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Tom Rini53633a82024-02-29 12:33:36 -05001# SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0-only OR BSD-2-Clause)
2%YAML 1.2
3---
4$id: http://devicetree.org/schemas/gpio/nvidia,tegra186-gpio.yaml#
5$schema: http://devicetree.org/meta-schemas/core.yaml#
6
7title: NVIDIA Tegra GPIO Controller (Tegra186 and later)
8
9maintainers:
10 - Thierry Reding <thierry.reding@gmail.com>
11 - Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
12
13description: |
14 Tegra186 contains two GPIO controllers; a main controller and an "AON"
15 controller. This binding document applies to both controllers. The register
16 layouts for the controllers share many similarities, but also some
17 significant differences. Hence, this document describes closely related but
18 different bindings and compatible values.
19
20 The Tegra186 GPIO controller allows software to set the IO direction of,
21 and read/write the value of, numerous GPIO signals. Routing of GPIO signals
22 to package balls is under the control of a separate pin controller hardware
23 block. Two major sets of registers exist:
24
25 a) Security registers, which allow configuration of allowed access to the
26 GPIO register set. These registers exist in a single contiguous block
27 of physical address space. The size of this block, and the security
28 features available, varies between the different GPIO controllers.
29
30 Access to this set of registers is not necessary in all circumstances.
31 Code that wishes to configure access to the GPIO registers needs access
32 to these registers to do so. Code which simply wishes to read or write
33 GPIO data does not need access to these registers.
34
35 b) GPIO registers, which allow manipulation of the GPIO signals. In some
36 GPIO controllers, these registers are exposed via multiple "physical
37 aliases" in address space, each of which access the same underlying
38 state. See the hardware documentation for rationale. Any particular
39 GPIO client is expected to access just one of these physical aliases.
40
41 Tegra HW documentation describes a unified naming convention for all GPIOs
42 implemented by the SoC. Each GPIO is assigned to a port, and a port may
43 control a number of GPIOs. Thus, each GPIO is named according to an
44 alphabetical port name and an integer GPIO name within the port. For
45 example, GPIO_PA0, GPIO_PN6, or GPIO_PCC3.
46
47 The number of ports implemented by each GPIO controller varies. The number
48 of implemented GPIOs within each port varies. GPIO registers within a
49 controller are grouped and laid out according to the port they affect.
50
51 The mapping from port name to the GPIO controller that implements that
52 port, and the mapping from port name to register offset within a
53 controller, are both extremely non-linear. The header file
54 <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h> describes the port-level mapping. In
55 that file, the naming convention for ports matches the HW documentation.
56 The values chosen for the names are alphabetically sorted within a
57 particular controller. Drivers need to map between the DT GPIO IDs and HW
58 register offsets using a lookup table.
59
60 Each GPIO controller can generate a number of interrupt signals. Each
61 signal represents the aggregate status for all GPIOs within a set of
62 ports. Thus, the number of interrupt signals generated by a controller
63 varies as a rough function of the number of ports it implements. Note
64 that the HW documentation refers to both the overall controller HW
65 module and the sets-of-ports as "controllers".
66
67 Each GPIO controller in fact generates multiple interrupts signals for
68 each set of ports. Each GPIO may be configured to feed into a specific
69 one of the interrupt signals generated by a set-of-ports. The intent is
70 for each generated signal to be routed to a different CPU, thus allowing
71 different CPUs to each handle subsets of the interrupts within a port.
72 The status of each of these per-port-set signals is reported via a
73 separate register. Thus, a driver needs to know which status register to
74 observe. This binding currently defines no configuration mechanism for
75 this. By default, drivers should use register
76 GPIO_${port}_INTERRUPT_STATUS_G1_0. Future revisions to the binding could
77 define a property to configure this.
78
79properties:
80 compatible:
81 enum:
82 - nvidia,tegra186-gpio
83 - nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon
84 - nvidia,tegra194-gpio
85 - nvidia,tegra194-gpio-aon
86 - nvidia,tegra234-gpio
87 - nvidia,tegra234-gpio-aon
88
89 reg-names:
90 items:
91 - const: security
92 - const: gpio
93 minItems: 1
94
95 reg:
96 items:
97 - description: Security configuration registers.
98 - description: |
99 GPIO control registers. This may cover either:
100
101 a) The single physical alias that this OS should use.
102 b) All physical aliases that exist in the controller. This is
103 appropriate when the OS is responsible for managing assignment
104 of the physical aliases.
105 minItems: 1
106
107 interrupts:
108 description: The interrupt outputs from the HW block, one per set of
109 ports, in the order the HW manual describes them. The number of entries
110 required varies depending on compatible value.
111
112 gpio-controller: true
113
114 "#gpio-cells":
115 description: |
116 Indicates how many cells are used in a consumer's GPIO specifier. In the
117 specifier:
118
119 - The first cell is the pin number.
120 See <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h>.
121 - The second cell contains flags:
122 - Bit 0 specifies polarity
123 - 0: Active-high (normal).
124 - 1: Active-low (inverted).
125 const: 2
126
127 interrupt-controller: true
128
129 "#interrupt-cells":
130 description: |
131 Indicates how many cells are used in a consumer's interrupt specifier.
132 In the specifier:
133
134 - The first cell is the GPIO number.
135 See <dt-bindings/gpio/tegra186-gpio.h>.
136 - The second cell is contains flags:
137 - Bits [3:0] indicate trigger type and level:
138 - 1: Low-to-high edge triggered.
139 - 2: High-to-low edge triggered.
140 - 4: Active high level-sensitive.
141 - 8: Active low level-sensitive.
142
143 Valid combinations are 1, 2, 3, 4, 8.
144 const: 2
145
146allOf:
147 - if:
148 properties:
149 compatible:
150 contains:
151 enum:
152 - nvidia,tegra186-gpio
153 - nvidia,tegra194-gpio
154 - nvidia,tegra234-gpio
155 then:
156 properties:
157 interrupts:
158 minItems: 6
159 maxItems: 48
160
161 - if:
162 properties:
163 compatible:
164 contains:
165 enum:
166 - nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon
167 - nvidia,tegra194-gpio-aon
168 - nvidia,tegra234-gpio-aon
169 then:
170 properties:
171 interrupts:
172 minItems: 1
173 maxItems: 4
174
175required:
176 - compatible
177 - reg
178 - reg-names
179 - interrupts
180
181additionalProperties: false
182
183examples:
184 - |
185 #include <dt-bindings/interrupt-controller/irq.h>
186
187 gpio@2200000 {
188 compatible = "nvidia,tegra186-gpio";
189 reg-names = "security", "gpio";
190 reg = <0x2200000 0x10000>,
191 <0x2210000 0x10000>;
192 interrupts = <0 47 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>,
193 <0 50 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>,
194 <0 53 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>,
195 <0 56 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>,
196 <0 59 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>,
197 <0 180 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
198 gpio-controller;
199 #gpio-cells = <2>;
200 interrupt-controller;
201 #interrupt-cells = <2>;
202 };
203
204 gpio@c2f0000 {
205 compatible = "nvidia,tegra186-gpio-aon";
206 reg-names = "security", "gpio";
207 reg = <0xc2f0000 0x1000>,
208 <0xc2f1000 0x1000>;
209 interrupts = <0 60 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_HIGH>;
210 gpio-controller;
211 #gpio-cells = <2>;
212 interrupt-controller;
213 #interrupt-cells = <2>;
214 };