       translation of SOC addresses for memory mapped SOC registers. | 
| Becky Bruce | 7d4b95a | 2006-02-06 14:26:31 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 980 |     - bus-frequency: Contains the bus frequency for the SOC node. | 
 | 981 |       Typically, the value of this field is filled in by the boot | 
 | 982 |       loader.  | 
 | 983 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 984 |  | 
 | 985 |   Recommended properties: | 
 | 986 |  | 
 | 987 |     - reg : This property defines the address and size of the | 
 | 988 |       memory-mapped registers that are used for the SOC node itself. | 
 | 989 |       It does not include the child device registers - these will be | 
 | 990 |       defined inside each child node.  The address specified in the | 
 | 991 |       "reg" property should match the unit address of the SOC node. | 
 | 992 |     - #address-cells : Address representation for "soc" devices.  The | 
 | 993 |       format of this field may vary depending on whether or not the | 
 | 994 |       device registers are memory mapped.  For memory mapped | 
 | 995 |       registers, this field represents the number of cells needed to | 
 | 996 |       represent the address of the registers.  For SOCs that do not | 
 | 997 |       use MMIO, a special address format should be defined that | 
 | 998 |       contains enough cells to represent the required information. | 
 | 999 |       See 1) above for more details on defining #address-cells. | 
 | 1000 |     - #size-cells : Size representation for "soc" devices | 
 | 1001 |     - #interrupt-cells : Defines the width of cells used to represent | 
 | 1002 |        interrupts.  Typically this value is <2>, which includes a | 
 | 1003 |        32-bit number that represents the interrupt number, and a | 
 | 1004 |        32-bit number that represents the interrupt sense and level. | 
 | 1005 |        This field is only needed if the SOC contains an interrupt | 
 | 1006 |        controller. | 
 | 1007 |  | 
 | 1008 |   The SOC node may contain child nodes for each SOC device that the | 
 | 1009 |   platform uses.  Nodes should not be created for devices which exist | 
 | 1010 |   on the SOC but are not used by a particular platform. See chapter VI | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1011 |   for more information on how to specify devices that are part of a SOC. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1012 |  | 
 | 1013 |   Example SOC node for the MPC8540: | 
 | 1014 |  | 
 | 1015 | 	soc8540@e0000000 { | 
 | 1016 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1017 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1018 | 		#interrupt-cells = <2>; | 
 | 1019 | 		device_type = "soc"; | 
 | 1020 | 		ranges = <00000000 e0000000 00100000> | 
 | 1021 | 		reg = <e0000000 00003000>; | 
| Becky Bruce | 7d4b95a | 2006-02-06 14:26:31 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1022 | 		bus-frequency = <0>; | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1023 | 	} | 
 | 1024 |  | 
 | 1025 |  | 
 | 1026 |  | 
 | 1027 | IV - "dtc", the device tree compiler | 
 | 1028 | ==================================== | 
 | 1029 |  | 
 | 1030 |  | 
 | 1031 | dtc source code can be found at | 
 | 1032 | <http://ozlabs.org/~dgibson/dtc/dtc.tar.gz> | 
 | 1033 |  | 
 | 1034 | WARNING: This version is still in early development stage; the | 
 | 1035 | resulting device-tree "blobs" have not yet been validated with the | 
 | 1036 | kernel. The current generated bloc lacks a useful reserve map (it will | 
 | 1037 | be fixed to generate an empty one, it's up to the bootloader to fill | 
 | 1038 | it up) among others. The error handling needs work, bugs are lurking, | 
 | 1039 | etc... | 
 | 1040 |  | 
 | 1041 | dtc basically takes a device-tree in a given format and outputs a | 
 | 1042 | device-tree in another format. The currently supported formats are: | 
 | 1043 |  | 
 | 1044 |   Input formats: | 
 | 1045 |   ------------- | 
 | 1046 |  | 
 | 1047 |      - "dtb": "blob" format, that is a flattened device-tree block | 
 | 1048 |        with | 
 | 1049 |         header all in a binary blob. | 
 | 1050 |      - "dts": "source" format. This is a text file containing a | 
 | 1051 |        "source" for a device-tree. The format is defined later in this | 
 | 1052 |         chapter. | 
 | 1053 |      - "fs" format. This is a representation equivalent to the | 
 | 1054 |         output of /proc/device-tree, that is nodes are directories and | 
 | 1055 | 	properties are files | 
 | 1056 |  | 
 | 1057 |  Output formats: | 
 | 1058 |  --------------- | 
 | 1059 |  | 
 | 1060 |      - "dtb": "blob" format | 
 | 1061 |      - "dts": "source" format | 
 | 1062 |      - "asm": assembly language file. This is a file that can be | 
 | 1063 |        sourced by gas to generate a device-tree "blob". That file can | 
 | 1064 |        then simply be added to your Makefile. Additionally, the | 
| Matt LaPlante | 6c28f2c | 2006-10-03 22:46:31 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1065 |        assembly file exports some symbols that can be used. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1066 |  | 
 | 1067 |  | 
 | 1068 | The syntax of the dtc tool is | 
 | 1069 |  | 
 | 1070 |     dtc [-I <input-format>] [-O <output-format>] | 
 | 1071 |         [-o output-filename] [-V output_version] input_filename | 
 | 1072 |  | 
 | 1073 |  | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1074 | The "output_version" defines what version of the "blob" format will be | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1075 | generated. Supported versions are 1,2,3 and 16. The default is | 
 | 1076 | currently version 3 but that may change in the future to version 16. | 
 | 1077 |  | 
 | 1078 | Additionally, dtc performs various sanity checks on the tree, like the | 
| Matt LaPlante | 6c28f2c | 2006-10-03 22:46:31 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1079 | uniqueness of linux, phandle properties, validity of strings, etc... | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1080 |  | 
 | 1081 | The format of the .dts "source" file is "C" like, supports C and C++ | 
| Matt LaPlante | 6c28f2c | 2006-10-03 22:46:31 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1082 | style comments. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1083 |  | 
 | 1084 | / { | 
 | 1085 | } | 
 | 1086 |  | 
 | 1087 | The above is the "device-tree" definition. It's the only statement | 
 | 1088 | supported currently at the toplevel. | 
 | 1089 |  | 
 | 1090 | / { | 
 | 1091 |   property1 = "string_value";	/* define a property containing a 0 | 
 | 1092 |                                  * terminated string | 
 | 1093 | 				 */ | 
 | 1094 |  | 
 | 1095 |   property2 = <1234abcd>;	/* define a property containing a | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1096 |                                  * numerical 32-bit value (hexadecimal) | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1097 | 				 */ | 
 | 1098 |  | 
 | 1099 |   property3 = <12345678 12345678 deadbeef>; | 
 | 1100 |                                 /* define a property containing 3 | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1101 |                                  * numerical 32-bit values (cells) in | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1102 |                                  * hexadecimal | 
 | 1103 | 				 */ | 
 | 1104 |   property4 = [0a 0b 0c 0d de ea ad be ef]; | 
 | 1105 |                                 /* define a property whose content is | 
 | 1106 |                                  * an arbitrary array of bytes | 
 | 1107 |                                  */ | 
 | 1108 |  | 
 | 1109 |   childnode@addresss {	/* define a child node named "childnode" | 
 | 1110 |                                  * whose unit name is "childnode at | 
 | 1111 | 				 * address" | 
 | 1112 |                                  */ | 
 | 1113 |  | 
 | 1114 |     childprop = "hello\n";      /* define a property "childprop" of | 
 | 1115 |                                  * childnode (in this case, a string) | 
 | 1116 |                                  */ | 
 | 1117 |   }; | 
 | 1118 | }; | 
 | 1119 |  | 
 | 1120 | Nodes can contain other nodes etc... thus defining the hierarchical | 
 | 1121 | structure of the tree. | 
 | 1122 |  | 
 | 1123 | Strings support common escape sequences from C: "\n", "\t", "\r", | 
 | 1124 | "\(octal value)", "\x(hex value)". | 
 | 1125 |  | 
 | 1126 | It is also suggested that you pipe your source file through cpp (gcc | 
 | 1127 | preprocessor) so you can use #include's, #define for constants, etc... | 
 | 1128 |  | 
 | 1129 | Finally, various options are planned but not yet implemented, like | 
 | 1130 | automatic generation of phandles, labels (exported to the asm file so | 
 | 1131 | you can point to a property content and change it easily from whatever | 
 | 1132 | you link the device-tree with), label or path instead of numeric value | 
 | 1133 | in some cells to "point" to a node (replaced by a phandle at compile | 
 | 1134 | time), export of reserve map address to the asm file, ability to | 
 | 1135 | specify reserve map content at compile time, etc... | 
 | 1136 |  | 
 | 1137 | We may provide a .h include file with common definitions of that | 
 | 1138 | proves useful for some properties (like building PCI properties or | 
 | 1139 | interrupt maps) though it may be better to add a notion of struct | 
 | 1140 | definitions to the compiler... | 
 | 1141 |  | 
 | 1142 |  | 
 | 1143 | V - Recommendations for a bootloader | 
 | 1144 | ==================================== | 
 | 1145 |  | 
 | 1146 |  | 
 | 1147 | Here are some various ideas/recommendations that have been proposed | 
 | 1148 | while all this has been defined and implemented. | 
 | 1149 |  | 
 | 1150 |   - The bootloader may want to be able to use the device-tree itself | 
 | 1151 |     and may want to manipulate it (to add/edit some properties, | 
 | 1152 |     like physical memory size or kernel arguments). At this point, 2 | 
 | 1153 |     choices can be made. Either the bootloader works directly on the | 
 | 1154 |     flattened format, or the bootloader has its own internal tree | 
 | 1155 |     representation with pointers (similar to the kernel one) and | 
 | 1156 |     re-flattens the tree when booting the kernel. The former is a bit | 
 | 1157 |     more difficult to edit/modify, the later requires probably a bit | 
 | 1158 |     more code to handle the tree structure. Note that the structure | 
 | 1159 |     format has been designed so it's relatively easy to "insert" | 
 | 1160 |     properties or nodes or delete them by just memmoving things | 
 | 1161 |     around. It contains no internal offsets or pointers for this | 
 | 1162 |     purpose. | 
 | 1163 |  | 
| Matt LaPlante | d6bc8ac | 2006-10-03 22:54:15 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1164 |   - An example of code for iterating nodes & retrieving properties | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1165 |     directly from the flattened tree format can be found in the kernel | 
 | 1166 |     file arch/ppc64/kernel/prom.c, look at scan_flat_dt() function, | 
| Matt LaPlante | d6bc8ac | 2006-10-03 22:54:15 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1167 |     its usage in early_init_devtree(), and the corresponding various | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1168 |     early_init_dt_scan_*() callbacks. That code can be re-used in a | 
 | 1169 |     GPL bootloader, and as the author of that code, I would be happy | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1170 |     to discuss possible free licensing to any vendor who wishes to | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1171 |     integrate all or part of this code into a non-GPL bootloader. | 
 | 1172 |  | 
 | 1173 |  | 
 | 1174 |  | 
 | 1175 | VI - System-on-a-chip devices and nodes | 
 | 1176 | ======================================= | 
 | 1177 |  | 
 | 1178 | Many companies are now starting to develop system-on-a-chip | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1179 | processors, where the processor core (CPU) and many peripheral devices | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1180 | exist on a single piece of silicon.  For these SOCs, an SOC node | 
 | 1181 | should be used that defines child nodes for the devices that make | 
 | 1182 | up the SOC. While platforms are not required to use this model in | 
 | 1183 | order to boot the kernel, it is highly encouraged that all SOC | 
 | 1184 | implementations define as complete a flat-device-tree as possible to | 
 | 1185 | describe the devices on the SOC.  This will allow for the | 
 | 1186 | genericization of much of the kernel code. | 
 | 1187 |  | 
 | 1188 |  | 
 | 1189 | 1) Defining child nodes of an SOC | 
 | 1190 | --------------------------------- | 
 | 1191 |  | 
 | 1192 | Each device that is part of an SOC may have its own node entry inside | 
 | 1193 | the SOC node.  For each device that is included in the SOC, the unit | 
 | 1194 | address property represents the address offset for this device's | 
 | 1195 | memory-mapped registers in the parent's address space.  The parent's | 
 | 1196 | address space is defined by the "ranges" property in the top-level soc | 
 | 1197 | node. The "reg" property for each node that exists directly under the | 
 | 1198 | SOC node should contain the address mapping from the child address space | 
 | 1199 | to the parent SOC address space and the size of the device's | 
 | 1200 | memory-mapped register file. | 
 | 1201 |  | 
 | 1202 | For many devices that may exist inside an SOC, there are predefined | 
 | 1203 | specifications for the format of the device tree node.  All SOC child | 
 | 1204 | nodes should follow these specifications, except where noted in this | 
 | 1205 | document. | 
 | 1206 |  | 
 | 1207 | See appendix A for an example partial SOC node definition for the | 
 | 1208 | MPC8540. | 
 | 1209 |  | 
 | 1210 |  | 
| Stuart Yoder | 2756590 | 2007-03-02 13:42:33 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1211 | 2) Representing devices without a current OF specification | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1212 | ---------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 1213 |  | 
 | 1214 | Currently, there are many devices on SOCs that do not have a standard | 
 | 1215 | representation pre-defined as part of the open firmware | 
 | 1216 | specifications, mainly because the boards that contain these SOCs are | 
 | 1217 | not currently booted using open firmware.   This section contains | 
 | 1218 | descriptions for the SOC devices for which new nodes have been | 
 | 1219 | defined; this list will expand as more and more SOC-containing | 
 | 1220 | platforms are moved over to use the flattened-device-tree model. | 
 | 1221 |  | 
 | 1222 |   a) MDIO IO device | 
 | 1223 |  | 
 | 1224 |   The MDIO is a bus to which the PHY devices are connected.  For each | 
 | 1225 |   device that exists on this bus, a child node should be created.  See | 
 | 1226 |   the definition of the PHY node below for an example of how to define | 
 | 1227 |   a PHY. | 
 | 1228 |  | 
 | 1229 |   Required properties: | 
 | 1230 |     - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1231 |     - compatible : Should define the compatible device type for the | 
| Kumar Gala | e77b28e | 2007-12-12 00:28:35 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1232 |       mdio.  Currently, this is most likely to be "fsl,gianfar-mdio" | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1233 |  | 
 | 1234 |   Example: | 
 | 1235 |  | 
 | 1236 | 	mdio@24520 { | 
 | 1237 | 		reg = <24520 20>; | 
| Kumar Gala | e77b28e | 2007-12-12 00:28:35 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1238 | 		compatible = "fsl,gianfar-mdio"; | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1239 |  | 
 | 1240 | 		ethernet-phy@0 { | 
 | 1241 | 			...... | 
 | 1242 | 		}; | 
 | 1243 | 	}; | 
 | 1244 |  | 
 | 1245 |  | 
 | 1246 |   b) Gianfar-compatible ethernet nodes | 
 | 1247 |  | 
 | 1248 |   Required properties: | 
 | 1249 |  | 
 | 1250 |     - device_type : Should be "network" | 
 | 1251 |     - model : Model of the device.  Can be "TSEC", "eTSEC", or "FEC" | 
 | 1252 |     - compatible : Should be "gianfar" | 
 | 1253 |     - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
| Jon Loeliger | f583165 | 2006-08-17 08:42:35 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1254 |     - mac-address : List of bytes representing the ethernet address of | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1255 |       this controller | 
 | 1256 |     - interrupts : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 1257 |       field that represents an encoding of the sense and level | 
 | 1258 |       information for the interrupt.  This should be encoded based on | 
 | 1259 |       the information in section 2) depending on the type of interrupt | 
 | 1260 |       controller you have. | 
 | 1261 |     - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 1262 |       services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 1263 |     - phy-handle : The phandle for the PHY connected to this ethernet | 
 | 1264 |       controller. | 
| Vitaly Bordug | a21e282 | 2007-12-07 01:51:31 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1265 |     - fixed-link : <a b c d e> where a is emulated phy id - choose any, | 
 | 1266 |       but unique to the all specified fixed-links, b is duplex - 0 half, | 
 | 1267 |       1 full, c is link speed - d#10/d#100/d#1000, d is pause - 0 no | 
 | 1268 |       pause, 1 pause, e is asym_pause - 0 no asym_pause, 1 asym_pause. | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1269 |  | 
| Scott Wood | e0a2f28 | 2007-03-16 12:28:46 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1270 |   Recommended properties: | 
 | 1271 |  | 
 | 1272 |     - linux,network-index : This is the intended "index" of this | 
 | 1273 |       network device.  This is used by the bootwrapper to interpret | 
 | 1274 |       MAC addresses passed by the firmware when no information other | 
 | 1275 |       than indices is available to associate an address with a device. | 
| Andy Fleming | cc65185 | 2007-07-10 17:28:49 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1276 |     - phy-connection-type : a string naming the controller/PHY interface type, | 
 | 1277 |       i.e., "mii" (default), "rmii", "gmii", "rgmii", "rgmii-id", "sgmii", | 
 | 1278 |       "tbi", or "rtbi".  This property is only really needed if the connection | 
 | 1279 |       is of type "rgmii-id", as all other connection types are detected by | 
 | 1280 |       hardware. | 
 | 1281 |  | 
| Scott Wood | e0a2f28 | 2007-03-16 12:28:46 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1282 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1283 |   Example: | 
 | 1284 |  | 
 | 1285 | 	ethernet@24000 { | 
 | 1286 | 		#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 1287 | 		device_type = "network"; | 
 | 1288 | 		model = "TSEC"; | 
 | 1289 | 		compatible = "gianfar"; | 
 | 1290 | 		reg = <24000 1000>; | 
| Jon Loeliger | f583165 | 2006-08-17 08:42:35 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1291 | 		mac-address = [ 00 E0 0C 00 73 00 ]; | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1292 | 		interrupts = <d 3 e 3 12 3>; | 
 | 1293 | 		interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 1294 | 		phy-handle = <2452000> | 
 | 1295 | 	}; | 
 | 1296 |  | 
 | 1297 |  | 
 | 1298 |  | 
 | 1299 |    c) PHY nodes | 
 | 1300 |  | 
 | 1301 |    Required properties: | 
 | 1302 |  | 
 | 1303 |     - device_type : Should be "ethernet-phy" | 
 | 1304 |     - interrupts : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 1305 |       field that represents an encoding of the sense and level | 
 | 1306 |       information for the interrupt.  This should be encoded based on | 
 | 1307 |       the information in section 2) depending on the type of interrupt | 
 | 1308 |       controller you have. | 
 | 1309 |     - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 1310 |       services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 1311 |     - reg : The ID number for the phy, usually a small integer | 
 | 1312 |     - linux,phandle :  phandle for this node; likely referenced by an | 
 | 1313 |       ethernet controller node. | 
 | 1314 |  | 
 | 1315 |  | 
 | 1316 |    Example: | 
 | 1317 |  | 
 | 1318 | 	ethernet-phy@0 { | 
 | 1319 | 		linux,phandle = <2452000> | 
 | 1320 | 		interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 1321 | 		interrupts = <35 1>; | 
 | 1322 | 		reg = <0>; | 
 | 1323 | 		device_type = "ethernet-phy"; | 
 | 1324 | 	}; | 
 | 1325 |  | 
 | 1326 |  | 
 | 1327 |    d) Interrupt controllers | 
 | 1328 |  | 
 | 1329 |    Some SOC devices contain interrupt controllers that are different | 
 | 1330 |    from the standard Open PIC specification.  The SOC device nodes for | 
 | 1331 |    these types of controllers should be specified just like a standard | 
 | 1332 |    OpenPIC controller.  Sense and level information should be encoded | 
 | 1333 |    as specified in section 2) of this chapter for each device that | 
 | 1334 |    specifies an interrupt. | 
 | 1335 |  | 
 | 1336 |    Example : | 
 | 1337 |  | 
 | 1338 | 	pic@40000 { | 
 | 1339 | 		linux,phandle = <40000>; | 
 | 1340 | 		clock-frequency = <0>; | 
 | 1341 | 		interrupt-controller; | 
 | 1342 | 		#address-cells = <0>; | 
 | 1343 | 		reg = <40000 40000>; | 
 | 1344 | 		built-in; | 
 | 1345 | 		compatible = "chrp,open-pic"; | 
 | 1346 | 		device_type = "open-pic"; | 
 | 1347 | 		big-endian; | 
 | 1348 | 	}; | 
 | 1349 |  | 
 | 1350 |  | 
 | 1351 |    e) I2C | 
 | 1352 |  | 
 | 1353 |    Required properties : | 
 | 1354 |  | 
 | 1355 |     - device_type : Should be "i2c" | 
 | 1356 |     - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
 | 1357 |  | 
 | 1358 |    Recommended properties : | 
 | 1359 |  | 
 | 1360 |     - compatible : Should be "fsl-i2c" for parts compatible with | 
 | 1361 |       Freescale I2C specifications. | 
 | 1362 |     - interrupts : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 1363 |       field that represents an encoding of the sense and level | 
 | 1364 |       information for the interrupt.  This should be encoded based on | 
 | 1365 |       the information in section 2) depending on the type of interrupt | 
 | 1366 |       controller you have. | 
 | 1367 |     - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 1368 |       services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 1369 |     - dfsrr : boolean; if defined, indicates that this I2C device has | 
 | 1370 |       a digital filter sampling rate register | 
 | 1371 |     - fsl5200-clocking : boolean; if defined, indicated that this device | 
 | 1372 |       uses the FSL 5200 clocking mechanism. | 
 | 1373 |  | 
 | 1374 |    Example : | 
 | 1375 |  | 
 | 1376 | 	i2c@3000 { | 
 | 1377 | 		interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 1378 | 		interrupts = <1b 3>; | 
 | 1379 | 		reg = <3000 18>; | 
 | 1380 | 		device_type = "i2c"; | 
 | 1381 | 		compatible  = "fsl-i2c"; | 
 | 1382 | 		dfsrr; | 
 | 1383 | 	}; | 
 | 1384 |  | 
 | 1385 |  | 
| Becky Bruce | ad71f12 | 2006-02-07 13:44:08 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1386 |    f) Freescale SOC USB controllers | 
 | 1387 |  | 
 | 1388 |    The device node for a USB controller that is part of a Freescale | 
 | 1389 |    SOC is as described in the document "Open Firmware Recommended | 
 | 1390 |    Practice : Universal Serial Bus" with the following modifications | 
 | 1391 |    and additions :   | 
 | 1392 |  | 
 | 1393 |    Required properties : | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1394 |     - compatible : Should be "fsl-usb2-mph" for multi port host USB | 
 | 1395 |       controllers, or "fsl-usb2-dr" for dual role USB controllers | 
 | 1396 |     - phy_type : For multi port host USB controllers, should be one of | 
 | 1397 |       "ulpi", or "serial". For dual role USB controllers, should be | 
| Becky Bruce | ad71f12 | 2006-02-07 13:44:08 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1398 |       one of "ulpi", "utmi", "utmi_wide", or "serial". | 
 | 1399 |     - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
 | 1400 |     - port0 : boolean; if defined, indicates port0 is connected for | 
 | 1401 |       fsl-usb2-mph compatible controllers.  Either this property or | 
 | 1402 |       "port1" (or both) must be defined for "fsl-usb2-mph" compatible  | 
 | 1403 |       controllers. | 
 | 1404 |     - port1 : boolean; if defined, indicates port1 is connected for | 
 | 1405 |       fsl-usb2-mph compatible controllers.  Either this property or | 
 | 1406 |       "port0" (or both) must be defined for "fsl-usb2-mph" compatible  | 
 | 1407 |       controllers. | 
| Li Yang | ea5b7a6 | 2007-02-07 13:51:09 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1408 |     - dr_mode : indicates the working mode for "fsl-usb2-dr" compatible | 
 | 1409 |       controllers.  Can be "host", "peripheral", or "otg".  Default to | 
 | 1410 |       "host" if not defined for backward compatibility. | 
| Becky Bruce | ad71f12 | 2006-02-07 13:44:08 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1411 |  | 
 | 1412 |    Recommended properties : | 
 | 1413 |     - interrupts : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 1414 |       field that represents an encoding of the sense and level | 
 | 1415 |       information for the interrupt.  This should be encoded based on | 
 | 1416 |       the information in section 2) depending on the type of interrupt | 
 | 1417 |       controller you have. | 
 | 1418 |     - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 1419 |       services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 1420 |  | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1421 |    Example multi port host USB controller device node : | 
| Becky Bruce | ad71f12 | 2006-02-07 13:44:08 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1422 | 	usb@22000 { | 
| Becky Bruce | ad71f12 | 2006-02-07 13:44:08 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1423 | 		compatible = "fsl-usb2-mph"; | 
 | 1424 | 		reg = <22000 1000>; | 
 | 1425 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1426 | 		#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 1427 | 		interrupt-parent = <700>; | 
 | 1428 | 		interrupts = <27 1>; | 
 | 1429 | 		phy_type = "ulpi"; | 
 | 1430 | 		port0; | 
 | 1431 | 		port1; | 
 | 1432 | 	}; | 
 | 1433 |  | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1434 |    Example dual role USB controller device node : | 
| Becky Bruce | ad71f12 | 2006-02-07 13:44:08 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1435 | 	usb@23000 { | 
| Becky Bruce | ad71f12 | 2006-02-07 13:44:08 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1436 | 		compatible = "fsl-usb2-dr"; | 
 | 1437 | 		reg = <23000 1000>; | 
 | 1438 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1439 | 		#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 1440 | 		interrupt-parent = <700>; | 
 | 1441 | 		interrupts = <26 1>; | 
| Li Yang | ea5b7a6 | 2007-02-07 13:51:09 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1442 | 		dr_mode = "otg"; | 
| Becky Bruce | ad71f12 | 2006-02-07 13:44:08 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1443 | 		phy = "ulpi"; | 
 | 1444 | 	}; | 
 | 1445 |  | 
 | 1446 |  | 
| Kim Phillips | b88a0b1 | 2006-03-22 14:39:03 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1447 |    g) Freescale SOC SEC Security Engines | 
 | 1448 |  | 
 | 1449 |    Required properties: | 
 | 1450 |  | 
 | 1451 |     - device_type : Should be "crypto" | 
 | 1452 |     - model : Model of the device.  Should be "SEC1" or "SEC2" | 
 | 1453 |     - compatible : Should be "talitos" | 
 | 1454 |     - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
 | 1455 |     - interrupts : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 1456 |       field that represents an encoding of the sense and level | 
 | 1457 |       information for the interrupt.  This should be encoded based on | 
 | 1458 |       the information in section 2) depending on the type of interrupt | 
 | 1459 |       controller you have. | 
 | 1460 |     - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 1461 |       services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 1462 |     - num-channels : An integer representing the number of channels | 
 | 1463 |       available. | 
 | 1464 |     - channel-fifo-len : An integer representing the number of | 
 | 1465 |       descriptor pointers each channel fetch fifo can hold. | 
 | 1466 |     - exec-units-mask : The bitmask representing what execution units | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1467 |       (EUs) are available. It's a single 32-bit cell. EU information | 
| Kim Phillips | b88a0b1 | 2006-03-22 14:39:03 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1468 |       should be encoded following the SEC's Descriptor Header Dword | 
 | 1469 |       EU_SEL0 field documentation, i.e. as follows: | 
 | 1470 |  | 
 | 1471 |         bit 0 = reserved - should be 0 | 
 | 1472 |         bit 1 = set if SEC has the ARC4 EU (AFEU) | 
 | 1473 |         bit 2 = set if SEC has the DES/3DES EU (DEU) | 
 | 1474 |         bit 3 = set if SEC has the message digest EU (MDEU) | 
 | 1475 |         bit 4 = set if SEC has the random number generator EU (RNG) | 
 | 1476 |         bit 5 = set if SEC has the public key EU (PKEU) | 
 | 1477 |         bit 6 = set if SEC has the AES EU (AESU) | 
 | 1478 |         bit 7 = set if SEC has the Kasumi EU (KEU) | 
 | 1479 |  | 
 | 1480 |       bits 8 through 31 are reserved for future SEC EUs. | 
 | 1481 |  | 
 | 1482 |     - descriptor-types-mask : The bitmask representing what descriptors | 
| Domen Puncer | 5dd6016 | 2007-03-02 21:44:45 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 1483 |       are available. It's a single 32-bit cell. Descriptor type | 
| Kim Phillips | b88a0b1 | 2006-03-22 14:39:03 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1484 |       information should be encoded following the SEC's Descriptor | 
 | 1485 |       Header Dword DESC_TYPE field documentation, i.e. as follows: | 
 | 1486 |  | 
 | 1487 |         bit 0  = set if SEC supports the aesu_ctr_nonsnoop desc. type | 
 | 1488 |         bit 1  = set if SEC supports the ipsec_esp descriptor type | 
 | 1489 |         bit 2  = set if SEC supports the common_nonsnoop desc. type | 
 | 1490 |         bit 3  = set if SEC supports the 802.11i AES ccmp desc. type | 
 | 1491 |         bit 4  = set if SEC supports the hmac_snoop_no_afeu desc. type | 
 | 1492 |         bit 5  = set if SEC supports the srtp descriptor type | 
 | 1493 |         bit 6  = set if SEC supports the non_hmac_snoop_no_afeu desc.type | 
 | 1494 |         bit 7  = set if SEC supports the pkeu_assemble descriptor type | 
 | 1495 |         bit 8  = set if SEC supports the aesu_key_expand_output desc.type | 
 | 1496 |         bit 9  = set if SEC supports the pkeu_ptmul descriptor type | 
 | 1497 |         bit 10 = set if SEC supports the common_nonsnoop_afeu desc. type | 
 | 1498 |         bit 11 = set if SEC supports the pkeu_ptadd_dbl descriptor type | 
 | 1499 |  | 
 | 1500 |       ..and so on and so forth. | 
 | 1501 |  | 
 | 1502 |    Example: | 
 | 1503 |  | 
 | 1504 |        /* MPC8548E */ | 
 | 1505 |        crypto@30000 { | 
 | 1506 |                device_type = "crypto"; | 
 | 1507 |                model = "SEC2"; | 
 | 1508 |                compatible = "talitos"; | 
 | 1509 |                reg = <30000 10000>; | 
 | 1510 |                interrupts = <1d 3>; | 
 | 1511 |                interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 1512 |                num-channels = <4>; | 
| Kim Phillips | cbdb54d | 2006-07-03 15:10:14 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1513 |                channel-fifo-len = <18>; | 
| Kim Phillips | b88a0b1 | 2006-03-22 14:39:03 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1514 |                exec-units-mask = <000000fe>; | 
| Kim Phillips | cbdb54d | 2006-07-03 15:10:14 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1515 |                descriptor-types-mask = <012b0ebf>; | 
| Kim Phillips | b88a0b1 | 2006-03-22 14:39:03 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1516 |        }; | 
 | 1517 |  | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1518 |    h) Board Control and Status (BCSR) | 
 | 1519 |  | 
 | 1520 |    Required properties: | 
 | 1521 |  | 
 | 1522 |     - device_type : Should be "board-control" | 
 | 1523 |     - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
 | 1524 |  | 
 | 1525 |     Example: | 
 | 1526 |  | 
 | 1527 | 	bcsr@f8000000 { | 
 | 1528 | 		device_type = "board-control"; | 
 | 1529 | 		reg = <f8000000 8000>; | 
 | 1530 | 	}; | 
 | 1531 |  | 
 | 1532 |    i) Freescale QUICC Engine module (QE) | 
 | 1533 |    This represents qe module that is installed on PowerQUICC II Pro. | 
| Scott Wood | e631ae3 | 2007-09-14 13:04:54 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1534 |  | 
 | 1535 |    NOTE:  This is an interim binding; it should be updated to fit | 
 | 1536 |    in with the CPM binding later in this document. | 
 | 1537 |  | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1538 |    Basically, it is a bus of devices, that could act more or less | 
 | 1539 |    as a complete entity (UCC, USB etc ). All of them should be siblings on | 
 | 1540 |    the "root" qe node, using the common properties from there. | 
| Michael Opdenacker | 59c5159 | 2007-05-09 08:57:56 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1541 |    The description below applies to the qe of MPC8360 and | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1542 |    more nodes and properties would be extended in the future. | 
 | 1543 |  | 
 | 1544 |    i) Root QE device | 
 | 1545 |  | 
 | 1546 |    Required properties: | 
| Anton Vorontsov | a2dd70a | 2008-01-24 18:39:59 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1547 |    - compatible : should be "fsl,qe"; | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1548 |    - model : precise model of the QE, Can be "QE", "CPM", or "CPM2" | 
 | 1549 |    - reg : offset and length of the device registers. | 
 | 1550 |    - bus-frequency : the clock frequency for QUICC Engine. | 
 | 1551 |  | 
 | 1552 |    Recommended properties | 
 | 1553 |    - brg-frequency : the internal clock source frequency for baud-rate | 
 | 1554 |      generators in Hz. | 
 | 1555 |  | 
 | 1556 |    Example: | 
 | 1557 | 	qe@e0100000 { | 
 | 1558 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1559 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1560 | 		#interrupt-cells = <2>; | 
| Anton Vorontsov | a2dd70a | 2008-01-24 18:39:59 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1561 | 		compatible = "fsl,qe"; | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1562 | 		ranges = <0 e0100000 00100000>; | 
 | 1563 | 		reg = <e0100000 480>; | 
 | 1564 | 		brg-frequency = <0>; | 
 | 1565 | 		bus-frequency = <179A7B00>; | 
 | 1566 | 	} | 
 | 1567 |  | 
 | 1568 |  | 
 | 1569 |    ii) SPI (Serial Peripheral Interface) | 
 | 1570 |  | 
 | 1571 |    Required properties: | 
| Anton Vorontsov | f3a2b29 | 2008-01-24 18:40:07 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1572 |    - cell-index : SPI controller index. | 
 | 1573 |    - compatible : should be "fsl,spi". | 
| Peter Korsgaard | f023dc7 | 2007-10-03 18:29:09 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1574 |    - mode : the SPI operation mode, it can be "cpu" or "cpu-qe". | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1575 |    - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
 | 1576 |    - interrupts : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 1577 |      field that represents an encoding of the sense and level | 
 | 1578 |      information for the interrupt.  This should be encoded based on | 
 | 1579 |      the information in section 2) depending on the type of interrupt | 
 | 1580 |      controller you have. | 
 | 1581 |    - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 1582 |      services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 1583 |  | 
 | 1584 |    Example: | 
 | 1585 | 	spi@4c0 { | 
| Anton Vorontsov | f3a2b29 | 2008-01-24 18:40:07 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1586 | 		cell-index = <0>; | 
 | 1587 | 		compatible = "fsl,spi"; | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1588 | 		reg = <4c0 40>; | 
 | 1589 | 		interrupts = <82 0>; | 
 | 1590 | 		interrupt-parent = <700>; | 
 | 1591 | 		mode = "cpu"; | 
 | 1592 | 	}; | 
 | 1593 |  | 
 | 1594 |  | 
 | 1595 |    iii) USB (Universal Serial Bus Controller) | 
 | 1596 |  | 
 | 1597 |    Required properties: | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1598 |    - compatible : could be "qe_udc" or "fhci-hcd". | 
 | 1599 |    - mode : the could be "host" or "slave". | 
 | 1600 |    - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
 | 1601 |    - interrupts : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 1602 |      field that represents an encoding of the sense and level | 
 | 1603 |      information for the interrupt.  This should be encoded based on | 
 | 1604 |      the information in section 2) depending on the type of interrupt | 
 | 1605 |      controller you have. | 
 | 1606 |    - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 1607 |      services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 1608 |  | 
 | 1609 |    Example(slave): | 
 | 1610 | 	usb@6c0 { | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1611 | 		compatible = "qe_udc"; | 
 | 1612 | 		reg = <6c0 40>; | 
 | 1613 | 		interrupts = <8b 0>; | 
 | 1614 | 		interrupt-parent = <700>; | 
 | 1615 | 		mode = "slave"; | 
 | 1616 | 	}; | 
 | 1617 |  | 
 | 1618 |  | 
 | 1619 |    iv) UCC (Unified Communications Controllers) | 
 | 1620 |  | 
 | 1621 |    Required properties: | 
 | 1622 |    - device_type : should be "network", "hldc", "uart", "transparent" | 
| Timur Tabi | 845cf50 | 2008-01-09 17:35:05 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1623 |      "bisync", "atm", or "serial". | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1624 |    - compatible : could be "ucc_geth" or "fsl_atm" and so on. | 
 | 1625 |    - model : should be "UCC". | 
 | 1626 |    - device-id : the ucc number(1-8), corresponding to UCCx in UM. | 
 | 1627 |    - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device | 
 | 1628 |    - interrupts : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 1629 |      field that represents an encoding of the sense and level | 
 | 1630 |      information for the interrupt.  This should be encoded based on | 
 | 1631 |      the information in section 2) depending on the type of interrupt | 
 | 1632 |      controller you have. | 
 | 1633 |    - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 1634 |      services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 1635 |    - pio-handle : The phandle for the Parallel I/O port configuration. | 
| Timur Tabi | 845cf50 | 2008-01-09 17:35:05 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1636 |    - port-number : for UART drivers, the port number to use, between 0 and 3. | 
 | 1637 |      This usually corresponds to the /dev/ttyQE device, e.g. <0> = /dev/ttyQE0. | 
 | 1638 |      The port number is added to the minor number of the device.  Unlike the | 
 | 1639 |      CPM UART driver, the port-number is required for the QE UART driver. | 
 | 1640 |    - soft-uart : for UART drivers, if specified this means the QE UART device | 
 | 1641 |      driver should use "Soft-UART" mode, which is needed on some SOCs that have | 
 | 1642 |      broken UART hardware.  Soft-UART is provided via a microcode upload. | 
| Timur Tabi | 174b0da | 2007-12-03 15:17:58 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1643 |    - rx-clock-name: the UCC receive clock source | 
 | 1644 |      "none": clock source is disabled | 
 | 1645 |      "brg1" through "brg16": clock source is BRG1-BRG16, respectively | 
 | 1646 |      "clk1" through "clk24": clock source is CLK1-CLK24, respectively | 
 | 1647 |    - tx-clock-name: the UCC transmit clock source | 
 | 1648 |      "none": clock source is disabled | 
 | 1649 |      "brg1" through "brg16": clock source is BRG1-BRG16, respectively | 
 | 1650 |      "clk1" through "clk24": clock source is CLK1-CLK24, respectively | 
 | 1651 |    The following two properties are deprecated.  rx-clock has been replaced | 
 | 1652 |    with rx-clock-name, and tx-clock has been replaced with tx-clock-name. | 
 | 1653 |    Drivers that currently use the deprecated properties should continue to | 
 | 1654 |    do so, in order to support older device trees, but they should be updated | 
 | 1655 |    to check for the new properties first. | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1656 |    - rx-clock : represents the UCC receive clock source. | 
 | 1657 |      0x00 : clock source is disabled; | 
 | 1658 |      0x1~0x10 : clock source is BRG1~BRG16 respectively; | 
 | 1659 |      0x11~0x28: clock source is QE_CLK1~QE_CLK24 respectively. | 
 | 1660 |    - tx-clock: represents the UCC transmit clock source; | 
 | 1661 |      0x00 : clock source is disabled; | 
 | 1662 |      0x1~0x10 : clock source is BRG1~BRG16 respectively; | 
 | 1663 |      0x11~0x28: clock source is QE_CLK1~QE_CLK24 respectively. | 
 | 1664 |  | 
 | 1665 |    Required properties for network device_type: | 
 | 1666 |    - mac-address : list of bytes representing the ethernet address. | 
 | 1667 |    - phy-handle : The phandle for the PHY connected to this controller. | 
 | 1668 |  | 
| Scott Wood | e0a2f28 | 2007-03-16 12:28:46 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1669 |    Recommended properties: | 
 | 1670 |    - linux,network-index : This is the intended "index" of this | 
 | 1671 |      network device.  This is used by the bootwrapper to interpret | 
 | 1672 |      MAC addresses passed by the firmware when no information other | 
 | 1673 |      than indices is available to associate an address with a device. | 
| Kim Phillips | 60c1922 | 2007-04-24 07:26:10 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1674 |    - phy-connection-type : a string naming the controller/PHY interface type, | 
| Kim Phillips | 34be456 | 2007-11-05 12:15:35 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1675 |      i.e., "mii" (default), "rmii", "gmii", "rgmii", "rgmii-id" (Internal | 
 | 1676 |      Delay), "rgmii-txid" (delay on TX only), "rgmii-rxid" (delay on RX only), | 
 | 1677 |      "tbi", or "rtbi". | 
| Scott Wood | e0a2f28 | 2007-03-16 12:28:46 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1678 |  | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1679 |    Example: | 
 | 1680 | 	ucc@2000 { | 
 | 1681 | 		device_type = "network"; | 
 | 1682 | 		compatible = "ucc_geth"; | 
 | 1683 | 		model = "UCC"; | 
 | 1684 | 		device-id = <1>; | 
 | 1685 | 		reg = <2000 200>; | 
 | 1686 | 		interrupts = <a0 0>; | 
 | 1687 | 		interrupt-parent = <700>; | 
 | 1688 | 		mac-address = [ 00 04 9f 00 23 23 ]; | 
 | 1689 | 		rx-clock = "none"; | 
 | 1690 | 		tx-clock = "clk9"; | 
 | 1691 | 		phy-handle = <212000>; | 
| Kim Phillips | 60c1922 | 2007-04-24 07:26:10 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1692 | 		phy-connection-type = "gmii"; | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1693 | 		pio-handle = <140001>; | 
 | 1694 | 	}; | 
 | 1695 |  | 
 | 1696 |  | 
 | 1697 |    v) Parallel I/O Ports | 
 | 1698 |  | 
 | 1699 |    This node configures Parallel I/O ports for CPUs with QE support. | 
 | 1700 |    The node should reside in the "soc" node of the tree.  For each | 
 | 1701 |    device that using parallel I/O ports, a child node should be created. | 
 | 1702 |    See the definition of the Pin configuration nodes below for more | 
 | 1703 |    information. | 
 | 1704 |  | 
 | 1705 |    Required properties: | 
 | 1706 |    - device_type : should be "par_io". | 
 | 1707 |    - reg : offset to the register set and its length. | 
 | 1708 |    - num-ports : number of Parallel I/O ports | 
 | 1709 |  | 
 | 1710 |    Example: | 
 | 1711 | 	par_io@1400 { | 
 | 1712 | 		reg = <1400 100>; | 
 | 1713 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1714 | 		#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 1715 | 		device_type = "par_io"; | 
 | 1716 | 		num-ports = <7>; | 
 | 1717 | 		ucc_pin@01 { | 
 | 1718 | 			...... | 
 | 1719 | 		}; | 
 | 1720 |  | 
 | 1721 |  | 
 | 1722 |    vi) Pin configuration nodes | 
 | 1723 |  | 
 | 1724 |    Required properties: | 
 | 1725 |    - linux,phandle : phandle of this node; likely referenced by a QE | 
 | 1726 |      device. | 
 | 1727 |    - pio-map : array of pin configurations.  Each pin is defined by 6 | 
 | 1728 |      integers.  The six numbers are respectively: port, pin, dir, | 
 | 1729 |      open_drain, assignment, has_irq. | 
 | 1730 |      - port : port number of the pin; 0-6 represent port A-G in UM. | 
 | 1731 |      - pin : pin number in the port. | 
 | 1732 |      - dir : direction of the pin, should encode as follows: | 
 | 1733 |  | 
 | 1734 | 	0 = The pin is disabled | 
 | 1735 | 	1 = The pin is an output | 
 | 1736 | 	2 = The pin is an input | 
 | 1737 | 	3 = The pin is I/O | 
 | 1738 |  | 
 | 1739 |      - open_drain : indicates the pin is normal or wired-OR: | 
 | 1740 |  | 
 | 1741 | 	0 = The pin is actively driven as an output | 
 | 1742 | 	1 = The pin is an open-drain driver. As an output, the pin is | 
 | 1743 | 	    driven active-low, otherwise it is three-stated. | 
 | 1744 |  | 
 | 1745 |      - assignment : function number of the pin according to the Pin Assignment | 
 | 1746 |        tables in User Manual.  Each pin can have up to 4 possible functions in | 
 | 1747 |        QE and two options for CPM. | 
| Matt LaPlante | a982ac0 | 2007-05-09 07:35:06 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 1748 |      - has_irq : indicates if the pin is used as source of external | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1749 |        interrupts. | 
 | 1750 |  | 
 | 1751 |    Example: | 
 | 1752 | 	ucc_pin@01 { | 
 | 1753 | 		linux,phandle = <140001>; | 
 | 1754 | 		pio-map = < | 
 | 1755 | 		/* port  pin  dir  open_drain  assignment  has_irq */ | 
 | 1756 | 			0  3  1  0  1  0 	/* TxD0 */ | 
 | 1757 | 			0  4  1  0  1  0 	/* TxD1 */ | 
 | 1758 | 			0  5  1  0  1  0 	/* TxD2 */ | 
 | 1759 | 			0  6  1  0  1  0 	/* TxD3 */ | 
 | 1760 | 			1  6  1  0  3  0 	/* TxD4 */ | 
 | 1761 | 			1  7  1  0  1  0 	/* TxD5 */ | 
 | 1762 | 			1  9  1  0  2  0 	/* TxD6 */ | 
 | 1763 | 			1  a  1  0  2  0 	/* TxD7 */ | 
 | 1764 | 			0  9  2  0  1  0 	/* RxD0 */ | 
 | 1765 | 			0  a  2  0  1  0 	/* RxD1 */ | 
 | 1766 | 			0  b  2  0  1  0 	/* RxD2 */ | 
 | 1767 | 			0  c  2  0  1  0 	/* RxD3 */ | 
 | 1768 | 			0  d  2  0  1  0 	/* RxD4 */ | 
 | 1769 | 			1  1  2  0  2  0 	/* RxD5 */ | 
 | 1770 | 			1  0  2  0  2  0 	/* RxD6 */ | 
 | 1771 | 			1  4  2  0  2  0 	/* RxD7 */ | 
 | 1772 | 			0  7  1  0  1  0 	/* TX_EN */ | 
 | 1773 | 			0  8  1  0  1  0 	/* TX_ER */ | 
 | 1774 | 			0  f  2  0  1  0 	/* RX_DV */ | 
 | 1775 | 			0  10 2  0  1  0 	/* RX_ER */ | 
 | 1776 | 			0  0  2  0  1  0 	/* RX_CLK */ | 
 | 1777 | 			2  9  1  0  3  0 	/* GTX_CLK - CLK10 */ | 
 | 1778 | 			2  8  2  0  1  0>;	/* GTX125 - CLK9 */ | 
 | 1779 | 	}; | 
 | 1780 |  | 
 | 1781 |    vii) Multi-User RAM (MURAM) | 
 | 1782 |  | 
 | 1783 |    Required properties: | 
| Anton Vorontsov | a2dd70a | 2008-01-24 18:39:59 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1784 |    - compatible : should be "fsl,qe-muram", "fsl,cpm-muram". | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1785 |    - mode : the could be "host" or "slave". | 
 | 1786 |    - ranges : Should be defined as specified in 1) to describe the | 
 | 1787 |       translation of MURAM addresses. | 
 | 1788 |    - data-only : sub-node which defines the address area under MURAM | 
 | 1789 |       bus that can be allocated as data/parameter | 
 | 1790 |  | 
 | 1791 |    Example: | 
 | 1792 |  | 
 | 1793 | 	muram@10000 { | 
| Anton Vorontsov | a2dd70a | 2008-01-24 18:39:59 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1794 | 		compatible = "fsl,qe-muram", "fsl,cpm-muram"; | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1795 | 		ranges = <0 00010000 0000c000>; | 
 | 1796 |  | 
 | 1797 | 		data-only@0{ | 
| Anton Vorontsov | a2dd70a | 2008-01-24 18:39:59 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1798 | 			compatible = "fsl,qe-muram-data", | 
 | 1799 | 				     "fsl,cpm-muram-data"; | 
| Li Yang | 9a1ab88 | 2006-10-02 20:08:59 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1800 | 			reg = <0 c000>; | 
 | 1801 | 		}; | 
 | 1802 | 	}; | 
| Kim Phillips | b88a0b1 | 2006-03-22 14:39:03 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1803 |  | 
| Timur Tabi | bc556ba | 2008-01-08 10:30:58 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 1804 |    viii) Uploaded QE firmware | 
 | 1805 |  | 
 | 1806 | 	 If a new firwmare has been uploaded to the QE (usually by the | 
 | 1807 | 	 boot loader), then a 'firmware' child node should be added to the QE | 
 | 1808 | 	 node.  This node provides information on the uploaded firmware that | 
 | 1809 | 	 device drivers may need. | 
 | 1810 |  | 
 | 1811 | 	 Required properties: | 
 | 1812 | 	 - id: The string name of the firmware.  This is taken from the 'id' | 
 | 1813 | 	       member of the qe_firmware structure of the uploaded firmware. | 
 | 1814 | 	       Device drivers can search this string to determine if the | 
 | 1815 | 	       firmware they want is already present. | 
 | 1816 | 	 - extended-modes: The Extended Modes bitfield, taken from the | 
 | 1817 | 			   firmware binary.  It is a 64-bit number represented | 
 | 1818 | 			   as an array of two 32-bit numbers. | 
 | 1819 | 	 - virtual-traps: The virtual traps, taken from the firmware binary. | 
 | 1820 | 			  It is an array of 8 32-bit numbers. | 
 | 1821 |  | 
 | 1822 | 	 Example: | 
 | 1823 |  | 
 | 1824 | 		firmware { | 
 | 1825 | 			id = "Soft-UART"; | 
 | 1826 | 			extended-modes = <0 0>; | 
 | 1827 | 			virtual-traps = <0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0>; | 
 | 1828 | 		} | 
 | 1829 |  | 
| David Gibson | 2099172 | 2007-09-07 13:23:53 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1830 |    j) CFI or JEDEC memory-mapped NOR flash | 
| Vitaly Wool | 28f9ec3 | 2006-11-20 16:32:39 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1831 |  | 
 | 1832 |     Flash chips (Memory Technology Devices) are often used for solid state | 
 | 1833 |     file systems on embedded devices. | 
 | 1834 |  | 
| David Gibson | 2099172 | 2007-09-07 13:23:53 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1835 |      - compatible : should contain the specific model of flash chip(s) | 
 | 1836 |        used, if known, followed by either "cfi-flash" or "jedec-flash" | 
 | 1837 |      - reg : Address range of the flash chip | 
 | 1838 |      - bank-width : Width (in bytes) of the flash bank.  Equal to the | 
 | 1839 |        device width times the number of interleaved chips. | 
 | 1840 |      - device-width : (optional) Width of a single flash chip.  If | 
 | 1841 |        omitted, assumed to be equal to 'bank-width'. | 
 | 1842 |      - #address-cells, #size-cells : Must be present if the flash has | 
 | 1843 |        sub-nodes representing partitions (see below).  In this case | 
 | 1844 |        both #address-cells and #size-cells must be equal to 1. | 
| Vitaly Wool | 28f9ec3 | 2006-11-20 16:32:39 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1845 |  | 
| David Gibson | 2099172 | 2007-09-07 13:23:53 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1846 |     For JEDEC compatible devices, the following additional properties | 
 | 1847 |     are defined: | 
| Vitaly Wool | 28f9ec3 | 2006-11-20 16:32:39 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1848 |  | 
| David Gibson | 2099172 | 2007-09-07 13:23:53 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1849 |      - vendor-id : Contains the flash chip's vendor id (1 byte). | 
 | 1850 |      - device-id : Contains the flash chip's device id (1 byte). | 
| Vitaly Wool | 28f9ec3 | 2006-11-20 16:32:39 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1851 |  | 
| David Gibson | 2099172 | 2007-09-07 13:23:53 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1852 |     In addition to the information on the flash bank itself, the | 
 | 1853 |     device tree may optionally contain additional information | 
 | 1854 |     describing partitions of the flash address space.  This can be | 
 | 1855 |     used on platforms which have strong conventions about which | 
 | 1856 |     portions of the flash are used for what purposes, but which don't | 
 | 1857 |     use an on-flash partition table such as RedBoot. | 
| Vitaly Wool | 28f9ec3 | 2006-11-20 16:32:39 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1858 |  | 
| David Gibson | 2099172 | 2007-09-07 13:23:53 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1859 |     Each partition is represented as a sub-node of the flash device. | 
 | 1860 |     Each node's name represents the name of the corresponding | 
 | 1861 |     partition of the flash device. | 
| Vitaly Wool | 28f9ec3 | 2006-11-20 16:32:39 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1862 |  | 
| David Gibson | 2099172 | 2007-09-07 13:23:53 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1863 |     Flash partitions | 
 | 1864 |      - reg : The partition's offset and size within the flash bank. | 
 | 1865 |      - label : (optional) The label / name for this flash partition. | 
 | 1866 |        If omitted, the label is taken from the node name (excluding | 
 | 1867 |        the unit address). | 
 | 1868 |      - read-only : (optional) This parameter, if present, is a hint to | 
 | 1869 |        Linux that this flash partition should only be mounted | 
 | 1870 |        read-only.  This is usually used for flash partitions | 
 | 1871 |        containing early-boot firmware images or data which should not | 
 | 1872 |        be clobbered. | 
 | 1873 |  | 
 | 1874 |     Example: | 
 | 1875 |  | 
 | 1876 | 	flash@ff000000 { | 
 | 1877 | 		compatible = "amd,am29lv128ml", "cfi-flash"; | 
 | 1878 | 		reg = <ff000000 01000000>; | 
 | 1879 | 		bank-width = <4>; | 
 | 1880 | 		device-width = <1>; | 
 | 1881 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1882 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1883 | 		fs@0 { | 
 | 1884 | 			label = "fs"; | 
 | 1885 | 			reg = <0 f80000>; | 
 | 1886 | 		}; | 
 | 1887 | 		firmware@f80000 { | 
 | 1888 | 			label ="firmware"; | 
 | 1889 | 			reg = <f80000 80000>; | 
 | 1890 | 			read-only; | 
 | 1891 | 		}; | 
 | 1892 | 	}; | 
| Vitaly Wool | 28f9ec3 | 2006-11-20 16:32:39 +0300 | [diff] [blame] | 1893 |  | 
| Roy Zang | 3b824f8 | 2007-06-19 15:19:18 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1894 |    k) Global Utilities Block | 
 | 1895 |  | 
 | 1896 |    The global utilities block controls power management, I/O device | 
 | 1897 |    enabling, power-on-reset configuration monitoring, general-purpose | 
 | 1898 |    I/O signal configuration, alternate function selection for multiplexed | 
 | 1899 |    signals, and clock control. | 
 | 1900 |  | 
 | 1901 |    Required properties: | 
 | 1902 |  | 
 | 1903 |     - compatible : Should define the compatible device type for | 
 | 1904 |       global-utilities. | 
 | 1905 |     - reg : Offset and length of the register set for the device. | 
 | 1906 |  | 
 | 1907 |   Recommended properties: | 
 | 1908 |  | 
 | 1909 |     - fsl,has-rstcr : Indicates that the global utilities register set | 
 | 1910 |       contains a functioning "reset control register" (i.e. the board | 
 | 1911 |       is wired to reset upon setting the HRESET_REQ bit in this register). | 
 | 1912 |  | 
 | 1913 |     Example: | 
 | 1914 |  | 
 | 1915 | 	global-utilities@e0000 {	/* global utilities block */ | 
 | 1916 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8548-guts"; | 
 | 1917 | 		reg = <e0000 1000>; | 
 | 1918 | 		fsl,has-rstcr; | 
 | 1919 | 	}; | 
 | 1920 |  | 
| Scott Wood | e631ae3 | 2007-09-14 13:04:54 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1921 |    l) Freescale Communications Processor Module | 
| David Gibson | 1d3bb99 | 2007-08-23 13:56:01 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 1922 |  | 
| Scott Wood | e631ae3 | 2007-09-14 13:04:54 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1923 |    NOTE: This is an interim binding, and will likely change slightly, | 
 | 1924 |    as more devices are supported.  The QE bindings especially are | 
 | 1925 |    incomplete. | 
 | 1926 |  | 
 | 1927 |    i) Root CPM node | 
 | 1928 |  | 
 | 1929 |    Properties: | 
 | 1930 |    - compatible : "fsl,cpm1", "fsl,cpm2", or "fsl,qe". | 
| Scott Wood | 15f8c60 | 2007-09-28 14:06:16 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1931 |    - reg : A 48-byte region beginning with CPCR. | 
| Scott Wood | e631ae3 | 2007-09-14 13:04:54 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1932 |  | 
 | 1933 |    Example: | 
 | 1934 | 	cpm@119c0 { | 
 | 1935 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1936 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 1937 | 		#interrupt-cells = <2>; | 
 | 1938 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8272-cpm", "fsl,cpm2"; | 
| Scott Wood | 15f8c60 | 2007-09-28 14:06:16 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1939 | 		reg = <119c0 30>; | 
| Scott Wood | e631ae3 | 2007-09-14 13:04:54 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1940 | 	} | 
 | 1941 |  | 
 | 1942 |    ii) Properties common to mulitple CPM/QE devices | 
 | 1943 |  | 
 | 1944 |    - fsl,cpm-command : This value is ORed with the opcode and command flag | 
 | 1945 |                        to specify the device on which a CPM command operates. | 
 | 1946 |  | 
 | 1947 |    - fsl,cpm-brg : Indicates which baud rate generator the device | 
 | 1948 |                    is associated with.  If absent, an unused BRG | 
 | 1949 |                    should be dynamically allocated.  If zero, the | 
 | 1950 |                    device uses an external clock rather than a BRG. | 
 | 1951 |  | 
 | 1952 |    - reg : Unless otherwise specified, the first resource represents the | 
 | 1953 |            scc/fcc/ucc registers, and the second represents the device's | 
 | 1954 |            parameter RAM region (if it has one). | 
 | 1955 |  | 
 | 1956 |    iii) Serial | 
 | 1957 |  | 
 | 1958 |    Currently defined compatibles: | 
 | 1959 |    - fsl,cpm1-smc-uart | 
 | 1960 |    - fsl,cpm2-smc-uart | 
 | 1961 |    - fsl,cpm1-scc-uart | 
 | 1962 |    - fsl,cpm2-scc-uart | 
 | 1963 |    - fsl,qe-uart | 
 | 1964 |  | 
 | 1965 |    Example: | 
 | 1966 |  | 
 | 1967 | 	serial@11a00 { | 
 | 1968 | 		device_type = "serial"; | 
 | 1969 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8272-scc-uart", | 
 | 1970 | 		             "fsl,cpm2-scc-uart"; | 
 | 1971 | 		reg = <11a00 20 8000 100>; | 
 | 1972 | 		interrupts = <28 8>; | 
 | 1973 | 		interrupt-parent = <&PIC>; | 
 | 1974 | 		fsl,cpm-brg = <1>; | 
 | 1975 | 		fsl,cpm-command = <00800000>; | 
 | 1976 | 	}; | 
 | 1977 |  | 
 | 1978 |    iii) Network | 
 | 1979 |  | 
 | 1980 |    Currently defined compatibles: | 
 | 1981 |    - fsl,cpm1-scc-enet | 
 | 1982 |    - fsl,cpm2-scc-enet | 
 | 1983 |    - fsl,cpm1-fec-enet | 
 | 1984 |    - fsl,cpm2-fcc-enet (third resource is GFEMR) | 
 | 1985 |    - fsl,qe-enet | 
 | 1986 |  | 
 | 1987 |    Example: | 
 | 1988 |  | 
 | 1989 | 	ethernet@11300 { | 
 | 1990 | 		device_type = "network"; | 
 | 1991 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8272-fcc-enet", | 
 | 1992 | 		             "fsl,cpm2-fcc-enet"; | 
 | 1993 | 		reg = <11300 20 8400 100 11390 1>; | 
 | 1994 | 		local-mac-address = [ 00 00 00 00 00 00 ]; | 
 | 1995 | 		interrupts = <20 8>; | 
 | 1996 | 		interrupt-parent = <&PIC>; | 
 | 1997 | 		phy-handle = <&PHY0>; | 
 | 1998 | 		linux,network-index = <0>; | 
 | 1999 | 		fsl,cpm-command = <12000300>; | 
 | 2000 | 	}; | 
 | 2001 |  | 
 | 2002 |    iv) MDIO | 
 | 2003 |  | 
 | 2004 |    Currently defined compatibles: | 
 | 2005 |    fsl,pq1-fec-mdio (reg is same as first resource of FEC device) | 
 | 2006 |    fsl,cpm2-mdio-bitbang (reg is port C registers) | 
 | 2007 |  | 
 | 2008 |    Properties for fsl,cpm2-mdio-bitbang: | 
 | 2009 |    fsl,mdio-pin : pin of port C controlling mdio data | 
 | 2010 |    fsl,mdc-pin : pin of port C controlling mdio clock | 
 | 2011 |  | 
 | 2012 |    Example: | 
 | 2013 |  | 
 | 2014 | 	mdio@10d40 { | 
 | 2015 | 		device_type = "mdio"; | 
 | 2016 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8272ads-mdio-bitbang", | 
 | 2017 | 		             "fsl,mpc8272-mdio-bitbang", | 
 | 2018 | 		             "fsl,cpm2-mdio-bitbang"; | 
 | 2019 | 		reg = <10d40 14>; | 
 | 2020 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2021 | 		#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 2022 | 		fsl,mdio-pin = <12>; | 
 | 2023 | 		fsl,mdc-pin = <13>; | 
 | 2024 | 	}; | 
 | 2025 |  | 
 | 2026 |    v) Baud Rate Generators | 
 | 2027 |  | 
 | 2028 |    Currently defined compatibles: | 
 | 2029 |    fsl,cpm-brg | 
 | 2030 |    fsl,cpm1-brg | 
 | 2031 |    fsl,cpm2-brg | 
 | 2032 |  | 
 | 2033 |    Properties: | 
 | 2034 |    - reg : There may be an arbitrary number of reg resources; BRG | 
 | 2035 |      numbers are assigned to these in order. | 
 | 2036 |    - clock-frequency : Specifies the base frequency driving | 
 | 2037 |      the BRG. | 
 | 2038 |  | 
 | 2039 |    Example: | 
 | 2040 |  | 
 | 2041 | 	brg@119f0 { | 
 | 2042 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8272-brg", | 
 | 2043 | 		             "fsl,cpm2-brg", | 
 | 2044 | 		             "fsl,cpm-brg"; | 
 | 2045 | 		reg = <119f0 10 115f0 10>; | 
 | 2046 | 		clock-frequency = <d#25000000>; | 
 | 2047 | 	}; | 
 | 2048 |  | 
 | 2049 |    vi) Interrupt Controllers | 
 | 2050 |  | 
 | 2051 |    Currently defined compatibles: | 
 | 2052 |    - fsl,cpm1-pic | 
 | 2053 |      - only one interrupt cell | 
 | 2054 |    - fsl,pq1-pic | 
 | 2055 |    - fsl,cpm2-pic | 
 | 2056 |      - second interrupt cell is level/sense: | 
 | 2057 |        - 2 is falling edge | 
 | 2058 |        - 8 is active low | 
 | 2059 |  | 
 | 2060 |    Example: | 
 | 2061 |  | 
 | 2062 | 	interrupt-controller@10c00 { | 
 | 2063 | 		#interrupt-cells = <2>; | 
 | 2064 | 		interrupt-controller; | 
 | 2065 | 		reg = <10c00 80>; | 
 | 2066 | 		compatible = "mpc8272-pic", "fsl,cpm2-pic"; | 
 | 2067 | 	}; | 
 | 2068 |  | 
 | 2069 |    vii) USB (Universal Serial Bus Controller) | 
 | 2070 |  | 
 | 2071 |    Properties: | 
 | 2072 |    - compatible : "fsl,cpm1-usb", "fsl,cpm2-usb", "fsl,qe-usb" | 
 | 2073 |  | 
 | 2074 |    Example: | 
 | 2075 | 	usb@11bc0 { | 
 | 2076 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2077 | 		#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 2078 | 		compatible = "fsl,cpm2-usb"; | 
 | 2079 | 		reg = <11b60 18 8b00 100>; | 
 | 2080 | 		interrupts = <b 8>; | 
 | 2081 | 		interrupt-parent = <&PIC>; | 
 | 2082 | 		fsl,cpm-command = <2e600000>; | 
 | 2083 | 	}; | 
 | 2084 |  | 
| Scott Wood | 15f8c60 | 2007-09-28 14:06:16 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2085 |    viii) Multi-User RAM (MURAM) | 
 | 2086 |  | 
 | 2087 |    The multi-user/dual-ported RAM is expressed as a bus under the CPM node. | 
 | 2088 |  | 
 | 2089 |    Ranges must be set up subject to the following restrictions: | 
 | 2090 |  | 
 | 2091 |    - Children's reg nodes must be offsets from the start of all muram, even | 
 | 2092 |      if the user-data area does not begin at zero. | 
 | 2093 |    - If multiple range entries are used, the difference between the parent | 
 | 2094 |      address and the child address must be the same in all, so that a single | 
 | 2095 |      mapping can cover them all while maintaining the ability to determine | 
 | 2096 |      CPM-side offsets with pointer subtraction.  It is recommended that | 
 | 2097 |      multiple range entries not be used. | 
 | 2098 |    - A child address of zero must be translatable, even if no reg resources | 
 | 2099 |      contain it. | 
 | 2100 |  | 
 | 2101 |    A child "data" node must exist, compatible with "fsl,cpm-muram-data", to | 
 | 2102 |    indicate the portion of muram that is usable by the OS for arbitrary | 
 | 2103 |    purposes.  The data node may have an arbitrary number of reg resources, | 
 | 2104 |    all of which contribute to the allocatable muram pool. | 
 | 2105 |  | 
 | 2106 |    Example, based on mpc8272: | 
 | 2107 |  | 
 | 2108 | 	muram@0 { | 
 | 2109 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2110 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2111 | 		ranges = <0 0 10000>; | 
 | 2112 |  | 
 | 2113 | 		data@0 { | 
 | 2114 | 			compatible = "fsl,cpm-muram-data"; | 
 | 2115 | 			reg = <0 2000 9800 800>; | 
 | 2116 | 		}; | 
 | 2117 | 	}; | 
 | 2118 |  | 
| Scott Wood | 96fca1de | 2007-09-14 13:24:02 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2119 |    m) Chipselect/Local Bus | 
 | 2120 |  | 
 | 2121 |    Properties: | 
 | 2122 |    - name : Should be localbus | 
 | 2123 |    - #address-cells : Should be either two or three.  The first cell is the | 
 | 2124 |                       chipselect number, and the remaining cells are the | 
 | 2125 |                       offset into the chipselect. | 
 | 2126 |    - #size-cells : Either one or two, depending on how large each chipselect | 
 | 2127 |                    can be. | 
 | 2128 |    - ranges : Each range corresponds to a single chipselect, and cover | 
 | 2129 |               the entire access window as configured. | 
 | 2130 |  | 
 | 2131 |    Example: | 
 | 2132 | 	localbus@f0010100 { | 
| Anton Vorontsov | 253772b | 2007-12-15 05:48:26 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2133 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8272-localbus", | 
| Scott Wood | 96fca1de | 2007-09-14 13:24:02 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2134 | 		             "fsl,pq2-localbus"; | 
 | 2135 | 		#address-cells = <2>; | 
 | 2136 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2137 | 		reg = <f0010100 40>; | 
 | 2138 |  | 
 | 2139 | 		ranges = <0 0 fe000000 02000000 | 
 | 2140 | 		          1 0 f4500000 00008000>; | 
 | 2141 |  | 
 | 2142 | 		flash@0,0 { | 
 | 2143 | 			compatible = "jedec-flash"; | 
 | 2144 | 			reg = <0 0 2000000>; | 
 | 2145 | 			bank-width = <4>; | 
 | 2146 | 			device-width = <1>; | 
 | 2147 | 		}; | 
 | 2148 |  | 
 | 2149 | 		board-control@1,0 { | 
 | 2150 | 			reg = <1 0 20>; | 
 | 2151 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8272ads-bcsr"; | 
 | 2152 | 		}; | 
 | 2153 | 	}; | 
 | 2154 |  | 
 | 2155 |  | 
| Linus Torvalds | e869086 | 2007-10-11 21:55:47 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 2156 |     n) 4xx/Axon EMAC ethernet nodes | 
| David Gibson | 1d3bb99 | 2007-08-23 13:56:01 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2157 |  | 
 | 2158 |     The EMAC ethernet controller in IBM and AMCC 4xx chips, and also | 
 | 2159 |     the Axon bridge.  To operate this needs to interact with a ths | 
 | 2160 |     special McMAL DMA controller, and sometimes an RGMII or ZMII | 
 | 2161 |     interface.  In addition to the nodes and properties described | 
 | 2162 |     below, the node for the OPB bus on which the EMAC sits must have a | 
 | 2163 |     correct clock-frequency property. | 
 | 2164 |  | 
 | 2165 |       i) The EMAC node itself | 
 | 2166 |  | 
 | 2167 |     Required properties: | 
 | 2168 |     - device_type       : "network" | 
 | 2169 |  | 
 | 2170 |     - compatible        : compatible list, contains 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2171 | 			  "ibm,emac-CHIP" where CHIP is the host ASIC (440gx, | 
 | 2172 | 			  405gp, Axon) and second is either "ibm,emac" or | 
 | 2173 | 			  "ibm,emac4".  For Axon, thus, we have: "ibm,emac-axon", | 
 | 2174 | 			  "ibm,emac4" | 
 | 2175 |     - interrupts        : <interrupt mapping for EMAC IRQ and WOL IRQ> | 
 | 2176 |     - interrupt-parent  : optional, if needed for interrupt mapping | 
 | 2177 |     - reg               : <registers mapping> | 
 | 2178 |     - local-mac-address : 6 bytes, MAC address | 
 | 2179 |     - mal-device        : phandle of the associated McMAL node | 
 | 2180 |     - mal-tx-channel    : 1 cell, index of the tx channel on McMAL associated | 
 | 2181 | 			  with this EMAC | 
 | 2182 |     - mal-rx-channel    : 1 cell, index of the rx channel on McMAL associated | 
 | 2183 | 			  with this EMAC | 
 | 2184 |     - cell-index        : 1 cell, hardware index of the EMAC cell on a given | 
 | 2185 | 			  ASIC (typically 0x0 and 0x1 for EMAC0 and EMAC1 on | 
 | 2186 | 			  each Axon chip) | 
 | 2187 |     - max-frame-size    : 1 cell, maximum frame size supported in bytes | 
 | 2188 |     - rx-fifo-size      : 1 cell, Rx fifo size in bytes for 10 and 100 Mb/sec | 
 | 2189 | 			  operations. | 
 | 2190 | 			  For Axon, 2048 | 
 | 2191 |     - tx-fifo-size      : 1 cell, Tx fifo size in bytes for 10 and 100 Mb/sec | 
 | 2192 | 			  operations. | 
 | 2193 | 			  For Axon, 2048. | 
 | 2194 |     - fifo-entry-size   : 1 cell, size of a fifo entry (used to calculate | 
 | 2195 | 			  thresholds). | 
 | 2196 | 			  For Axon, 0x00000010 | 
 | 2197 |     - mal-burst-size    : 1 cell, MAL burst size (used to calculate thresholds) | 
 | 2198 | 			  in bytes. | 
 | 2199 | 			  For Axon, 0x00000100 (I think ...) | 
 | 2200 |     - phy-mode          : string, mode of operations of the PHY interface. | 
 | 2201 | 			  Supported values are: "mii", "rmii", "smii", "rgmii", | 
 | 2202 | 			  "tbi", "gmii", rtbi", "sgmii". | 
 | 2203 | 			  For Axon on CAB, it is "rgmii" | 
 | 2204 |     - mdio-device       : 1 cell, required iff using shared MDIO registers | 
 | 2205 | 			  (440EP).  phandle of the EMAC to use to drive the | 
 | 2206 | 			  MDIO lines for the PHY used by this EMAC. | 
 | 2207 |     - zmii-device       : 1 cell, required iff connected to a ZMII.  phandle of | 
 | 2208 | 			  the ZMII device node | 
 | 2209 |     - zmii-channel      : 1 cell, required iff connected to a ZMII.  Which ZMII | 
 | 2210 | 			  channel or 0xffffffff if ZMII is only used for MDIO. | 
 | 2211 |     - rgmii-device      : 1 cell, required iff connected to an RGMII. phandle | 
 | 2212 | 			  of the RGMII device node. | 
 | 2213 | 			  For Axon: phandle of plb5/plb4/opb/rgmii | 
 | 2214 |     - rgmii-channel     : 1 cell, required iff connected to an RGMII.  Which | 
 | 2215 | 			  RGMII channel is used by this EMAC. | 
 | 2216 | 			  Fox Axon: present, whatever value is appropriate for each | 
 | 2217 | 			  EMAC, that is the content of the current (bogus) "phy-port" | 
 | 2218 | 			  property. | 
 | 2219 |  | 
 | 2220 |     Recommended properties: | 
 | 2221 |     - linux,network-index : This is the intended "index" of this | 
 | 2222 |       network device.  This is used by the bootwrapper to interpret | 
 | 2223 |       MAC addresses passed by the firmware when no information other | 
 | 2224 |       than indices is available to associate an address with a device. | 
 | 2225 |  | 
 | 2226 |     Optional properties: | 
 | 2227 |     - phy-address       : 1 cell, optional, MDIO address of the PHY. If absent, | 
 | 2228 | 			  a search is performed. | 
 | 2229 |     - phy-map           : 1 cell, optional, bitmap of addresses to probe the PHY | 
 | 2230 | 			  for, used if phy-address is absent. bit 0x00000001 is | 
 | 2231 | 			  MDIO address 0. | 
 | 2232 | 			  For Axon it can be absent, thouugh my current driver | 
 | 2233 | 			  doesn't handle phy-address yet so for now, keep | 
 | 2234 | 			  0x00ffffff in it. | 
 | 2235 |     - rx-fifo-size-gige : 1 cell, Rx fifo size in bytes for 1000 Mb/sec | 
 | 2236 | 			  operations (if absent the value is the same as | 
 | 2237 | 			  rx-fifo-size).  For Axon, either absent or 2048. | 
 | 2238 |     - tx-fifo-size-gige : 1 cell, Tx fifo size in bytes for 1000 Mb/sec | 
 | 2239 | 			  operations (if absent the value is the same as | 
 | 2240 | 			  tx-fifo-size). For Axon, either absent or 2048. | 
 | 2241 |     - tah-device        : 1 cell, optional. If connected to a TAH engine for | 
 | 2242 | 			  offload, phandle of the TAH device node. | 
 | 2243 |     - tah-channel       : 1 cell, optional. If appropriate, channel used on the | 
 | 2244 | 			  TAH engine. | 
 | 2245 |  | 
 | 2246 |     Example: | 
 | 2247 |  | 
 | 2248 | 	EMAC0: ethernet@40000800 { | 
 | 2249 | 		linux,network-index = <0>; | 
 | 2250 | 		device_type = "network"; | 
 | 2251 | 		compatible = "ibm,emac-440gp", "ibm,emac"; | 
 | 2252 | 		interrupt-parent = <&UIC1>; | 
 | 2253 | 		interrupts = <1c 4 1d 4>; | 
 | 2254 | 		reg = <40000800 70>; | 
 | 2255 | 		local-mac-address = [00 04 AC E3 1B 1E]; | 
 | 2256 | 		mal-device = <&MAL0>; | 
 | 2257 | 		mal-tx-channel = <0 1>; | 
 | 2258 | 		mal-rx-channel = <0>; | 
 | 2259 | 		cell-index = <0>; | 
 | 2260 | 		max-frame-size = <5dc>; | 
 | 2261 | 		rx-fifo-size = <1000>; | 
 | 2262 | 		tx-fifo-size = <800>; | 
 | 2263 | 		phy-mode = "rmii"; | 
 | 2264 | 		phy-map = <00000001>; | 
 | 2265 | 		zmii-device = <&ZMII0>; | 
 | 2266 | 		zmii-channel = <0>; | 
 | 2267 | 	}; | 
 | 2268 |  | 
 | 2269 |       ii) McMAL node | 
 | 2270 |  | 
 | 2271 |     Required properties: | 
 | 2272 |     - device_type        : "dma-controller" | 
 | 2273 |     - compatible         : compatible list, containing 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2274 | 			   "ibm,mcmal-CHIP" where CHIP is the host ASIC (like | 
 | 2275 | 			   emac) and the second is either "ibm,mcmal" or | 
 | 2276 | 			   "ibm,mcmal2". | 
 | 2277 | 			   For Axon, "ibm,mcmal-axon","ibm,mcmal2" | 
 | 2278 |     - interrupts         : <interrupt mapping for the MAL interrupts sources: | 
 | 2279 |                            5 sources: tx_eob, rx_eob, serr, txde, rxde>. | 
 | 2280 |                            For Axon: This is _different_ from the current | 
 | 2281 | 			   firmware.  We use the "delayed" interrupts for txeob | 
 | 2282 | 			   and rxeob. Thus we end up with mapping those 5 MPIC | 
 | 2283 | 			   interrupts, all level positive sensitive: 10, 11, 32, | 
 | 2284 | 			   33, 34 (in decimal) | 
 | 2285 |     - dcr-reg            : < DCR registers range > | 
 | 2286 |     - dcr-parent         : if needed for dcr-reg | 
 | 2287 |     - num-tx-chans       : 1 cell, number of Tx channels | 
 | 2288 |     - num-rx-chans       : 1 cell, number of Rx channels | 
 | 2289 |  | 
 | 2290 |       iii) ZMII node | 
 | 2291 |  | 
 | 2292 |     Required properties: | 
 | 2293 |     - compatible         : compatible list, containing 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2294 | 			   "ibm,zmii-CHIP" where CHIP is the host ASIC (like | 
 | 2295 | 			   EMAC) and the second is "ibm,zmii". | 
 | 2296 | 			   For Axon, there is no ZMII node. | 
 | 2297 |     - reg                : <registers mapping> | 
 | 2298 |  | 
 | 2299 |       iv) RGMII node | 
 | 2300 |  | 
 | 2301 |     Required properties: | 
 | 2302 |     - compatible         : compatible list, containing 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2303 | 			   "ibm,rgmii-CHIP" where CHIP is the host ASIC (like | 
 | 2304 | 			   EMAC) and the second is "ibm,rgmii". | 
 | 2305 |                            For Axon, "ibm,rgmii-axon","ibm,rgmii" | 
 | 2306 |     - reg                : <registers mapping> | 
 | 2307 |     - revision           : as provided by the RGMII new version register if | 
 | 2308 | 			   available. | 
 | 2309 | 			   For Axon: 0x0000012a | 
 | 2310 |  | 
| Timur Tabi | bc556ba | 2008-01-08 10:30:58 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 2311 |    o) Xilinx IP cores | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2312 |  | 
 | 2313 |    The Xilinx EDK toolchain ships with a set of IP cores (devices) for use | 
 | 2314 |    in Xilinx Spartan and Virtex FPGAs.  The devices cover the whole range | 
 | 2315 |    of standard device types (network, serial, etc.) and miscellanious | 
 | 2316 |    devices (gpio, LCD, spi, etc).  Also, since these devices are | 
 | 2317 |    implemented within the fpga fabric every instance of the device can be | 
 | 2318 |    synthesised with different options that change the behaviour. | 
 | 2319 |  | 
 | 2320 |    Each IP-core has a set of parameters which the FPGA designer can use to | 
 | 2321 |    control how the core is synthesized.  Historically, the EDK tool would | 
 | 2322 |    extract the device parameters relevant to device drivers and copy them | 
 | 2323 |    into an 'xparameters.h' in the form of #define symbols.  This tells the | 
 | 2324 |    device drivers how the IP cores are configured, but it requres the kernel | 
 | 2325 |    to be recompiled every time the FPGA bitstream is resynthesized. | 
 | 2326 |  | 
 | 2327 |    The new approach is to export the parameters into the device tree and | 
 | 2328 |    generate a new device tree each time the FPGA bitstream changes.  The | 
 | 2329 |    parameters which used to be exported as #defines will now become | 
 | 2330 |    properties of the device node.  In general, device nodes for IP-cores | 
 | 2331 |    will take the following form: | 
 | 2332 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2333 | 	(name): (generic-name)@(base-address) { | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2334 | 		compatible = "xlnx,(ip-core-name)-(HW_VER)" | 
 | 2335 | 			     [, (list of compatible devices), ...]; | 
 | 2336 | 		reg = <(baseaddr) (size)>; | 
 | 2337 | 		interrupt-parent = <&interrupt-controller-phandle>; | 
 | 2338 | 		interrupts = < ... >; | 
 | 2339 | 		xlnx,(parameter1) = "(string-value)"; | 
 | 2340 | 		xlnx,(parameter2) = <(int-value)>; | 
 | 2341 | 	}; | 
 | 2342 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2343 | 	(generic-name):   an open firmware-style name that describes the | 
 | 2344 | 			generic class of device.  Preferably, this is one word, such | 
 | 2345 | 			as 'serial' or 'ethernet'. | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2346 | 	(ip-core-name):	the name of the ip block (given after the BEGIN | 
 | 2347 | 			directive in system.mhs).  Should be in lowercase | 
 | 2348 | 			and all underscores '_' converted to dashes '-'. | 
 | 2349 | 	(name):		is derived from the "PARAMETER INSTANCE" value. | 
 | 2350 | 	(parameter#):	C_* parameters from system.mhs.  The C_ prefix is | 
 | 2351 | 			dropped from the parameter name, the name is converted | 
 | 2352 | 			to lowercase and all underscore '_' characters are | 
 | 2353 | 			converted to dashes '-'. | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2354 | 	(baseaddr):	the baseaddr parameter value (often named C_BASEADDR). | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2355 | 	(HW_VER):	from the HW_VER parameter. | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2356 | 	(size):		the address range size (often C_HIGHADDR - C_BASEADDR + 1). | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2357 |  | 
 | 2358 |    Typically, the compatible list will include the exact IP core version | 
 | 2359 |    followed by an older IP core version which implements the same | 
 | 2360 |    interface or any other device with the same interface. | 
 | 2361 |  | 
 | 2362 |    'reg', 'interrupt-parent' and 'interrupts' are all optional properties. | 
 | 2363 |  | 
 | 2364 |    For example, the following block from system.mhs: | 
 | 2365 |  | 
 | 2366 | 	BEGIN opb_uartlite | 
 | 2367 | 		PARAMETER INSTANCE = opb_uartlite_0 | 
 | 2368 | 		PARAMETER HW_VER = 1.00.b | 
 | 2369 | 		PARAMETER C_BAUDRATE = 115200 | 
 | 2370 | 		PARAMETER C_DATA_BITS = 8 | 
 | 2371 | 		PARAMETER C_ODD_PARITY = 0 | 
 | 2372 | 		PARAMETER C_USE_PARITY = 0 | 
 | 2373 | 		PARAMETER C_CLK_FREQ = 50000000 | 
 | 2374 | 		PARAMETER C_BASEADDR = 0xEC100000 | 
 | 2375 | 		PARAMETER C_HIGHADDR = 0xEC10FFFF | 
 | 2376 | 		BUS_INTERFACE SOPB = opb_7 | 
 | 2377 | 		PORT OPB_Clk = CLK_50MHz | 
 | 2378 | 		PORT Interrupt = opb_uartlite_0_Interrupt | 
 | 2379 | 		PORT RX = opb_uartlite_0_RX | 
 | 2380 | 		PORT TX = opb_uartlite_0_TX | 
 | 2381 | 		PORT OPB_Rst = sys_bus_reset_0 | 
 | 2382 | 	END | 
 | 2383 |  | 
 | 2384 |    becomes the following device tree node: | 
 | 2385 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2386 | 	opb_uartlite_0: serial@ec100000 { | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2387 | 		device_type = "serial"; | 
 | 2388 | 		compatible = "xlnx,opb-uartlite-1.00.b"; | 
 | 2389 | 		reg = <ec100000 10000>; | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2390 | 		interrupt-parent = <&opb_intc_0>; | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2391 | 		interrupts = <1 0>; // got this from the opb_intc parameters | 
 | 2392 | 		current-speed = <d#115200>;	// standard serial device prop | 
 | 2393 | 		clock-frequency = <d#50000000>;	// standard serial device prop | 
 | 2394 | 		xlnx,data-bits = <8>; | 
 | 2395 | 		xlnx,odd-parity = <0>; | 
 | 2396 | 		xlnx,use-parity = <0>; | 
 | 2397 | 	}; | 
 | 2398 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2399 |    Some IP cores actually implement 2 or more logical devices.  In | 
 | 2400 |    this case, the device should still describe the whole IP core with | 
 | 2401 |    a single node and add a child node for each logical device.  The | 
 | 2402 |    ranges property can be used to translate from parent IP-core to the | 
 | 2403 |    registers of each device.  In addition, the parent node should be | 
 | 2404 |    compatible with the bus type 'xlnx,compound', and should contain | 
 | 2405 |    #address-cells and #size-cells, as with any other bus.  (Note: this | 
 | 2406 |    makes the assumption that both logical devices have the same bus | 
 | 2407 |    binding.  If this is not true, then separate nodes should be used | 
 | 2408 |    for each logical device).  The 'cell-index' property can be used to | 
 | 2409 |    enumerate logical devices within an IP core.  For example, the | 
 | 2410 |    following is the system.mhs entry for the dual ps2 controller found | 
 | 2411 |    on the ml403 reference design. | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2412 |  | 
 | 2413 | 	BEGIN opb_ps2_dual_ref | 
 | 2414 | 		PARAMETER INSTANCE = opb_ps2_dual_ref_0 | 
 | 2415 | 		PARAMETER HW_VER = 1.00.a | 
 | 2416 | 		PARAMETER C_BASEADDR = 0xA9000000 | 
 | 2417 | 		PARAMETER C_HIGHADDR = 0xA9001FFF | 
 | 2418 | 		BUS_INTERFACE SOPB = opb_v20_0 | 
 | 2419 | 		PORT Sys_Intr1 = ps2_1_intr | 
 | 2420 | 		PORT Sys_Intr2 = ps2_2_intr | 
 | 2421 | 		PORT Clkin1 = ps2_clk_rx_1 | 
 | 2422 | 		PORT Clkin2 = ps2_clk_rx_2 | 
 | 2423 | 		PORT Clkpd1 = ps2_clk_tx_1 | 
 | 2424 | 		PORT Clkpd2 = ps2_clk_tx_2 | 
 | 2425 | 		PORT Rx1 = ps2_d_rx_1 | 
 | 2426 | 		PORT Rx2 = ps2_d_rx_2 | 
 | 2427 | 		PORT Txpd1 = ps2_d_tx_1 | 
 | 2428 | 		PORT Txpd2 = ps2_d_tx_2 | 
 | 2429 | 	END | 
 | 2430 |  | 
 | 2431 |    It would result in the following device tree nodes: | 
 | 2432 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2433 | 	opb_ps2_dual_ref_0: opb-ps2-dual-ref@a9000000 { | 
 | 2434 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2435 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2436 | 		compatible = "xlnx,compound"; | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2437 | 		ranges = <0 a9000000 2000>; | 
 | 2438 | 		// If this device had extra parameters, then they would | 
 | 2439 | 		// go here. | 
 | 2440 | 		ps2@0 { | 
 | 2441 | 			compatible = "xlnx,opb-ps2-dual-ref-1.00.a"; | 
 | 2442 | 			reg = <0 40>; | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2443 | 			interrupt-parent = <&opb_intc_0>; | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2444 | 			interrupts = <3 0>; | 
 | 2445 | 			cell-index = <0>; | 
 | 2446 | 		}; | 
 | 2447 | 		ps2@1000 { | 
 | 2448 | 			compatible = "xlnx,opb-ps2-dual-ref-1.00.a"; | 
 | 2449 | 			reg = <1000 40>; | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2450 | 			interrupt-parent = <&opb_intc_0>; | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2451 | 			interrupts = <3 0>; | 
 | 2452 | 			cell-index = <0>; | 
 | 2453 | 		}; | 
 | 2454 | 	}; | 
 | 2455 |  | 
 | 2456 |    Also, the system.mhs file defines bus attachments from the processor | 
 | 2457 |    to the devices.  The device tree structure should reflect the bus | 
 | 2458 |    attachments.  Again an example; this system.mhs fragment: | 
 | 2459 |  | 
 | 2460 | 	BEGIN ppc405_virtex4 | 
 | 2461 | 		PARAMETER INSTANCE = ppc405_0 | 
 | 2462 | 		PARAMETER HW_VER = 1.01.a | 
 | 2463 | 		BUS_INTERFACE DPLB = plb_v34_0 | 
 | 2464 | 		BUS_INTERFACE IPLB = plb_v34_0 | 
 | 2465 | 	END | 
 | 2466 |  | 
 | 2467 | 	BEGIN opb_intc | 
 | 2468 | 		PARAMETER INSTANCE = opb_intc_0 | 
 | 2469 | 		PARAMETER HW_VER = 1.00.c | 
 | 2470 | 		PARAMETER C_BASEADDR = 0xD1000FC0 | 
 | 2471 | 		PARAMETER C_HIGHADDR = 0xD1000FDF | 
 | 2472 | 		BUS_INTERFACE SOPB = opb_v20_0 | 
 | 2473 | 	END | 
 | 2474 |  | 
 | 2475 | 	BEGIN opb_uart16550 | 
 | 2476 | 		PARAMETER INSTANCE = opb_uart16550_0 | 
 | 2477 | 		PARAMETER HW_VER = 1.00.d | 
 | 2478 | 		PARAMETER C_BASEADDR = 0xa0000000 | 
 | 2479 | 		PARAMETER C_HIGHADDR = 0xa0001FFF | 
 | 2480 | 		BUS_INTERFACE SOPB = opb_v20_0 | 
 | 2481 | 	END | 
 | 2482 |  | 
 | 2483 | 	BEGIN plb_v34 | 
 | 2484 | 		PARAMETER INSTANCE = plb_v34_0 | 
 | 2485 | 		PARAMETER HW_VER = 1.02.a | 
 | 2486 | 	END | 
 | 2487 |  | 
 | 2488 | 	BEGIN plb_bram_if_cntlr | 
 | 2489 | 		PARAMETER INSTANCE = plb_bram_if_cntlr_0 | 
 | 2490 | 		PARAMETER HW_VER = 1.00.b | 
 | 2491 | 		PARAMETER C_BASEADDR = 0xFFFF0000 | 
 | 2492 | 		PARAMETER C_HIGHADDR = 0xFFFFFFFF | 
 | 2493 | 		BUS_INTERFACE SPLB = plb_v34_0 | 
 | 2494 | 	END | 
 | 2495 |  | 
 | 2496 | 	BEGIN plb2opb_bridge | 
 | 2497 | 		PARAMETER INSTANCE = plb2opb_bridge_0 | 
 | 2498 | 		PARAMETER HW_VER = 1.01.a | 
 | 2499 | 		PARAMETER C_RNG0_BASEADDR = 0x20000000 | 
 | 2500 | 		PARAMETER C_RNG0_HIGHADDR = 0x3FFFFFFF | 
 | 2501 | 		PARAMETER C_RNG1_BASEADDR = 0x60000000 | 
 | 2502 | 		PARAMETER C_RNG1_HIGHADDR = 0x7FFFFFFF | 
 | 2503 | 		PARAMETER C_RNG2_BASEADDR = 0x80000000 | 
 | 2504 | 		PARAMETER C_RNG2_HIGHADDR = 0xBFFFFFFF | 
 | 2505 | 		PARAMETER C_RNG3_BASEADDR = 0xC0000000 | 
 | 2506 | 		PARAMETER C_RNG3_HIGHADDR = 0xDFFFFFFF | 
 | 2507 | 		BUS_INTERFACE SPLB = plb_v34_0 | 
 | 2508 | 		BUS_INTERFACE MOPB = opb_v20_0 | 
 | 2509 | 	END | 
 | 2510 |  | 
 | 2511 |    Gives this device tree (some properties removed for clarity): | 
 | 2512 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2513 | 	plb@0 { | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2514 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2515 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2516 | 		compatible = "xlnx,plb-v34-1.02.a"; | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2517 | 		device_type = "ibm,plb"; | 
 | 2518 | 		ranges; // 1:1 translation | 
 | 2519 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2520 | 		plb_bram_if_cntrl_0: bram@ffff0000 { | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2521 | 			reg = <ffff0000 10000>; | 
 | 2522 | 		} | 
 | 2523 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2524 | 		opb@20000000 { | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2525 | 			#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2526 | 			#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2527 | 			ranges = <20000000 20000000 20000000 | 
 | 2528 | 				  60000000 60000000 20000000 | 
 | 2529 | 				  80000000 80000000 40000000 | 
 | 2530 | 				  c0000000 c0000000 20000000>; | 
 | 2531 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2532 | 			opb_uart16550_0: serial@a0000000 { | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2533 | 				reg = <a00000000 2000>; | 
 | 2534 | 			}; | 
 | 2535 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ab99eee | 2008-01-09 06:35:07 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2536 | 			opb_intc_0: interrupt-controller@d1000fc0 { | 
| Grant Likely | 7ae0fa4 | 2007-10-23 14:27:41 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2537 | 				reg = <d1000fc0 20>; | 
 | 2538 | 			}; | 
 | 2539 | 		}; | 
 | 2540 | 	}; | 
 | 2541 |  | 
 | 2542 |    That covers the general approach to binding xilinx IP cores into the | 
 | 2543 |    device tree.  The following are bindings for specific devices: | 
 | 2544 |  | 
 | 2545 |       i) Xilinx ML300 Framebuffer | 
 | 2546 |  | 
 | 2547 |       Simple framebuffer device from the ML300 reference design (also on the | 
 | 2548 |       ML403 reference design as well as others). | 
 | 2549 |  | 
 | 2550 |       Optional properties: | 
 | 2551 |        - resolution = <xres yres> : pixel resolution of framebuffer.  Some | 
 | 2552 |                                     implementations use a different resolution. | 
 | 2553 |                                     Default is <d#640 d#480> | 
 | 2554 |        - virt-resolution = <xvirt yvirt> : Size of framebuffer in memory. | 
 | 2555 |                                            Default is <d#1024 d#480>. | 
 | 2556 |        - rotate-display (empty) : rotate display 180 degrees. | 
 | 2557 |  | 
 | 2558 |       ii) Xilinx SystemACE | 
 | 2559 |  | 
 | 2560 |       The Xilinx SystemACE device is used to program FPGAs from an FPGA | 
 | 2561 |       bitstream stored on a CF card.  It can also be used as a generic CF | 
 | 2562 |       interface device. | 
 | 2563 |  | 
 | 2564 |       Optional properties: | 
 | 2565 |        - 8-bit (empty) : Set this property for SystemACE in 8 bit mode | 
 | 2566 |  | 
 | 2567 |       iii) Xilinx EMAC and Xilinx TEMAC | 
 | 2568 |  | 
 | 2569 |       Xilinx Ethernet devices.  In addition to general xilinx properties | 
 | 2570 |       listed above, nodes for these devices should include a phy-handle | 
 | 2571 |       property, and may include other common network device properties | 
 | 2572 |       like local-mac-address. | 
 | 2573 |        | 
 | 2574 |       iv) Xilinx Uartlite | 
 | 2575 |  | 
 | 2576 |       Xilinx uartlite devices are simple fixed speed serial ports. | 
 | 2577 |  | 
 | 2578 |       Requred properties: | 
 | 2579 |        - current-speed : Baud rate of uartlite | 
 | 2580 |  | 
| Stephen Neuendorffer | ef66a9d | 2008-02-06 04:24:10 +1100 | [diff] [blame] | 2581 |       v) Xilinx hwicap | 
 | 2582 |  | 
 | 2583 | 		Xilinx hwicap devices provide access to the configuration logic | 
 | 2584 | 		of the FPGA through the Internal Configuration Access Port | 
 | 2585 | 		(ICAP).  The ICAP enables partial reconfiguration of the FPGA, | 
 | 2586 | 		readback of the configuration information, and some control over | 
 | 2587 | 		'warm boots' of the FPGA fabric. | 
 | 2588 |  | 
 | 2589 | 		Required properties: | 
 | 2590 | 		- xlnx,family : The family of the FPGA, necessary since the | 
 | 2591 |                       capabilities of the underlying ICAP hardware | 
 | 2592 |                       differ between different families.  May be | 
 | 2593 |                       'virtex2p', 'virtex4', or 'virtex5'. | 
 | 2594 |  | 
| Timur Tabi | c7d24a2 | 2008-01-18 09:24:53 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 2595 |     p) Freescale Synchronous Serial Interface | 
 | 2596 |  | 
 | 2597 |        The SSI is a serial device that communicates with audio codecs.  It can | 
 | 2598 |        be programmed in AC97, I2S, left-justified, or right-justified modes. | 
 | 2599 |  | 
 | 2600 |        Required properties: | 
 | 2601 |        - compatible	  : compatible list, containing "fsl,ssi" | 
 | 2602 |        - cell-index	  : the SSI, <0> = SSI1, <1> = SSI2, and so on | 
 | 2603 |        - reg		  : offset and length of the register set for the device | 
 | 2604 |        - interrupts	  : <a b> where a is the interrupt number and b is a | 
 | 2605 |                             field that represents an encoding of the sense and | 
 | 2606 | 			    level information for the interrupt.  This should be | 
 | 2607 | 			    encoded based on the information in section 2) | 
 | 2608 | 			    depending on the type of interrupt controller you | 
 | 2609 | 			    have. | 
 | 2610 |        - interrupt-parent : the phandle for the interrupt controller that | 
 | 2611 |                             services interrupts for this device. | 
 | 2612 |        - fsl,mode	  : the operating mode for the SSI interface | 
 | 2613 | 			    "i2s-slave" - I2S mode, SSI is clock slave | 
 | 2614 | 			    "i2s-master" - I2S mode, SSI is clock master | 
 | 2615 | 			    "lj-slave" - left-justified mode, SSI is clock slave | 
 | 2616 | 			    "lj-master" - l.j. mode, SSI is clock master | 
 | 2617 | 			    "rj-slave" - right-justified mode, SSI is clock slave | 
 | 2618 | 			    "rj-master" - r.j., SSI is clock master | 
 | 2619 | 			    "ac97-slave" - AC97 mode, SSI is clock slave | 
 | 2620 | 			    "ac97-master" - AC97 mode, SSI is clock master | 
 | 2621 |  | 
 | 2622 |        Optional properties: | 
 | 2623 |        - codec-handle	  : phandle to a 'codec' node that defines an audio | 
 | 2624 | 			    codec connected to this SSI.  This node is typically | 
 | 2625 | 			    a child of an I2C or other control node. | 
 | 2626 |  | 
 | 2627 |        Child 'codec' node required properties: | 
 | 2628 |        - compatible	  : compatible list, contains the name of the codec | 
 | 2629 |  | 
 | 2630 |        Child 'codec' node optional properties: | 
 | 2631 |        - clock-frequency  : The frequency of the input clock, which typically | 
 | 2632 |                             comes from an on-board dedicated oscillator. | 
 | 2633 |  | 
| Zhang Wei | 457aa81 | 2007-10-30 17:23:48 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 2634 |     * Freescale 83xx DMA Controller | 
 | 2635 |  | 
 | 2636 |     Freescale PowerPC 83xx have on chip general purpose DMA controllers. | 
 | 2637 |  | 
 | 2638 |     Required properties: | 
 | 2639 |  | 
 | 2640 |     - compatible        : compatible list, contains 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2641 | 			 "fsl,CHIP-dma", where CHIP is the processor | 
 | 2642 | 			 (mpc8349, mpc8360, etc.) and the second is | 
 | 2643 | 			 "fsl,elo-dma" | 
 | 2644 |     - reg               : <registers mapping for DMA general status reg> | 
 | 2645 |     - ranges 		: Should be defined as specified in 1) to describe the | 
 | 2646 | 			  DMA controller channels. | 
 | 2647 |     - cell-index        : controller index.  0 for controller @ 0x8100 | 
 | 2648 |     - interrupts        : <interrupt mapping for DMA IRQ> | 
 | 2649 |     - interrupt-parent  : optional, if needed for interrupt mapping | 
 | 2650 |  | 
 | 2651 |  | 
 | 2652 |     - DMA channel nodes: | 
 | 2653 | 	    - compatible        : compatible list, contains 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2654 | 				 "fsl,CHIP-dma-channel", where CHIP is the processor | 
 | 2655 | 				 (mpc8349, mpc8350, etc.) and the second is | 
 | 2656 | 				 "fsl,elo-dma-channel" | 
 | 2657 | 	    - reg               : <registers mapping for channel> | 
 | 2658 | 	    - cell-index        : dma channel index starts at 0. | 
 | 2659 |  | 
 | 2660 |     Optional properties: | 
 | 2661 | 	    - interrupts        : <interrupt mapping for DMA channel IRQ> | 
 | 2662 | 				  (on 83xx this is expected to be identical to | 
 | 2663 | 				   the interrupts property of the parent node) | 
 | 2664 | 	    - interrupt-parent  : optional, if needed for interrupt mapping | 
 | 2665 |  | 
 | 2666 |   Example: | 
 | 2667 | 	dma@82a8 { | 
 | 2668 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2669 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2670 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8349-dma", "fsl,elo-dma"; | 
 | 2671 | 		reg = <82a8 4>; | 
 | 2672 | 		ranges = <0 8100 1a4>; | 
 | 2673 | 		interrupt-parent = <&ipic>; | 
 | 2674 | 		interrupts = <47 8>; | 
 | 2675 | 		cell-index = <0>; | 
 | 2676 | 		dma-channel@0 { | 
 | 2677 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8349-dma-channel", "fsl,elo-dma-channel"; | 
 | 2678 | 			cell-index = <0>; | 
 | 2679 | 			reg = <0 80>; | 
 | 2680 | 		}; | 
 | 2681 | 		dma-channel@80 { | 
 | 2682 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8349-dma-channel", "fsl,elo-dma-channel"; | 
 | 2683 | 			cell-index = <1>; | 
 | 2684 | 			reg = <80 80>; | 
 | 2685 | 		}; | 
 | 2686 | 		dma-channel@100 { | 
 | 2687 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8349-dma-channel", "fsl,elo-dma-channel"; | 
 | 2688 | 			cell-index = <2>; | 
 | 2689 | 			reg = <100 80>; | 
 | 2690 | 		}; | 
 | 2691 | 		dma-channel@180 { | 
 | 2692 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8349-dma-channel", "fsl,elo-dma-channel"; | 
 | 2693 | 			cell-index = <3>; | 
 | 2694 | 			reg = <180 80>; | 
 | 2695 | 		}; | 
 | 2696 | 	}; | 
 | 2697 |  | 
 | 2698 |    * Freescale 85xx/86xx DMA Controller | 
 | 2699 |  | 
 | 2700 |     Freescale PowerPC 85xx/86xx have on chip general purpose DMA controllers. | 
 | 2701 |  | 
 | 2702 |     Required properties: | 
 | 2703 |  | 
 | 2704 |     - compatible        : compatible list, contains 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2705 | 			 "fsl,CHIP-dma", where CHIP is the processor | 
 | 2706 | 			 (mpc8540, mpc8540, etc.) and the second is | 
 | 2707 | 			 "fsl,eloplus-dma" | 
 | 2708 |     - reg               : <registers mapping for DMA general status reg> | 
 | 2709 |     - cell-index        : controller index.  0 for controller @ 0x21000, | 
 | 2710 |                                              1 for controller @ 0xc000 | 
 | 2711 |     - ranges 		: Should be defined as specified in 1) to describe the | 
 | 2712 | 			  DMA controller channels. | 
 | 2713 |  | 
 | 2714 |     - DMA channel nodes: | 
 | 2715 | 	    - compatible        : compatible list, contains 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2716 | 				 "fsl,CHIP-dma-channel", where CHIP is the processor | 
 | 2717 | 				 (mpc8540, mpc8560, etc.) and the second is | 
 | 2718 | 				 "fsl,eloplus-dma-channel" | 
 | 2719 | 	    - cell-index        : dma channel index starts at 0. | 
 | 2720 | 	    - reg               : <registers mapping for channel> | 
 | 2721 | 	    - interrupts        : <interrupt mapping for DMA channel IRQ> | 
 | 2722 | 	    - interrupt-parent  : optional, if needed for interrupt mapping | 
 | 2723 |  | 
 | 2724 |   Example: | 
 | 2725 | 	dma@21300 { | 
 | 2726 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2727 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2728 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8540-dma", "fsl,eloplus-dma"; | 
 | 2729 | 		reg = <21300 4>; | 
 | 2730 | 		ranges = <0 21100 200>; | 
 | 2731 | 		cell-index = <0>; | 
 | 2732 | 		dma-channel@0 { | 
 | 2733 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8540-dma-channel", "fsl,eloplus-dma-channel"; | 
 | 2734 | 			reg = <0 80>; | 
 | 2735 | 			cell-index = <0>; | 
 | 2736 | 			interrupt-parent = <&mpic>; | 
 | 2737 | 			interrupts = <14 2>; | 
 | 2738 | 		}; | 
 | 2739 | 		dma-channel@80 { | 
 | 2740 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8540-dma-channel", "fsl,eloplus-dma-channel"; | 
 | 2741 | 			reg = <80 80>; | 
 | 2742 | 			cell-index = <1>; | 
 | 2743 | 			interrupt-parent = <&mpic>; | 
 | 2744 | 			interrupts = <15 2>; | 
 | 2745 | 		}; | 
 | 2746 | 		dma-channel@100 { | 
 | 2747 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8540-dma-channel", "fsl,eloplus-dma-channel"; | 
 | 2748 | 			reg = <100 80>; | 
 | 2749 | 			cell-index = <2>; | 
 | 2750 | 			interrupt-parent = <&mpic>; | 
 | 2751 | 			interrupts = <16 2>; | 
 | 2752 | 		}; | 
 | 2753 | 		dma-channel@180 { | 
 | 2754 | 			compatible = "fsl,mpc8540-dma-channel", "fsl,eloplus-dma-channel"; | 
 | 2755 | 			reg = <180 80>; | 
 | 2756 | 			cell-index = <3>; | 
 | 2757 | 			interrupt-parent = <&mpic>; | 
 | 2758 | 			interrupts = <17 2>; | 
 | 2759 | 		}; | 
 | 2760 | 	}; | 
 | 2761 |  | 
| Li Yang | b61ad65 | 2007-10-19 19:38:46 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 2762 |     * Freescale 8xxx/3.0 Gb/s SATA nodes | 
 | 2763 |  | 
 | 2764 |     SATA nodes are defined to describe on-chip Serial ATA controllers. | 
 | 2765 |     Each SATA port should have its own node. | 
 | 2766 |  | 
 | 2767 |     Required properties: | 
 | 2768 |     - compatible        : compatible list, contains 2 entries, first is | 
 | 2769 | 			 "fsl,CHIP-sata", where CHIP is the processor | 
 | 2770 | 			 (mpc8315, mpc8379, etc.) and the second is | 
 | 2771 | 			 "fsl,pq-sata" | 
 | 2772 |     - interrupts        : <interrupt mapping for SATA IRQ> | 
 | 2773 |     - cell-index        : controller index. | 
 | 2774 |                               1 for controller @ 0x18000 | 
 | 2775 |                               2 for controller @ 0x19000 | 
 | 2776 |                               3 for controller @ 0x1a000 | 
 | 2777 |                               4 for controller @ 0x1b000 | 
 | 2778 |  | 
 | 2779 |     Optional properties: | 
 | 2780 |     - interrupt-parent  : optional, if needed for interrupt mapping | 
 | 2781 |     - reg               : <registers mapping> | 
 | 2782 |  | 
 | 2783 |    Example: | 
 | 2784 |  | 
 | 2785 | 	sata@18000 { | 
 | 2786 | 		compatible = "fsl,mpc8379-sata", "fsl,pq-sata"; | 
 | 2787 | 		reg = <0x18000 0x1000>; | 
 | 2788 | 		cell-index = <1>; | 
 | 2789 | 		interrupts = <2c 8>; | 
 | 2790 | 		interrupt-parent = < &ipic >; | 
 | 2791 |         }; | 
| Timur Tabi | c7d24a2 | 2008-01-18 09:24:53 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 2792 |  | 
| Valentine Barshak | 41abd68 | 2007-09-25 05:27:56 +1000 | [diff] [blame] | 2793 |     q) USB EHCI controllers | 
 | 2794 |  | 
 | 2795 |     Required properties: | 
 | 2796 |       - compatible : should be "usb-ehci". | 
 | 2797 |       - reg : should contain at least address and length of the standard EHCI | 
 | 2798 |         register set for the device. Optional platform-dependent registers | 
 | 2799 |         (debug-port or other) can be also specified here, but only after | 
 | 2800 |         definition of standard EHCI registers. | 
 | 2801 |       - interrupts : one EHCI interrupt should be described here. | 
 | 2802 |     If device registers are implemented in big endian mode, the device | 
 | 2803 |     node should have "big-endian-regs" property. | 
 | 2804 |     If controller implementation operates with big endian descriptors, | 
 | 2805 |     "big-endian-desc" property should be specified. | 
 | 2806 |     If both big endian registers and descriptors are used by the controller | 
 | 2807 |     implementation, "big-endian" property can be specified instead of having | 
 | 2808 |     both "big-endian-regs" and "big-endian-desc". | 
 | 2809 |  | 
 | 2810 |      Example (Sequoia 440EPx): | 
 | 2811 | 	    ehci@e0000300 { | 
 | 2812 | 		   compatible = "ibm,usb-ehci-440epx", "usb-ehci"; | 
 | 2813 | 		   interrupt-parent = <&UIC0>; | 
 | 2814 | 		   interrupts = <1a 4>; | 
 | 2815 | 		   reg = <0 e0000300 90 0 e0000390 70>; | 
 | 2816 | 		   big-endian; | 
 | 2817 | 	   }; | 
 | 2818 |  | 
 | 2819 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 2820 |    More devices will be defined as this spec matures. | 
 | 2821 |  | 
| Stuart Yoder | 2756590 | 2007-03-02 13:42:33 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 2822 | VII - Specifying interrupt information for devices | 
 | 2823 | =================================================== | 
 | 2824 |  | 
 | 2825 | The device tree represents the busses and devices of a hardware | 
 | 2826 | system in a form similar to the physical bus topology of the | 
 | 2827 | hardware. | 
 | 2828 |  | 
 | 2829 | In addition, a logical 'interrupt tree' exists which represents the | 
 | 2830 | hierarchy and routing of interrupts in the hardware. | 
 | 2831 |  | 
 | 2832 | The interrupt tree model is fully described in the | 
 | 2833 | document "Open Firmware Recommended Practice: Interrupt | 
 | 2834 | Mapping Version 0.9".  The document is available at: | 
 | 2835 | <http://playground.sun.com/1275/practice>. | 
 | 2836 |  | 
 | 2837 | 1) interrupts property | 
 | 2838 | ---------------------- | 
 | 2839 |  | 
 | 2840 | Devices that generate interrupts to a single interrupt controller | 
 | 2841 | should use the conventional OF representation described in the | 
 | 2842 | OF interrupt mapping documentation. | 
 | 2843 |  | 
 | 2844 | Each device which generates interrupts must have an 'interrupt' | 
 | 2845 | property.  The interrupt property value is an arbitrary number of | 
 | 2846 | of 'interrupt specifier' values which describe the interrupt or | 
 | 2847 | interrupts for the device. | 
 | 2848 |  | 
 | 2849 | The encoding of an interrupt specifier is determined by the | 
 | 2850 | interrupt domain in which the device is located in the | 
 | 2851 | interrupt tree.  The root of an interrupt domain specifies in | 
 | 2852 | its #interrupt-cells property the number of 32-bit cells | 
 | 2853 | required to encode an interrupt specifier.  See the OF interrupt | 
 | 2854 | mapping documentation for a detailed description of domains. | 
 | 2855 |  | 
 | 2856 | For example, the binding for the OpenPIC interrupt controller | 
 | 2857 | specifies  an #interrupt-cells value of 2 to encode the interrupt | 
 | 2858 | number and level/sense information. All interrupt children in an | 
 | 2859 | OpenPIC interrupt domain use 2 cells per interrupt in their interrupts | 
 | 2860 | property. | 
 | 2861 |  | 
 | 2862 | The PCI bus binding specifies a #interrupt-cell value of 1 to encode | 
 | 2863 | which interrupt pin (INTA,INTB,INTC,INTD) is used. | 
 | 2864 |  | 
 | 2865 | 2) interrupt-parent property | 
 | 2866 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 2867 |  | 
 | 2868 | The interrupt-parent property is specified to define an explicit | 
 | 2869 | link between a device node and its interrupt parent in | 
 | 2870 | the interrupt tree.  The value of interrupt-parent is the | 
 | 2871 | phandle of the parent node. | 
 | 2872 |  | 
 | 2873 | If the interrupt-parent property is not defined for a node, it's | 
 | 2874 | interrupt parent is assumed to be an ancestor in the node's | 
 | 2875 | _device tree_ hierarchy. | 
 | 2876 |  | 
 | 2877 | 3) OpenPIC Interrupt Controllers | 
 | 2878 | -------------------------------- | 
 | 2879 |  | 
 | 2880 | OpenPIC interrupt controllers require 2 cells to encode | 
 | 2881 | interrupt information.  The first cell defines the interrupt | 
 | 2882 | number.  The second cell defines the sense and level | 
 | 2883 | information. | 
 | 2884 |  | 
 | 2885 | Sense and level information should be encoded as follows: | 
 | 2886 |  | 
 | 2887 | 	0 = low to high edge sensitive type enabled | 
 | 2888 | 	1 = active low level sensitive type enabled | 
 | 2889 | 	2 = active high level sensitive type enabled | 
 | 2890 | 	3 = high to low edge sensitive type enabled | 
 | 2891 |  | 
 | 2892 | 4) ISA Interrupt Controllers | 
 | 2893 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 2894 |  | 
 | 2895 | ISA PIC interrupt controllers require 2 cells to encode | 
 | 2896 | interrupt information.  The first cell defines the interrupt | 
 | 2897 | number.  The second cell defines the sense and level | 
 | 2898 | information. | 
 | 2899 |  | 
 | 2900 | ISA PIC interrupt controllers should adhere to the ISA PIC | 
 | 2901 | encodings listed below: | 
 | 2902 |  | 
 | 2903 | 	0 =  active low level sensitive type enabled | 
 | 2904 | 	1 =  active high level sensitive type enabled | 
 | 2905 | 	2 =  high to low edge sensitive type enabled | 
 | 2906 | 	3 =  low to high edge sensitive type enabled | 
 | 2907 |  | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 2908 |  | 
 | 2909 | Appendix A - Sample SOC node for MPC8540 | 
 | 2910 | ======================================== | 
 | 2911 |  | 
 | 2912 | Note that the #address-cells and #size-cells for the SoC node | 
 | 2913 | in this example have been explicitly listed; these are likely | 
 | 2914 | not necessary as they are usually the same as the root node. | 
 | 2915 |  | 
 | 2916 | 	soc8540@e0000000 { | 
 | 2917 | 		#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2918 | 		#size-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2919 | 		#interrupt-cells = <2>; | 
 | 2920 | 		device_type = "soc"; | 
 | 2921 | 		ranges = <00000000 e0000000 00100000> | 
 | 2922 | 		reg = <e0000000 00003000>; | 
| Becky Bruce | 7d4b95a | 2006-02-06 14:26:31 -0600 | [diff] [blame] | 2923 | 		bus-frequency = <0>; | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 2924 |  | 
 | 2925 | 		mdio@24520 { | 
 | 2926 | 			reg = <24520 20>; | 
 | 2927 | 			device_type = "mdio"; | 
 | 2928 | 			compatible = "gianfar"; | 
 | 2929 |  | 
 | 2930 | 			ethernet-phy@0 { | 
 | 2931 | 				linux,phandle = <2452000> | 
 | 2932 | 				interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 2933 | 				interrupts = <35 1>; | 
 | 2934 | 				reg = <0>; | 
 | 2935 | 				device_type = "ethernet-phy"; | 
 | 2936 | 			}; | 
 | 2937 |  | 
 | 2938 | 			ethernet-phy@1 { | 
 | 2939 | 				linux,phandle = <2452001> | 
 | 2940 | 				interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 2941 | 				interrupts = <35 1>; | 
 | 2942 | 				reg = <1>; | 
 | 2943 | 				device_type = "ethernet-phy"; | 
 | 2944 | 			}; | 
 | 2945 |  | 
 | 2946 | 			ethernet-phy@3 { | 
 | 2947 | 				linux,phandle = <2452002> | 
 | 2948 | 				interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 2949 | 				interrupts = <35 1>; | 
 | 2950 | 				reg = <3>; | 
 | 2951 | 				device_type = "ethernet-phy"; | 
 | 2952 | 			}; | 
 | 2953 |  | 
 | 2954 | 		}; | 
 | 2955 |  | 
 | 2956 | 		ethernet@24000 { | 
 | 2957 | 			#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 2958 | 			device_type = "network"; | 
 | 2959 | 			model = "TSEC"; | 
 | 2960 | 			compatible = "gianfar"; | 
 | 2961 | 			reg = <24000 1000>; | 
| Jon Loeliger | f583165 | 2006-08-17 08:42:35 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2962 | 			mac-address = [ 00 E0 0C 00 73 00 ]; | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 2963 | 			interrupts = <d 3 e 3 12 3>; | 
 | 2964 | 			interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 2965 | 			phy-handle = <2452000>; | 
 | 2966 | 		}; | 
 | 2967 |  | 
 | 2968 | 		ethernet@25000 { | 
 | 2969 | 			#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2970 | 			#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 2971 | 			device_type = "network"; | 
 | 2972 | 			model = "TSEC"; | 
 | 2973 | 			compatible = "gianfar"; | 
 | 2974 | 			reg = <25000 1000>; | 
| Jon Loeliger | f583165 | 2006-08-17 08:42:35 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2975 | 			mac-address = [ 00 E0 0C 00 73 01 ]; | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 2976 | 			interrupts = <13 3 14 3 18 3>; | 
 | 2977 | 			interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 2978 | 			phy-handle = <2452001>; | 
 | 2979 | 		}; | 
 | 2980 |  | 
 | 2981 | 		ethernet@26000 { | 
 | 2982 | 			#address-cells = <1>; | 
 | 2983 | 			#size-cells = <0>; | 
 | 2984 | 			device_type = "network"; | 
 | 2985 | 			model = "FEC"; | 
 | 2986 | 			compatible = "gianfar"; | 
 | 2987 | 			reg = <26000 1000>; | 
| Jon Loeliger | f583165 | 2006-08-17 08:42:35 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 2988 | 			mac-address = [ 00 E0 0C 00 73 02 ]; | 
| David Gibson | c125a18 | 2006-02-01 03:05:22 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 2989 | 			interrupts = <19 3>; | 
 | 2990 | 			interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 2991 | 			phy-handle = <2452002>; | 
 | 2992 | 		}; | 
 | 2993 |  | 
 | 2994 | 		serial@4500 { | 
 | 2995 | 			device_type = "serial"; | 
 | 2996 | 			compatible = "ns16550"; | 
 | 2997 | 			reg = <4500 100>; | 
 | 2998 | 			clock-frequency = <0>; | 
 | 2999 | 			interrupts = <1a 3>; | 
 | 3000 | 			interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 3001 | 		}; | 
 | 3002 |  | 
 | 3003 | 		pic@40000 { | 
 | 3004 | 			linux,phandle = <40000>; | 
 | 3005 | 			clock-frequency = <0>; | 
 | 3006 | 			interrupt-controller; | 
 | 3007 | 			#address-cells = <0>; | 
 | 3008 | 			reg = <40000 40000>; | 
 | 3009 | 			built-in; | 
 | 3010 | 			compatible = "chrp,open-pic"; | 
 | 3011 | 			device_type = "open-pic"; | 
 | 3012 |                         big-endian; | 
 | 3013 | 		}; | 
 | 3014 |  | 
 | 3015 | 		i2c@3000 { | 
 | 3016 | 			interrupt-parent = <40000>; | 
 | 3017 | 			interrupts = <1b 3>; | 
 | 3018 | 			reg = <3000 18>; | 
 | 3019 | 			device_type = "i2c"; | 
 | 3020 | 			compatible  = "fsl-i2c"; | 
 | 3021 | 			dfsrr; | 
 | 3022 | 		}; | 
 | 3023 |  | 
 | 3024 | 	}; |