To reach higher capacities, arrays of chips are now pretty common. Unfortunately, most of the controllers have been designed a decade ago and did not all anticipate the need for several chip-selects. The new cs-gpios property allows to workaround this limitation by adding as many GPIO chip-select as needed. Signed-off-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@xxxxxxxxxxx> --- .../devicetree/bindings/mtd/nand-controller.yaml | 16 +++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/nand-controller.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/nand-controller.yaml index 678b39952502..70a400e385b2 100644 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/nand-controller.yaml +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/nand-controller.yaml @@ -38,6 +38,15 @@ properties: ranges: true + cs-gpios: + description: + Array of chip-select available to the controller. The first + entries are a 1:1 mapping of the available chip-select on the + NAND controller (even if they are not used). As many additional + chip-select as needed may follow and should be phandles of GPIO + lines. 'reg' entries of the NAND chip subnodes become indexes of + this array when this property is present. + patternProperties: "^nand@[a-f0-9]$": type: object @@ -164,14 +173,19 @@ examples: nand-controller { #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; + gpio-cs = <0>, <&gpioA 1>; /* A single native CS is available */ /* controller specific properties */ nand@0 { - reg = <0>; + reg = <0>; /* Native CS */ nand-use-soft-ecc-engine; nand-ecc-algo = "bch"; /* controller specific properties */ }; + + nand@1 { + reg = <1>; /* GPIO CS */ + }; }; -- 2.27.0