On Tue, Jun 30, 2015 at 2:27 PM, Paul Osmialowski <pawelo@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Based on K70P256M150SF3RM.pdf K70 Sub-Family Reference Manual, Rev. 3. > > Signed-off-by: Paul Osmialowski <pawelo@xxxxxxxxxxx> (...) > +struct kinetis_sim_regs { > + u32 sopt1; /* System Options Register 1 */ > + u32 rsv0[1024]; > + u32 sopt2; /* System Options Register 2 */ > + u32 rsv1; > + u32 sopt4; /* System Options Register 4 */ > + u32 sopt5; /* System Options Register 5 */ > + u32 sopt6; /* System Options Register 6 */ > + u32 sopt7; /* System Options Register 7 */ > + u32 rsv2[2]; > + u32 sdid; /* System Device Identification Register */ > + u32 scgc[KINETIS_SIM_CG_NUMREGS]; /* Clock Gating Regs 1...7 */ > + u32 clkdiv1; /* System Clock Divider Register 1 */ > + u32 clkdiv2; /* System Clock Divider Register 2 */ > + u32 fcfg1; /* Flash Configuration Register 1 */ > + u32 fcfg2; /* Flash Configuration Register 2 */ > + u32 uidh; /* Unique Identification Register High */ > + u32 uidmh; /* Unique Identification Register Mid-High */ > + u32 uidml; /* Unique Identification Register Mid Low */ > + u32 uidl; /* Unique Identification Register Low */ > + u32 clkdiv3; /* System Clock Divider Register 3 */ > + u32 clkdiv4; /* System Clock Divider Register 4 */ > + u32 mcr; /* Misc Control Register */ > +}; Now there is this design pattern where you copy the datasheet register map to a struct again. This is not good if there is a second revision of the hardware and some registers are shuffled around. IMO it is better to just use #defines for register offsets, so you can do exceptions later. Else a new hardware revision leads to a new struct with new accessor functions etc etc. Yours, Linus Walleij -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-serial" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html