On 01/07/2015 01:06 AM, Tomeu Vizoso wrote:
On 6 January 2015 at 18:09, Stephen Warren <swarren@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 01/06/2015 03:37 AM, Tomeu Vizoso wrote:
Following 6dbaff2b, the kernel expects that the bootloader has correctly
programmed the Tegra pinmux.
DTs for the Jetson and the Venice2 had been updated already but this one
was left behind.
So this setup is true for NVIDIA-controlled development/reference boards
where we've ensured that the bootloader sets up 100% of the pinmux.
However, I know that Coreboot on this board doesn't set up everything in the
pinmux, and since it's in r/o flash never will. As such, I'm not sure this
change is safe for this board. That is, unless you want to force upstream
kernels to be booted via a chain-loaded path: Coreboot (r/o) -> U-Boot (r/w
with full pinmux setup) -> kernel.
Have tested this with the stock vendor firmware (coreboot) and have found
no
issues.
There are presumably a bunch of features which aren't yet supported
upstream, and hence you couldn't test though? That means we might find that
parts of the pinmux aren't yet programmed but need to be to enable those
features.
Sure, there's no chance that my testing could have been extensive enough.
Following Andrew's feedback, I will be looking at getting the pinmux
programming right in the DTs.
As an FYI, the way this typically works (for NVIDIA reference boards,
and many/most customer boards) is that NVIDIA syseng publishes an Excel
spreadsheet that can be edited to define the board's pinmux, and which
performs some error checks. This spreadsheet can directly generate (via
Excel macros/...) pinmux data tables and/or DT files for our
product/internal/downstream Android and L4T kernels. For recent SoCs,
the tegra-pinmux-scripts project[1] can take a CSV representation of the
spreadsheet and generate both a U-Boot header file (for upstream or L4T;
they're the same) and upstream Linux kernel DT files that represent the
pinmux.
So, your best bet is to see if such a spreadsheet exists for these
platforms, and import it into tegra-pinmux-scripts. That will save a lot
of work if the spreadsheet exists (and is up-to-date).
[1] https://github.com/NVIDIA/tegra-pinmux-scripts
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