From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: m-karicheri2@ti.com (Murali Karicheri) Date: Fri, 23 May 2014 13:14:00 -0400 Subject: [PATCH v1 3/5] phy: pci serdes phy driver for keystone In-Reply-To: <9550746.D1ri3H0uvi@wuerfel> References: <1400169692-9677-1-git-send-email-m-karicheri2@ti.com> <1400169692-9677-4-git-send-email-m-karicheri2@ti.com> <9550746.D1ri3H0uvi@wuerfel> Message-ID: <537F81D8.2080005@ti.com> To: linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org List-Id: linux-arm-kernel.lists.infradead.org On 5/15/2014 12:14 PM, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > On Thursday 15 May 2014 12:01:30 Murali Karicheri wrote: >> +static struct serdes_config ks_100mhz_pcie_5gbps_serdes[] = { >> + {0x0000, 0x00000800, 0x0000ff00}, >> + {0x0060, 0x00041c5c, 0x00ffffff}, >> + {0x0064, 0x0343c700, 0xffffff00}, >> + {0x006c, 0x00000012, 0x000000ff}, >> + {0x0068, 0x00070000, 0x00ff0000}, >> + {0x0078, 0x0000c000, 0x0000ff00}, > It looks like the PHY is generic, but the configuration above is > PCI specific. If this is true, you should have #phy-cells=<1> > and document the possible modes, adding a lookup table here to > pick the configuration based on the argument. It's fine to just > implement pcie-5ghz initially, but the binding should list all > the modes that the PHY can support. The PCIE name needs to be dropped and as you correctly guessed, this SERDES is generic. > > Also, please list the exact name of the phy if you can find it > out. You mention that you don't know the register descriptions, > but you should at least be able to let us know what phy this > is, in case some other SoC reuses the same thing. Unfortunately there is a NDA restriction that prevents us from using the actual Phy name and keystone phy is the name what we can usel at the moment. I am checking this with our IP team and if original name can be used, I will update the driver to reflect the same. >> +static int ks_phy_init(struct phy *phy) >> +{ >> + struct serdes_config *p; >> + struct phy_keystone *ks_phy = phy_get_drvdata(phy); >> + >> + int i; >> + >> + for (i = 0, p = &ks_100mhz_pcie_5gbps_serdes[0]; >> + i < ARRAY_SIZE(ks_100mhz_pcie_5gbps_serdes); >> + i++, p++) { >> + reg_rmw((ks_phy->base + p->reg), p->val, p->mask); >> + reg_dump((ks_phy->base + p->reg), p->mask); >> + } >> + udelay(2000); > This should probably be msleep(2); Fine. Murali > > Arnd