On 01/24/2012 04:21 PM, Simon Glass wrote: > This adds clock references to the USB part of the device tree for U-Boot. > > The USB timing information may vary between boards sometimes, but for > now we hard-code it in C. This is because all current T2x boards use > the same values, we will deal with T3x later and we first need to agree > on the format for this timing information in the fdt and may in fact > decide that it has no place there.
The patch below does more than what's covered by this description... > Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org> > --- > Changes in v5: > - Add dr_mode property to control host/device/otg mode > - Add nvidia,has-legacy-mode property per review comments > - Change device tree comment style from // to /* */ > > arch/arm/dts/tegra20.dtsi | 7 +++++++ > 1 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/arch/arm/dts/tegra20.dtsi b/arch/arm/dts/tegra20.dtsi > index ec75747..b2e3a40 100644 > --- a/arch/arm/dts/tegra20.dtsi > +++ b/arch/arm/dts/tegra20.dtsi > @@ -176,6 +176,9 @@ > reg = <0xc5000000 0x4000>; > interrupts = < 52 >; > phy_type = "utmi"; > + clocks = <&periph_clk 22>; /* PERIPH_ID_USBD */ > + dr_mode = "otg"; The dr_mode value is board-specific, so should be in tegra-seaboard.dts not tegra20.dtsi. For example, on true Seaboard, perhaps USB3 could operate in "otg" mode since it's an external port, whereas on Springbank, USB3 is hard-wired to a keyboard controller, so should be marked "host" mode only. Related, I assume that any port marked as "otg" needs to have a VBUS GPIO defined so that it can be turned off in device mode, or is VBUS controlled by some other mechanism in some cases? Given that, I /think/ you can't actually mark USB3 as "otg" or "device" on Seaboard since there's no VBUS GPIO. -- nvpublic _______________________________________________ U-Boot mailing list U-Boot@lists.denx.de http://lists.denx.de/mailman/listinfo/u-boot