On Wed, 14 Oct 2015 13:17:16 +0200
Rafał Miłecki wrote:
> If all PCI-bus-host-specific code is always the same,
And that's the point. It's always the same _except_ for the device IDs.
Which obviously are PCI-device specific.
--
Michael
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On 23 September 2015 at 17:58, Michael Büsch wrote:
> On Wed, 23 Sep 2015 12:02:48 +0200
> Rafał Miłecki wrote:
>
>> On 21 September 2015 at 18:20, Michael Büsch wrote:
>> > On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 11:04:19 +0200
>> > Rafał Miłecki wrote:
>> >> @@ -1464,6 +1463,12 @@ static int __init ssb_modinit(v
On Wed, 23 Sep 2015 12:02:48 +0200
Rafał Miłecki wrote:
> On 21 September 2015 at 18:20, Michael Büsch wrote:
> > On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 11:04:19 +0200
> > Rafał Miłecki wrote:
> >> @@ -1464,6 +1463,12 @@ static int __init ssb_modinit(void)
> >> /* don't fail SSB init because of this
On 21 September 2015 at 18:20, Michael Büsch wrote:
> On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 11:04:19 +0200
> Rafał Miłecki wrote:
>> @@ -1464,6 +1463,12 @@ static int __init ssb_modinit(void)
>> /* don't fail SSB init because of this */
>> err = 0;
>> }
>> + err = ssb_host_pcm
On 09/21/2015 11:26 AM, Michael Büsch wrote:
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 11:14:32 -0500
Larry Finger wrote:
This patch has been tested on PPC architecture with Linksys WPC54G PCMCIA cards.
Are you sure that this really is a 16 bit PCMCIA card and not a PC-Card?
If it shows up in lspci, it's not a PC
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 11:14:32 -0500
Larry Finger wrote:
> This patch has been tested on PPC architecture with Linksys WPC54G PCMCIA
> cards.
Are you sure that this really is a 16 bit PCMCIA card and not a PC-Card?
If it shows up in lspci, it's not a PCMCIA card.
> It probably does not matter he
On Mon, 21 Sep 2015 11:04:19 +0200
Rafał Miłecki wrote:
> ssb bus can be found on various "host" devices like PCI/PCMCIA/SDIO.
> Every ssb bus contains cores AKA devices.
> The main idea is to have ssb driver scan/initialize bus and register
> ready-to-use cores. This way ssb drivers can operate
On 09/21/2015 04:04 AM, Rafał Miłecki wrote:
ssb bus can be found on various "host" devices like PCI/PCMCIA/SDIO.
Every ssb bus contains cores AKA devices.
The main idea is to have ssb driver scan/initialize bus and register
ready-to-use cores. This way ssb drivers can operate on a single core
mo
ssb bus can be found on various "host" devices like PCI/PCMCIA/SDIO.
Every ssb bus contains cores AKA devices.
The main idea is to have ssb driver scan/initialize bus and register
ready-to-use cores. This way ssb drivers can operate on a single core
mostly ignoring underlaying details.
For some re