linux/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/dma/snps-dma.txt
Rob Herring 791d3ef2e1 dt-bindings: remove 'interrupt-parent' from bindings
'interrupt-parent' is often documented as part of define bindings, but
it is really outside the scope of a device binding. It's never required
in a given node as it is often inherited from a parent node. Or it can
be implicit if a parent node is an 'interrupt-controller' node. So
remove it from all the binding files.

Cc: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
Cc: devicetree@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
2018-07-25 14:09:39 -06:00

68 lines
2.1 KiB
Plaintext

* Synopsys Designware DMA Controller
Required properties:
- compatible: "snps,dma-spear1340"
- reg: Address range of the DMAC registers
- interrupt: Should contain the DMAC interrupt number
- dma-channels: Number of channels supported by hardware
- dma-requests: Number of DMA request lines supported, up to 16
- dma-masters: Number of AHB masters supported by the controller
- #dma-cells: must be <3>
- chan_allocation_order: order of allocation of channel, 0 (default): ascending,
1: descending
- chan_priority: priority of channels. 0 (default): increase from chan 0->n, 1:
increase from chan n->0
- block_size: Maximum block size supported by the controller
- data-width: Maximum data width supported by hardware per AHB master
(in bytes, power of 2)
Deprecated properties:
- data_width: Maximum data width supported by hardware per AHB master
(0 - 8bits, 1 - 16bits, ..., 5 - 256bits)
Optional properties:
- is_private: The device channels should be marked as private and not for by the
general purpose DMA channel allocator. False if not passed.
- multi-block: Multi block transfers supported by hardware. Array property with
one cell per channel. 0: not supported, 1 (default): supported.
Example:
dmahost: dma@fc000000 {
compatible = "snps,dma-spear1340";
reg = <0xfc000000 0x1000>;
interrupt-parent = <&vic1>;
interrupts = <12>;
dma-channels = <8>;
dma-requests = <16>;
dma-masters = <2>;
#dma-cells = <3>;
chan_allocation_order = <1>;
chan_priority = <1>;
block_size = <0xfff>;
data-width = <8 8>;
};
DMA clients connected to the Designware DMA controller must use the format
described in the dma.txt file, using a four-cell specifier for each channel.
The four cells in order are:
1. A phandle pointing to the DMA controller
2. The DMA request line number
3. Memory master for transfers on allocated channel
4. Peripheral master for transfers on allocated channel
Example:
serial@e0000000 {
compatible = "arm,pl011", "arm,primecell";
reg = <0xe0000000 0x1000>;
interrupts = <0 35 0x4>;
dmas = <&dmahost 12 0 1>,
<&dmahost 13 1 0>;
dma-names = "rx", "rx";
};