linux/Documentation/powerpc/dts-bindings/fsl/cpm_qe/cpm.txt
Kumar Gala d0fc2eaaf4 powerpc/fsl: Refactor device bindings
Moved Freescale SoC related bindings out of booting-without-of.txt and into
their own files.

Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <galak@kernel.crashing.org>
2008-07-14 07:55:46 -05:00

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* Freescale Communications Processor Module
NOTE: This is an interim binding, and will likely change slightly,
as more devices are supported. The QE bindings especially are
incomplete.
* Root CPM node
Properties:
- compatible : "fsl,cpm1", "fsl,cpm2", or "fsl,qe".
- reg : A 48-byte region beginning with CPCR.
Example:
cpm@119c0 {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
#interrupt-cells = <2>;
compatible = "fsl,mpc8272-cpm", "fsl,cpm2";
reg = <119c0 30>;
}
* Properties common to mulitple CPM/QE devices
- fsl,cpm-command : This value is ORed with the opcode and command flag
to specify the device on which a CPM command operates.
- fsl,cpm-brg : Indicates which baud rate generator the device
is associated with. If absent, an unused BRG
should be dynamically allocated. If zero, the
device uses an external clock rather than a BRG.
- reg : Unless otherwise specified, the first resource represents the
scc/fcc/ucc registers, and the second represents the device's
parameter RAM region (if it has one).
* Multi-User RAM (MURAM)
The multi-user/dual-ported RAM is expressed as a bus under the CPM node.
Ranges must be set up subject to the following restrictions:
- Children's reg nodes must be offsets from the start of all muram, even
if the user-data area does not begin at zero.
- If multiple range entries are used, the difference between the parent
address and the child address must be the same in all, so that a single
mapping can cover them all while maintaining the ability to determine
CPM-side offsets with pointer subtraction. It is recommended that
multiple range entries not be used.
- A child address of zero must be translatable, even if no reg resources
contain it.
A child "data" node must exist, compatible with "fsl,cpm-muram-data", to
indicate the portion of muram that is usable by the OS for arbitrary
purposes. The data node may have an arbitrary number of reg resources,
all of which contribute to the allocatable muram pool.
Example, based on mpc8272:
muram@0 {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
ranges = <0 0 10000>;
data@0 {
compatible = "fsl,cpm-muram-data";
reg = <0 2000 9800 800>;
};
};