The new pins—PA8, PA9, PE5, and PC7—are described in a new pinctrl node
named “sdmmc2-d47-3”, AKA phandle “sdmmc2_d47_pins_d”. These names are
identical to their Linux kernel counterparts (commit
7af08140979a6e7e12b78c93b8625c8d25b084e2).
Signed-off-by: Grzegorz Szymaszek <gszymaszek@short.pl>
Change-Id: Ie6a019f4361790f6b5d4910ce1e7b507a6c6a21a
Some STM32MP1‐based boards, like Seeed Studio’s SoM‐STM32MP157C, have
the SoC connected to the PMIC via I2C2 instead of I2C4 (which is used on
the official ST development boards). This commit brings TF‑A one step
closer to boot on such boards.
The pins used, PH4 and PH5, are described in a new pinctrl node named
“i2c2-0”, AKA phandle “i2c2_pins_a”. These names are identical to their
Linux kernel counterparts (commit
7af08140979a6e7e12b78c93b8625c8d25b084e2).
Signed-off-by: Grzegorz Szymaszek <gszymaszek@short.pl>
Change-Id: Ief6f0a632cfa992dcf3fed95d266ad6a07a96fe0
There is one dtsi file per SoC version:
- STM32MP151: common part for all version, Single Cortex-A7
- STM32MP153: Dual Cortex-A7
- STM32MP157: + GPU and DSI, but not needed for TF-A
The STM32MP15xC include a cryptography peripheral, add it in a dedicated
file.
There are 4 packages available, for which the IOs number change. Have one
file for each package. The 2 packages AB and AD are added.
STM32157A-DK1 and STM32MP157C-DK2 share most of their features, a common
dkx file is then created.
Some reordering is done in other files, and realign with kernel DT files.
The DDR files are generated with our internal tool, no changes in the
registers values.
Change-Id: I9f2ef00306310abe34b94c2f10fc7a77a10493d1
Signed-off-by: Yann Gautier <yann.gautier@st.com>