On Thu, Aug 25, 2011 at 01:27:12PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Thursday 18 August 2011, David Brown wrote: > > +static void __init msm8660_surf_fpga_init(void __iomem *fpga_mem) > > +{ > > + /* Advanced mode */ > > + writew(0xFFFF, fpga_mem + 0x15C); > > + /* FPGA_UART_SEL */ > > + writew(0, fpga_mem + 0x172); > > + /* FPGA_GPIO_CONFIG_117 */ > > + writew(1, fpga_mem + 0xEA); > > + /* FPGA_GPIO_CONFIG_118 */ > > + writew(1, fpga_mem + 0xEC); > > + dmb(); > > +} > > Does the dmb() do the right thing here? It seems strange to combine a strictly > ordered I/O instruction with another ordering instruction, and I think it would > be better to use writew_relaxed for the first one, followed by a 'wmb()'. I guess I didn't really think about that, I just kind of kept the code. I'll ask Stepan why he did it that way, and come up with a cleaner solution. > > +#ifdef CONFIG_OF > > +static void __init msm8660_surf_fpga_init_dt(void) > > +{ > > + struct device_node *node; > > + void __iomem *fpga_mem; > > + > > + node = of_find_compatible_node(NULL, NULL, "qcom,msm8660-surf-fpga"); > > + if (!node) > > + return; > > + > > + fpga_mem = of_iomap(node, 0); > > + of_node_put(node); > > + if (!fpga_mem) { > > + printk(KERN_ERR "%s: Can't map fpga registers\n", __func__); > > + return; > > + } > > + > > + msm8660_surf_fpga_init(fpga_mem); > > + iounmap(fpga_mem); > > +} > > +#endif > > Is the serial port connected through the FPGA or just configured by it? The FPGA controls how the UART pins are connected on the development board. The serial port itself is in the MSM, not the FPGA, and on other dev boards this isn't needed for the serial port to work. > In the former case, I think it would be better to make this a proper > device driver that binds to the qcom,msm8660-surf-fpga device, > configures it and then creates the platform_devices for the child > nodes (the serial port, possibly others) by calling > of_platform_bus_probe. It might make sense to have the FPGA as a driver. I believe it was done early to make sure that the pins were configured correctly before the serial driver came up. As far as I can tell, the output pin is already configured correctly, so this can actually happen completely independently, since early usage of the UART is really only for console messages. I don't think it makes sense for the serial to be a child node, this FPGA configuration is more along the lines of pinmux. Most configurations of this SOC don't have or need this fpga. So, if I made it a separate driver, where would it go? Since this board still has platform device support, I suspect the platform data needed to describe this device would end up being larger than the driver itself. David -- Sent by an employee of the Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. The Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of the Code Aurora Forum. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arm-msm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html