This adds a new spi-rx-bus-channels property to the generic spi peripheral property bindings. This property is used to describe devices that have parallel data output channels. This property is different from spi-rx-bus-width in that the latter means that we are reading multiple bits of a single word at one time while the former means that we are reading single bits of multiple words at the same time. Signed-off-by: David Lechner <dlechner@xxxxxxxxxxxx> --- The rest of this series is ready to merge, so just looking for an ack from Mark on this one. .../devicetree/bindings/spi/spi-peripheral-props.yaml | 12 ++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+) diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/spi/spi-peripheral-props.yaml b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/spi/spi-peripheral-props.yaml index 15938f81fdce..1c8e71c18234 100644 --- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/spi/spi-peripheral-props.yaml +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/spi/spi-peripheral-props.yaml @@ -67,6 +67,18 @@ properties: enum: [0, 1, 2, 4, 8] default: 1 + spi-rx-bus-channels: + description: + The number of parallel channels for read transfers. The difference between + this and spi-rx-bus-width is that a value N for spi-rx-bus-channels means + the SPI bus is receiving one bit each of N different words at the same + time whereas a value M for spi-rx-bus-width means that the bus is + receiving M bits of a single word at the same time. It is also possible to + use both properties at the same time, meaning the bus is receiving M bits + of N different words at the same time. + $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/uint32 + default: 1 + spi-rx-delay-us: description: Delay, in microseconds, after a read transfer. -- 2.34.1