linux_dsm_epyc7002/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/memory-controllers/mvebu-devbus.txt
Ezequiel Garcia 3edad321b1 drivers: memory: Introduce Marvell EBU Device Bus driver
Marvell EBU SoCs such as Armada 370/XP, Orion5x (88f5xxx) and
Discovery (mv78xx0) supports a Device Bus controller to access several
kinds of memories and I/O devices (NOR, NAND, SRAM, FPGA).

This commit adds a driver to handle this controller. So far only
Armada 370, Armada XP and Discovery SoCs are supported.

The driver must be registered through a device tree node;
as explained in the binding document.

For each child node in the device tree, this driver will:
  * set timing parameters
  * register a child device
  * setup an address decoding window, using the mbus driver

Keep in mind the address decoding window setup is only a temporary hack.
This code will be removed from this devbus driver as soon as a proper device
tree binding for the mbus driver is added.

Signed-off-by: Ezequiel Garcia <ezequiel.garcia@free-electrons.com>
Acked-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Acked-by: Jason Cooper <jason@lakedaemon.net>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2013-05-21 10:11:56 -07:00

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Device tree bindings for MVEBU Device Bus controllers
The Device Bus controller available in some Marvell's SoC allows to control
different types of standard memory and I/O devices such as NOR, NAND, and FPGA.
The actual devices are instantiated from the child nodes of a Device Bus node.
Required properties:
- compatible: Currently only Armada 370/XP SoC are supported,
with this compatible string:
marvell,mvebu-devbus
- reg: A resource specifier for the register space.
This is the base address of a chip select within
the controller's register space.
(see the example below)
- #address-cells: Must be set to 1
- #size-cells: Must be set to 1
- ranges: Must be set up to reflect the memory layout with four
integer values for each chip-select line in use:
0 <physical address of mapping> <size>
Mandatory timing properties for child nodes:
Read parameters:
- devbus,turn-off-ps: Defines the time during which the controller does not
drive the AD bus after the completion of a device read.
This prevents contentions on the Device Bus after a read
cycle from a slow device.
- devbus,bus-width: Defines the bus width (e.g. <16>)
- devbus,badr-skew-ps: Defines the time delay from from A[2:0] toggle,
to read data sample. This parameter is useful for
synchronous pipelined devices, where the address
precedes the read data by one or two cycles.
- devbus,acc-first-ps: Defines the time delay from the negation of
ALE[0] to the cycle that the first read data is sampled
by the controller.
- devbus,acc-next-ps: Defines the time delay between the cycle that
samples data N and the cycle that samples data N+1
(in burst accesses).
- devbus,rd-setup-ps: Defines the time delay between DEV_CSn assertion to
DEV_OEn assertion. If set to 0 (default),
DEV_OEn and DEV_CSn are asserted at the same cycle.
This parameter has no affect on <acc-first-ps> parameter
(no affect on first data sample). Set <rd-setup-ps>
to a value smaller than <acc-first-ps>.
- devbus,rd-hold-ps: Defines the time between the last data sample to the
de-assertion of DEV_CSn. If set to 0 (default),
DEV_OEn and DEV_CSn are de-asserted at the same cycle
(the cycle of the last data sample).
This parameter has no affect on DEV_OEn de-assertion.
DEV_OEn is always de-asserted the next cycle after
last data sampled. Also this parameter has no
affect on <turn-off-ps> parameter.
Set <rd-hold-ps> to a value smaller than <turn-off-ps>.
Write parameters:
- devbus,ale-wr-ps: Defines the time delay from the ALE[0] negation cycle
to the DEV_WEn assertion.
- devbus,wr-low-ps: Defines the time during which DEV_WEn is active.
A[2:0] and Data are kept valid as long as DEV_WEn
is active. This parameter defines the setup time of
address and data to DEV_WEn rise.
- devbus,wr-high-ps: Defines the time during which DEV_WEn is kept
inactive (high) between data beats of a burst write.
DEV_A[2:0] and Data are kept valid (do not toggle) for
<wr-high-ps> - <tick> ps.
This parameter defines the hold time of address and
data after DEV_WEn rise.
- devbus,sync-enable: Synchronous device enable.
1: True
0: False
An example for an Armada XP GP board, with a 16 MiB NOR device as child
is showed below. Note that the Device Bus driver is in charge of allocating
the mbus address decoding window for each of its child devices.
The window is created using the chip select specified in the child
device node together with the base address and size specified in the ranges
property. For instance, in the example below the allocated decoding window
will start at base address 0xf0000000, with a size 0x1000000 (16 MiB)
for chip select 0 (a.k.a DEV_BOOTCS).
This address window handling is done in this mvebu-devbus only as a temporary
solution. It will be removed when the support for mbus device tree binding is
added.
The reg property implicitly specifies the chip select as this:
0x10400: DEV_BOOTCS
0x10408: DEV_CS0
0x10410: DEV_CS1
0x10418: DEV_CS2
0x10420: DEV_CS3
Example:
devbus-bootcs@d0010400 {
status = "okay";
ranges = <0 0xf0000000 0x1000000>; /* @addr 0xf0000000, size 0x1000000 */
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
/* Device Bus parameters are required */
/* Read parameters */
devbus,bus-width = <8>;
devbus,turn-off-ps = <60000>;
devbus,badr-skew-ps = <0>;
devbus,acc-first-ps = <124000>;
devbus,acc-next-ps = <248000>;
devbus,rd-setup-ps = <0>;
devbus,rd-hold-ps = <0>;
/* Write parameters */
devbus,sync-enable = <0>;
devbus,wr-high-ps = <60000>;
devbus,wr-low-ps = <60000>;
devbus,ale-wr-ps = <60000>;
flash@0 {
compatible = "cfi-flash";
/* 16 MiB */
reg = <0 0x1000000>;
bank-width = <2>;
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
/*
* We split the 16 MiB in two partitions,
* just as an example.
*/
partition@0 {
label = "First";
reg = <0 0x800000>;
};
partition@800000 {
label = "Second";
reg = <0x800000 0x800000>;
};
};
};