On Monday 04 May 2015 19:42:02 Yoshinori Sato wrote: > + > + h8intc: intc@0 { > + compatible = "renesas,h8s-intc", "renesas,h8300-intc"; > + #interrupt-cells = <1>; > + interrupt-controller; > + }; The node name should be "interrupt-controller@0", not "intc@0", to follow the common conventions. > + tpu: tpu@ffffe0 { > + compatible = "renesas,tpu"; > + reg = <0xffffe0 16>, <0xfffff0 12>; > + clocks = <&pclk>; > + clock-names = "peripheral_clk"; > + }; > + > + timer8: timer@ffffb0 { > + compatible = "renesas,8bit-timer"; > + reg = <0xffff80 10>; > + interrupts = <72 75>; > + clocks = <&pclk>; > + clock-names = "peripheral_clk"; > + renesas,mode = <CLOCKEVENTDEVICE>; > + renesas,div = <DIV_8>; > + }; > + The renesas,div property seems odd here. How about defining a "clock-frequency" property and figuring out the divider from the parent clock in the driver? Your new binding makes it mandatory to have a "fclk" clock, which seems better suited than "peripheral_clk", so I'd suggest you change the code to match the documentation (rather than the other way round). Alternatively, you could make this an anonymous clock and not specify the name at all. The renesas,mode property seems odd. Why is that needed? It sounds like you are encoding how you expect the device to be used by Linux, rather than what it can do in hardware. If you have multiple variants of the 8bit-timer hardware that have different features, better use separate compatible strings for them, or a boolean flag that announces the presence or absence of a feature. If however, this is just a hint for Linux, maybe you can find a way for the driver to take a guess itself, e.g. using the first device it finds as a clockevent device, and only use a clocksource device if there is more than one? > + sci0: serial@ffff78 { > + compatible = "renesas,sci"; > + reg = <0xffff78 8>; > + interrupts = <88 89 90 91>; > + clocks = <&pclk>; > + clock-names = "peripheral_clk"; > + }; > + sci1: serial@ffff80 { > + compatible = "renesas,sci"; > + reg = <0xffff80 8>; > + interrupts = <92 93 94 95>; > + clocks = <&pclk>; > + clock-names = "peripheral_clk"; > + }; > + sci2: serial@ffff88 { > + compatible = "renesas,sci"; > + reg = <0xffff88 8>; > + interrupts = <96 97 98 99>; > + clocks = <&pclk>; > + clock-names = "peripheral_clk"; > + }; > +}; The binding for sci requires the clock to be named "sci_ick", so please use that instead of "peripheral_clk". The driver can handle both. Arnd -- 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