2012-02-23 17:04:51 +04:00
ARM Versatile Express boards family
-----------------------------------
ARM's Versatile Express platform consists of a motherboard and one
or more daughterboards (tiles). The motherboard provides a set of
peripherals. Processor and RAM "live" on the tiles.
The motherboard and each core tile should be described by a separate
Device Tree source file, with the tile's description including
the motherboard file using a /include/ directive. As the motherboard
can be initialized in one of two different configurations ("memory
maps"), care must be taken to include the correct one.
mfd: Versatile Express config infrastructure
Versatile Express platform has an elaborated configuration system,
consisting of microcontrollers residing on the mother- and
daughterboards known as Motherboard/Daughterboard Configuration
Controller (MCC and DCC). The controllers are responsible for
the platform initialization (reset generation, flash programming,
FPGA bitfiles loading etc.) but also control clock generators,
voltage regulators, gather environmental data like temperature,
power consumption etc. Even the video output switch (FPGA) is
controlled that way.
Those devices are _not_ visible in the main address space and
the usual communication channel uses some kind of a bridge in
the peripheral block sending commands (requests) to the
controllers and receiving responses. It can take up to
500 microseconds for a transaction to be completed, therefore
it is important to provide a non-blocking interface to it.
This patch adds an abstraction of this infrastructure. Bridge
drivers can register themselves with the framework. Then,
a driver of a device can request an abstract "function" - the
request will be redirected to a bridge referred by thedd
"arm,vexpress,config-bridge" property of the device tree node.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Moll <pawel.moll@arm.com>
2012-09-24 17:55:40 +04:00
Root node
---------
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Required properties in the root node:
- compatible value:
compatible = "arm,vexpress,<model>", "arm,vexpress";
where <model> is the full tile model name (as used in the tile's
Technical Reference Manual), eg.:
- for Coretile Express A5x2 (V2P-CA5s):
compatible = "arm,vexpress,v2p-ca5s", "arm,vexpress";
- for Coretile Express A9x4 (V2P-CA9):
compatible = "arm,vexpress,v2p-ca9", "arm,vexpress";
If a tile comes in several variants or can be used in more then one
configuration, the compatible value should be:
compatible = "arm,vexpress,<model>,<variant>", \
"arm,vexpress,<model>", "arm,vexpress";
eg:
- Coretile Express A15x2 (V2P-CA15) with Tech Chip 1:
compatible = "arm,vexpress,v2p-ca15,tc1", \
"arm,vexpress,v2p-ca15", "arm,vexpress";
- LogicTile Express 13MG (V2F-2XV6) running Cortex-A7 (3 cores) SMM:
compatible = "arm,vexpress,v2f-2xv6,ca7x3", \
"arm,vexpress,v2f-2xv6", "arm,vexpress";
Optional properties in the root node:
- tile model name (use name from the tile's Technical Reference
Manual, eg. "V2P-CA5s")
model = "<model>";
- tile's HBI number (unique ARM's board model ID, visible on the
PCB's silkscreen) in hexadecimal transcription:
arm,hbi = <0xhbi>
eg:
- for Coretile Express A5x2 (V2P-CA5s) HBI-0191:
arm,hbi = <0x191>;
- Coretile Express A9x4 (V2P-CA9) HBI-0225:
arm,hbi = <0x225>;
mfd: Versatile Express config infrastructure
Versatile Express platform has an elaborated configuration system,
consisting of microcontrollers residing on the mother- and
daughterboards known as Motherboard/Daughterboard Configuration
Controller (MCC and DCC). The controllers are responsible for
the platform initialization (reset generation, flash programming,
FPGA bitfiles loading etc.) but also control clock generators,
voltage regulators, gather environmental data like temperature,
power consumption etc. Even the video output switch (FPGA) is
controlled that way.
Those devices are _not_ visible in the main address space and
the usual communication channel uses some kind of a bridge in
the peripheral block sending commands (requests) to the
controllers and receiving responses. It can take up to
500 microseconds for a transaction to be completed, therefore
it is important to provide a non-blocking interface to it.
This patch adds an abstraction of this infrastructure. Bridge
drivers can register themselves with the framework. Then,
a driver of a device can request an abstract "function" - the
request will be redirected to a bridge referred by thedd
"arm,vexpress,config-bridge" property of the device tree node.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Moll <pawel.moll@arm.com>
2012-09-24 17:55:40 +04:00
CPU nodes
---------
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Top-level standard "cpus" node is required. It must contain a node
with device_type = "cpu" property for every available core, eg.:
cpus {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <0>;
cpu@0 {
device_type = "cpu";
compatible = "arm,cortex-a5";
reg = <0>;
};
};
mfd: Versatile Express config infrastructure
Versatile Express platform has an elaborated configuration system,
consisting of microcontrollers residing on the mother- and
daughterboards known as Motherboard/Daughterboard Configuration
Controller (MCC and DCC). The controllers are responsible for
the platform initialization (reset generation, flash programming,
FPGA bitfiles loading etc.) but also control clock generators,
voltage regulators, gather environmental data like temperature,
power consumption etc. Even the video output switch (FPGA) is
controlled that way.
Those devices are _not_ visible in the main address space and
the usual communication channel uses some kind of a bridge in
the peripheral block sending commands (requests) to the
controllers and receiving responses. It can take up to
500 microseconds for a transaction to be completed, therefore
it is important to provide a non-blocking interface to it.
This patch adds an abstraction of this infrastructure. Bridge
drivers can register themselves with the framework. Then,
a driver of a device can request an abstract "function" - the
request will be redirected to a bridge referred by thedd
"arm,vexpress,config-bridge" property of the device tree node.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Moll <pawel.moll@arm.com>
2012-09-24 17:55:40 +04:00
Configuration infrastructure
----------------------------
The platform has an elaborated configuration system, consisting of
microcontrollers residing on the mother- and daughterboards known
as Motherboard/Daughterboard Configuration Controller (MCC and DCC).
The controllers are responsible for the platform initialization
(reset generation, flash programming, FPGA bitfiles loading etc.)
but also control clock generators, voltage regulators, gather
environmental data like temperature, power consumption etc. Even
the video output switch (FPGA) is controlled that way.
Nodes describing devices controlled by this infrastructure should
point at the bridge device node:
- bridge phandle:
arm,vexpress,config-bridge = <phandle>;
This property can be also defined in a parent node (eg. for a DCC)
and is effective for all children.
Platform topology
-----------------
As Versatile Express can be configured in number of physically
different setups, the device tree should describe platform topology.
Root node and main motherboard node must define the following
property, describing physical location of the children nodes:
- site number:
arm,vexpress,site = <number>;
where 0 means motherboard, 1 or 2 are daugtherboard sites,
0xf means "master" site (site containing main CPU tile)
- when daughterboards are stacked on one site, their position
in the stack be be described with:
arm,vexpress,position = <number>;
- when describing tiles consisting more than one DCC, its number
can be described with:
arm,vexpress,dcc = <number>;
Any of the numbers above defaults to zero if not defined in
the node or any of its parent.
Motherboard
-----------
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The motherboard description file provides a single "motherboard" node
using 2 address cells corresponding to the Static Memory Bus used
between the motherboard and the tile. The first cell defines the Chip
Select (CS) line number, the second cell address offset within the CS.
All interrupt lines between the motherboard and the tile are active
high and are described using single cell.
Optional properties of the "motherboard" node:
- motherboard's memory map variant:
arm,v2m-memory-map = "<name>";
where name is one of:
- "rs1" - for RS1 map (i.a. peripherals on CS3); this map is also
referred to as "ARM Cortex-A Series memory map":
arm,v2m-memory-map = "rs1";
When this property is missing, the motherboard is using the original
memory map (also known as the "Legacy memory map", primarily used
with the original CoreTile Express A9x4) with peripherals on CS7.
Motherboard .dtsi files provide a set of labelled peripherals that
can be used to obtain required phandle in the tile's "aliases" node:
- UARTs, note that the numbers correspond to the physical connectors
on the motherboard's back panel:
v2m_serial0, v2m_serial1, v2m_serial2 and v2m_serial3
- I2C controllers:
v2m_i2c_dvi and v2m_i2c_pcie
- SP804 timers:
v2m_timer01 and v2m_timer23
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The tile description should define a "smb" node, describing the
Static Memory Bus between the tile and motherboard. It must define
the following properties:
- "simple-bus" compatible value (to ensure creation of the children)
compatible = "simple-bus";
- mapping of the SMB CS/offset addresses into main address space:
#address-cells = <2>;
#size-cells = <1>;
ranges = <...>;
- interrupts mapping:
#interrupt-cells = <1>;
interrupt-map-mask = <0 0 63>;
interrupt-map = <...>;
2012-02-23 17:04:51 +04:00
mfd: Versatile Express config infrastructure
Versatile Express platform has an elaborated configuration system,
consisting of microcontrollers residing on the mother- and
daughterboards known as Motherboard/Daughterboard Configuration
Controller (MCC and DCC). The controllers are responsible for
the platform initialization (reset generation, flash programming,
FPGA bitfiles loading etc.) but also control clock generators,
voltage regulators, gather environmental data like temperature,
power consumption etc. Even the video output switch (FPGA) is
controlled that way.
Those devices are _not_ visible in the main address space and
the usual communication channel uses some kind of a bridge in
the peripheral block sending commands (requests) to the
controllers and receiving responses. It can take up to
500 microseconds for a transaction to be completed, therefore
it is important to provide a non-blocking interface to it.
This patch adds an abstraction of this infrastructure. Bridge
drivers can register themselves with the framework. Then,
a driver of a device can request an abstract "function" - the
request will be redirected to a bridge referred by thedd
"arm,vexpress,config-bridge" property of the device tree node.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Moll <pawel.moll@arm.com>
2012-09-24 17:55:40 +04:00
Example of a VE tile description (simplified)
---------------------------------------------
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/dts-v1/;
/ {
model = "V2P-CA5s";
arm,hbi = <0x225>;
mfd: Versatile Express config infrastructure
Versatile Express platform has an elaborated configuration system,
consisting of microcontrollers residing on the mother- and
daughterboards known as Motherboard/Daughterboard Configuration
Controller (MCC and DCC). The controllers are responsible for
the platform initialization (reset generation, flash programming,
FPGA bitfiles loading etc.) but also control clock generators,
voltage regulators, gather environmental data like temperature,
power consumption etc. Even the video output switch (FPGA) is
controlled that way.
Those devices are _not_ visible in the main address space and
the usual communication channel uses some kind of a bridge in
the peripheral block sending commands (requests) to the
controllers and receiving responses. It can take up to
500 microseconds for a transaction to be completed, therefore
it is important to provide a non-blocking interface to it.
This patch adds an abstraction of this infrastructure. Bridge
drivers can register themselves with the framework. Then,
a driver of a device can request an abstract "function" - the
request will be redirected to a bridge referred by thedd
"arm,vexpress,config-bridge" property of the device tree node.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Moll <pawel.moll@arm.com>
2012-09-24 17:55:40 +04:00
arm,vexpress,site = <0xf>;
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compatible = "arm,vexpress-v2p-ca5s", "arm,vexpress";
interrupt-parent = <&gic>;
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
chosen { };
aliases {
serial0 = &v2m_serial0;
};
cpus {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <0>;
cpu@0 {
device_type = "cpu";
compatible = "arm,cortex-a5";
reg = <0>;
};
};
gic: interrupt-controller@2c001000 {
compatible = "arm,cortex-a9-gic";
#interrupt-cells = <3>;
#address-cells = <0>;
interrupt-controller;
reg = <0x2c001000 0x1000>,
<0x2c000100 0x100>;
};
mfd: Versatile Express config infrastructure
Versatile Express platform has an elaborated configuration system,
consisting of microcontrollers residing on the mother- and
daughterboards known as Motherboard/Daughterboard Configuration
Controller (MCC and DCC). The controllers are responsible for
the platform initialization (reset generation, flash programming,
FPGA bitfiles loading etc.) but also control clock generators,
voltage regulators, gather environmental data like temperature,
power consumption etc. Even the video output switch (FPGA) is
controlled that way.
Those devices are _not_ visible in the main address space and
the usual communication channel uses some kind of a bridge in
the peripheral block sending commands (requests) to the
controllers and receiving responses. It can take up to
500 microseconds for a transaction to be completed, therefore
it is important to provide a non-blocking interface to it.
This patch adds an abstraction of this infrastructure. Bridge
drivers can register themselves with the framework. Then,
a driver of a device can request an abstract "function" - the
request will be redirected to a bridge referred by thedd
"arm,vexpress,config-bridge" property of the device tree node.
Signed-off-by: Pawel Moll <pawel.moll@arm.com>
2012-09-24 17:55:40 +04:00
dcc {
compatible = "simple-bus";
arm,vexpress,config-bridge = <&v2m_sysreg>;
osc@0 {
compatible = "arm,vexpress-osc";
};
};
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smb {
compatible = "simple-bus";
#address-cells = <2>;
#size-cells = <1>;
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/* CS0 is visible at 0x08000000 */
ranges = <0 0 0x08000000 0x04000000>;
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#interrupt-cells = <1>;
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interrupt-map-mask = <0 0 63>;
/* Active high IRQ 0 is connected to GIC's SPI0 */
interrupt-map = <0 0 0 &gic 0 0 4>;
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/include/ "vexpress-v2m-rs1.dtsi"
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};
};