Generally, power LEDs should indicate when power is applied, and go out once power is removed. _Not_ annoy the developer with migraine-inducing blinking reminicent of some badly animated television series designed to sell sugar to children. On a more serious note, most of these OS-specific properties aren't necessary and should be removed. I left two that are legitimately tying disk LEDs to disk activity. Other than that, we keep the state the bootloader left them in until userspace changes the state via sysfs. Signed-off-by: Jason Cooper <jason@lakedaemon.net>
35 lines
584 B
Plaintext
35 lines
584 B
Plaintext
/dts-v1/;
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#include "kirkwood-ns2-common.dtsi"
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/ {
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model = "LaCie Network Space Lite v2";
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compatible = "lacie,netspace_lite_v2", "marvell,kirkwood-88f6192", "marvell,kirkwood";
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memory {
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device_type = "memory";
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reg = <0x00000000 0x8000000>;
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};
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ocp@f1000000 {
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sata@80000 {
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pinctrl-0 = <&pmx_ns2_sata0>;
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pinctrl-names = "default";
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status = "okay";
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nr-ports = <1>;
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};
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};
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gpio-leds {
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compatible = "gpio-leds";
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blue-sata {
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label = "ns2:blue:sata";
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gpios = <&gpio0 30 1>;
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linux,default-trigger = "ide-disk";
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};
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};
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};
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ðphy0 { reg = <0>; };
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