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of: Document {little,big,native}-endian bindings
These apply to newly converted drivers, like serial8250/libahci/... The examples were adapted from the regmap bindings document. Signed-off-by: Kevin Cernekee <cernekee@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Peter Hurley <peter@hurleysoftware.com> Acked-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Signed-off-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
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Common properties | ||
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The ePAPR specification does not define any properties related to hardware | ||
byteswapping, but endianness issues show up frequently in porting Linux to | ||
different machine types. This document attempts to provide a consistent | ||
way of handling byteswapping across drivers. | ||
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Optional properties: | ||
- big-endian: Boolean; force big endian register accesses | ||
unconditionally (e.g. ioread32be/iowrite32be). Use this if you | ||
know the peripheral always needs to be accessed in BE mode. | ||
- little-endian: Boolean; force little endian register accesses | ||
unconditionally (e.g. readl/writel). Use this if you know the | ||
peripheral always needs to be accessed in LE mode. | ||
- native-endian: Boolean; always use register accesses matched to the | ||
endianness of the kernel binary (e.g. LE vmlinux -> readl/writel, | ||
BE vmlinux -> ioread32be/iowrite32be). In this case no byteswaps | ||
will ever be performed. Use this if the hardware "self-adjusts" | ||
register endianness based on the CPU's configured endianness. | ||
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If a binding supports these properties, then the binding should also | ||
specify the default behavior if none of these properties are present. | ||
In such cases, little-endian is the preferred default, but it is not | ||
a requirement. The of_device_is_big_endian() and of_fdt_is_big_endian() | ||
helper functions do assume that little-endian is the default, because | ||
most existing (PCI-based) drivers implicitly default to LE by using | ||
readl/writel for MMIO accesses. | ||
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Examples: | ||
Scenario 1 : CPU in LE mode & device in LE mode. | ||
dev: dev@40031000 { | ||
compatible = "name"; | ||
reg = <0x40031000 0x1000>; | ||
... | ||
native-endian; | ||
}; | ||
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Scenario 2 : CPU in LE mode & device in BE mode. | ||
dev: dev@40031000 { | ||
compatible = "name"; | ||
reg = <0x40031000 0x1000>; | ||
... | ||
big-endian; | ||
}; | ||
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Scenario 3 : CPU in BE mode & device in BE mode. | ||
dev: dev@40031000 { | ||
compatible = "name"; | ||
reg = <0x40031000 0x1000>; | ||
... | ||
native-endian; | ||
}; | ||
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Scenario 4 : CPU in BE mode & device in LE mode. | ||
dev: dev@40031000 { | ||
compatible = "name"; | ||
reg = <0x40031000 0x1000>; | ||
... | ||
little-endian; | ||
}; |