76 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			76 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| = Reset Signal Device Tree Bindings =
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| 
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| This binding is intended to represent the hardware reset signals present
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| internally in most IC (SoC, FPGA, ...) designs. Reset signals for whole
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| standalone chips are most likely better represented as GPIOs, although there
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| are likely to be exceptions to this rule.
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| 
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| Hardware blocks typically receive a reset signal. This signal is generated by
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| a reset provider (e.g. power management or clock module) and received by a
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| reset consumer (the module being reset, or a module managing when a sub-
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| ordinate module is reset). This binding exists to represent the provider and
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| consumer, and provide a way to couple the two together.
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| 
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| A reset signal is represented by the phandle of the provider, plus a reset
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| specifier - a list of DT cells that represents the reset signal within the
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| provider. The length (number of cells) and semantics of the reset specifier
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| are dictated by the binding of the reset provider, although common schemes
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| are described below.
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| 
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| A word on where to place reset signal consumers in device tree: It is possible
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| in hardware for a reset signal to affect multiple logically separate HW blocks
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| at once. In this case, it would be unwise to represent this reset signal in
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| the DT node of each affected HW block, since if activated, an unrelated block
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| may be reset. Instead, reset signals should be represented in the DT node
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| where it makes most sense to control it; this may be a bus node if all
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| children of the bus are affected by the reset signal, or an individual HW
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| block node for dedicated reset signals. The intent of this binding is to give
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| appropriate software access to the reset signals in order to manage the HW,
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| rather than to slavishly enumerate the reset signal that affects each HW
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| block.
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| 
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| = Reset providers =
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| 
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| Required properties:
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| #reset-cells:	Number of cells in a reset specifier; Typically 0 for nodes
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| 		with a single reset output and 1 for nodes with multiple
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| 		reset outputs.
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| 
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| For example:
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| 
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| 	rst: reset-controller {
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| 		#reset-cells = <1>;
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| 	};
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| 
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| = Reset consumers =
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| 
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| Required properties:
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| resets:		List of phandle and reset specifier pairs, one pair
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| 		for each reset signal that affects the device, or that the
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| 		device manages. Note: if the reset provider specifies '0' for
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| 		#reset-cells, then only the phandle portion of the pair will
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| 		appear.
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| 
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| Optional properties:
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| reset-names:	List of reset signal name strings sorted in the same order as
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| 		the resets property. Consumers drivers will use reset-names to
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| 		match reset signal names with reset specifiers.
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| 
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| For example:
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| 
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| 	device {
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| 		resets = <&rst 20>;
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| 		reset-names = "reset";
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| 	};
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| 
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| This represents a device with a single reset signal named "reset".
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| 
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| 	bus {
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| 		resets = <&rst 10> <&rst 11> <&rst 12> <&rst 11>;
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| 		reset-names = "i2s1", "i2s2", "dma", "mixer";
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| 	};
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| 
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| This represents a bus that controls the reset signal of each of four sub-
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| ordinate devices. Consider for example a bus that fails to operate unless no
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| child device has reset asserted.
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