From: Chris Bostic <cbostic@xxxxxxxxxx> Introduction of the IBM 'Flexible Support Interface' (FSI) bus device driver. FSI is a high fan out serial bus consisting of a clock and a serial data line capable of running at speeds up to 166 MHz. This set provides the basic framework to add FSI extensions to the Linux bus and device models. Master specific implementations are defined to utilize the core FSI function. In Linux, we have a core FSI "bus type", along with drivers for FSI masters and engines. The FSI master drivers expose a read/write interface to the bus address space. The master drivers are under drivers/fsi/fsi-master-*.c. The core handles probing and discovery of slaves and slave engines, using those read/write interfaces. It is responsible for creating the endpoint Linux devices corresponding to the discovered engines on each slave. Slave engines are identified by an 'engine' type, and an optional version. Engine, a.k.a. client, drivers are matched and bound to these engines during discovery. This patch set does not include extended FSI function such as: * Hub master support * Cascaded master support * Application layer hot plug notification * Application layer FSI bus status interface Common FSI terminology: * Master Controller of the FSI bus. Only the master is allowed to control the clock line and is the initiator of all transactions on a bus. * Slave The receiver or target of a master initiated transaction. The slave cannot initiate communications on a bus and must respond to any master requests for data. * CFAM Stands for Common Field replaceable unit Access Macro. A CFAM is an ASIC residing in any device requiring FSI communications. CFAMs consist of an array of hardware 'engines' used for various purposes. I2C masters, UARTs, General Purpose IO hardware are common types of these engines. * Configuration Space / Table A table contained at the beginning of each CFAM address space. This table lists information such as the CFAM's ID, which engine types and versions it has available, as well as its addressing range. * FSI Engine driver A device driver that registers with the FSI core so that it can access devices it owns on an FSI bus. Chris Bostic (5): drivers/fsi: Set up links for slave communication drivers/fsi: Set slave SMODE to init communication drivers/fsi: Add master unscan drivers/fsi: Add documentation for GPIO bindings drivers/fsi: Add GPIO based FSI master Jeremy Kerr (11): drivers/fsi: Add empty fsi bus definitions drivers/fsi: Add device & driver definitions drivers/fsi: add driver to device matches drivers/fsi: Add fsi master definition drivers/fsi: Add fake master driver drivers/fsi: Add slave definition drivers/fsi: Add empty master scan drivers/fsi: Add crc4 helpers drivers/fsi: Implement slave initialisation drivers/fsi: scan slaves & register devices drivers/fsi: Add device read/write/peek functions .../devicetree/bindings/fsi/fsi-master-gpio.txt | 21 + drivers/Kconfig | 2 + drivers/Makefile | 1 + drivers/fsi/Kconfig | 29 ++ drivers/fsi/Makefile | 4 + drivers/fsi/fsi-core.c | 514 +++++++++++++++++++ drivers/fsi/fsi-master-fake.c | 95 ++++ drivers/fsi/fsi-master-gpio.c | 552 +++++++++++++++++++++ drivers/fsi/fsi-master.h | 62 +++ include/linux/fsi.h | 60 +++ 10 files changed, 1340 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/fsi/fsi-master-gpio.txt create mode 100644 drivers/fsi/Kconfig create mode 100644 drivers/fsi/Makefile create mode 100644 drivers/fsi/fsi-core.c create mode 100644 drivers/fsi/fsi-master-fake.c create mode 100644 drivers/fsi/fsi-master-gpio.c create mode 100644 drivers/fsi/fsi-master.h create mode 100644 include/linux/fsi.h -- 1.8.2.2 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html