Hi Conor, On Wed, Nov 10, 2021 at 3:20 PM <Conor.Dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 09/11/2021 09:04, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: > > On Mon, Nov 8, 2021 at 4:07 PM <conor.dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> From: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >> > >> Update the device tree for the icicle kit by splitting it into a third part, > >> which contains peripherals in the fpga fabric, add new peripherals > >> (spi, qspi, gpio, rtc, pcie, system services, i2c), update parts of the memory > >> map which have been changed. > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > As I said in the replies to another patch this is my first time doing > any upstreaming of a device tree, i didnt realise that this would be a > problem. No problem, we're here to help you ;-) > >> --- a/arch/riscv/boot/dts/microchip/microchip-mpfs-icicle-kit.dts > >> +++ b/arch/riscv/boot/dts/microchip/microchip-mpfs-icicle-kit.dts > >> @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ > >> // SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0 OR MIT) > >> -/* Copyright (c) 2020 Microchip Technology Inc */ > >> +/* Copyright (c) 2020-2021 Microchip Technology Inc */ > >> > >> /dts-v1/; > >> > >> @@ -13,72 +13,187 @@ / { > >> compatible = "microchip,mpfs-icicle-kit", "microchip,mpfs"; > >> > >> aliases { > >> - ethernet0 = &emac1; > >> - serial0 = &serial0; > >> - serial1 = &serial1; > >> - serial2 = &serial2; > >> - serial3 = &serial3; > >> + mmuart0 = &mmuart0; > >> + mmuart1 = &mmuart1; > >> + mmuart2 = &mmuart2; > >> + mmuart3 = &mmuart3; > >> + mmuart4 = &mmuart4; > > > > Why? SerialN is the standard alias name. > we changed the label to mmuart to match the microchip documentation. The serialN aliases are standardized, so you cannot change them. > would it make more sense to call mmuart but alias it to serial? > ie serial0 = &mmuart0; You can change the labels, so that's OK. > >> +&spi1 { > >> + status = "okay"; > > > > No slave devices specified? > no, but its exposed But without specifying slave devices first you cannot use the controller anyway? While I2C supports instantiating slaves from userspace by writing to the new_device file in sysfs, SPI doesn't have that feature. > >> +&gpio2 { > >> + interrupts = <PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT > >> + PLIC_INT_GPIO2_NON_DIRECT>; > > > > Why override interrupts in the board .dts file? > > Doesn't this belong in the SoC .dtsi file? > The interrupt setup for the gpio isnt fixed, there is an option to > either connect the individual gpio interrupts to the plic *or* they can > be connected to a per gpio controller common interrupt, and it is up to > the driver to read a register to determine which interrupt triggered the > common/NON_DIRECT interrupt. This decision is made by a write to a > system register in application code, which to us didn't seem like it > belonged in the soc .dtsi. So it is software policy? Then it doesn't belong in the board DTS either. > Using the common interrupt for GPIO2 is the default on the > polarfire-soc, there are only 38 per gpio line interrupts available of > which 14 are connected to gpio0 and 24 to gpio1. > >> plic: interrupt-controller@c000000 { > >> - #interrupt-cells = <1>; > >> - compatible = "sifive,fu540-c000-plic", "sifive,plic-1.0.0"; > >> + compatible = "sifive,plic-1.0.0"; > > > > Why drop the first one again? > we felt it didnt make sense to have something that specifically > references the fu540 in the device tree for this board. That would be a revert of commit 73d3c44115514616 ("riscv: dts: microchip: add missing compatibles for clint and plic"), which you supplied an R-b tag for? Is this the same plic as in the FU540 SoC? Or do we need a new microchip,mpfs-plic compatible value? > >> - emac1: ethernet@20112000 { > >> + mac0: ethernet@20110000 { > >> compatible = "cdns,macb"; > >> - reg = <0x0 0x20112000 0x0 0x2000>; > >> + #address-cells = <1>; > >> + #size-cells = <0>; > >> + reg = <0x0 0x20110000 0x0 0x2000>; > >> + clocks = <&clkcfg CLK_MAC0>, <&clkcfg CLK_AHB>; > >> + clock-names = "pclk", "hclk"; > >> interrupt-parent = <&plic>; > >> - interrupts = <70 71 72 73>; > >> - local-mac-address = [00 00 00 00 00 00]; > >> - clocks = <&clkcfg 5>, <&clkcfg 2>; > >> + interrupts = <PLIC_INT_MAC0_INT > >> + PLIC_INT_MAC0_QUEUE1 > >> + PLIC_INT_MAC0_QUEUE2 > >> + PLIC_INT_MAC0_QUEUE3 > >> + PLIC_INT_MAC0_EMAC > >> + PLIC_INT_MAC0_MMSL>; > > > > Please group using angular brackets. > > > >> + mac-address = [56 34 12 00 FC 01]; > > > > Please drop this. > Is the problem here having mac-address instead of local-, having either > at all or that we have populated it rather than just filling with 0s? MAC addresses are supposed to be unique. > We set it in u-boot anyway, so I think dropping entirely is okay. Exactly. Gr{oetje,eeting}s, Geert -- Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that. -- Linus Torvalds