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The GPIOs are access through some registers in the chip common core. We need locking around these GPIO accesses, all GPIOs are accessed through the same registers and parallel writes will cause problems. Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de> Patchwork: http://patchwork.linux-mips.org/patch/4585 Acked-by: Florian Fainelli <florian@openwrt.org> |
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.. | ||
bcma_private.h | ||
core.c | ||
driver_chipcommon_nflash.c | ||
driver_chipcommon_pmu.c | ||
driver_chipcommon_sflash.c | ||
driver_chipcommon.c | ||
driver_gmac_cmn.c | ||
driver_mips.c | ||
driver_pci_host.c | ||
driver_pci.c | ||
host_pci.c | ||
host_soc.c | ||
Kconfig | ||
main.c | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
scan.c | ||
scan.h | ||
sprom.c | ||
TODO |
Broadcom introduced new bus as replacement for older SSB. It is based on AMBA, however from programming point of view there is nothing AMBA specific we use. Standard AMBA drivers are platform specific, have hardcoded addresses and use AMBA standard fields like CID and PID. In case of Broadcom's cards every device consists of: 1) Broadcom specific AMBA device. It is put on AMBA bus, but can not be treated as standard AMBA device. Reading it's CID or PID can cause machine lockup. 2) AMBA standard devices called ports or wrappers. They have CIDs (AMBA_CID) and PIDs (0x103BB369), but we do not use that info for anything. One of that devices is used for managing Broadcom specific core. Addresses of AMBA devices are not hardcoded in driver and have to be read from EPROM. In this situation we decided to introduce separated bus. It can contain up to 16 devices identified by Broadcom specific fields: manufacturer, id, revision and class.