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A new I3C subsystem has been added and a generic description has been created to represent the I3C bus and the devices connected on it. Document this generic representation. Cc: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Boris Brezillon <boris.brezillon@bootlin.com> Reviewed-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org> Acked-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
139 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
139 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
Generic device tree bindings for I3C busses
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===========================================
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This document describes generic bindings that should be used to describe I3C
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busses in a device tree.
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Required properties
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-------------------
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- #address-cells - should be <3>. Read more about addresses below.
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- #size-cells - should be <0>.
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- compatible - name of the I3C master controller driving the I3C bus
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For other required properties e.g. to describe register sets,
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clocks, etc. check the binding documentation of the specific driver.
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The node describing an I3C bus should be named i3c-master.
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Optional properties
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-------------------
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These properties may not be supported by all I3C master drivers. Each I3C
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master bindings should specify which of them are supported.
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- i3c-scl-hz: frequency of the SCL signal used for I3C transfers.
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When undefined the core sets it to 12.5MHz.
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- i2c-scl-hz: frequency of the SCL signal used for I2C transfers.
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When undefined, the core looks at LVR (Legacy Virtual Register)
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values of I2C devices described in the device tree to determine
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the maximum I2C frequency.
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I2C devices
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===========
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Each I2C device connected to the bus should be described in a subnode. All
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properties described in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/i2c/i2c.txt are
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valid here, but several new properties have been added.
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New constraint on existing properties:
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--------------------------------------
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- reg: contains 3 cells
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+ first cell : still encoding the I2C address
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+ second cell: shall be 0
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+ third cell: shall encode the I3C LVR (Legacy Virtual Register)
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bit[31:8]: unused/ignored
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bit[7:5]: I2C device index. Possible values
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* 0: I2C device has a 50 ns spike filter
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* 1: I2C device does not have a 50 ns spike filter but supports high
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frequency on SCL
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* 2: I2C device does not have a 50 ns spike filter and is not tolerant
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to high frequencies
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* 3-7: reserved
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bit[4]: tell whether the device operates in FM (Fast Mode) or FM+ mode
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* 0: FM+ mode
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* 1: FM mode
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bit[3:0]: device type
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* 0-15: reserved
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The I2C node unit-address should always match the first cell of the reg
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property: <device-type>@<i2c-address>.
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I3C devices
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===========
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All I3C devices are supposed to support DAA (Dynamic Address Assignment), and
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are thus discoverable. So, by default, I3C devices do not have to be described
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in the device tree.
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This being said, one might want to attach extra resources to these devices,
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and those resources may have to be described in the device tree, which in turn
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means we have to describe I3C devices.
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Another use case for describing an I3C device in the device tree is when this
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I3C device has a static I2C address and we want to assign it a specific I3C
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dynamic address before the DAA takes place (so that other devices on the bus
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can't take this dynamic address).
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The I3C device should be names <device-type>@<static-i2c-address>,<i3c-pid>,
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where device-type is describing the type of device connected on the bus
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(gpio-controller, sensor, ...).
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Required properties
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-------------------
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- reg: contains 3 cells
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+ first cell : encodes the static I2C address. Should be 0 if the device does
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not have one (0 is not a valid I2C address).
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+ second and third cells: should encode the ProvisionalID. The second cell
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contains the manufacturer ID left-shifted by 1.
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The third cell contains ORing of the part ID
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left-shifted by 16, the instance ID left-shifted
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by 12 and the extra information. This encoding is
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following the PID definition provided by the I3C
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specification.
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Optional properties
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-------------------
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- assigned-address: dynamic address to be assigned to this device. This
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property is only valid if the I3C device has a static
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address (first cell of the reg property != 0).
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Example:
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i3c-master@d040000 {
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compatible = "cdns,i3c-master";
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clocks = <&coreclock>, <&i3csysclock>;
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clock-names = "pclk", "sysclk";
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interrupts = <3 0>;
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reg = <0x0d040000 0x1000>;
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#address-cells = <3>;
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#size-cells = <0>;
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i2c-scl-hz = <100000>;
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/* I2C device. */
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nunchuk: nunchuk@52 {
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compatible = "nintendo,nunchuk";
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reg = <0x52 0x0 0x10>;
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};
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/* I3C device with a static I2C address. */
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thermal_sensor: sensor@68,39200144004 {
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reg = <0x68 0x392 0x144004>;
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assigned-address = <0xa>;
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};
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/*
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* I3C device without a static I2C address but requiring
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* resources described in the DT.
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*/
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sensor@0,39200154004 {
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reg = <0x0 0x392 0x154004>;
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clocks = <&clock_provider 0>;
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};
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};
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