This adds thermal zone and tsadc nodes to rk3399 dtsi, rk3399 thermal
data is including the cpu and gpu sensor zone node.
The thermal zone node is the node containing all the required info
for describing a thermal zone, including its cooling device bindings.
The thermal zone node must contain, apart from its own properties, one
sub-node containing trip nodes and one sub-node containing all the zone
cooling maps.
The following is the parameter is introduced:
* polling-delay:
The maximum number of milliseconds to wait between polls
* polling-delay-passive:
The maximum number of milliseconds to wait between polls when performing
passive cooling.
* trips:
A sub-node which is a container of only trip point nodes required to
describe the thermal zone.
* cooling-maps:
A sub-node which is a container of only cooling device map nodes, used to
describe the relation between trips and cooling devices.
* cooling-device:
A phandle of a cooling device with its specifier, referring to which
cooling device is used in this cooling specifier binding. In the cooling
specifier, the first cell is the minimum cooling state and the second cell
is the maximum cooling state used in this map.
Signed-off-by: Caesar Wang <wxt@rock-chips.com>
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>
Add the core io-domain nodes to grf and pmugrf which individual
boards than just have to enable and add the necessary supplies to.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>
Add description for the SDHCI v5.1 eMMC controller on rk3399. Fix it to
200 MHz, to support all supported timing modes.
Note that 'rockchip,rk3399-sdhci-5.1' is not documented; we presumably
have a compliant Arasan controller, but let's have a rockchip property
as the canonical backup/precautionary measure. Per Heiko's previous
suggestion, let's not clutter the arasan doc with it.
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Shawn Lin <shawn.lin@rock-chips.com>
Reviewed-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>
Per the examples in
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/phy/rockchip-emmc-phy.txt, we need the
grf node to be a simple-mfd in order to properly enumerate child devices
like our eMMC PHY.
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
[directly mimic for the pmugrf, which will need the same change later
and there is no need to pollute commit history with another patch]
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>
These clocks are all core clocks used by many blocks/peripherals, many
of whose drivers don't set their clock rates at all. Let's assign
reasonable default clock rates for these core clocks, so that these
peripherals get something reasonable by default, and also so that if
child devices want to select a clock rate themselves, their muxes have
some reasonable parent clock rates to branch off of (rather than just
the boot-time defaults).
This helps the eMMC PHY, for one, to get a reasonable ACLK rate.
Signed-off-by: Xing Zheng <zhengxing@rock-chips.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>
This patch adds core dtsi file for Rockchip RK3399 SoCs.
The RK3399 has big/little architecture, which needs a separate
node for the PMU of each microarchitecture, for now it missing
the pmu node since the old one could not work well.
Signed-off-by: Jianqun Xu <jay.xu@rock-chips.com>
Tested-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>