On Fri, Sep 22, 2017 at 05:07:22PM +0100, Dave Stevenson wrote:
> Hi Stefan
> 
> On 22 September 2017 at 07:45, Stefan Wahren <stefan.wah...@i2se.com> wrote:
> > Hi Dave,
> >
> >> Dave Stevenson <dave.steven...@raspberrypi.org> hat am 20. September 2017 
> >> um 18:07 geschrieben:
> >>
> >>
> >> Document the DT bindings for the CSI2/CCP2 receiver peripheral
> >> (known as Unicam) on BCM283x SoCs.
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Dave Stevenson <dave.steven...@raspberrypi.org>
> >> ---
> >>
> >> Changes since v2
> >> - Removed all references to Linux drivers.
> >> - Reworded section about disabling the firmware driver.
> >> - Renamed clock from "lp_clock" to "lp" in description and example.
> >> - Referred to video-interfaces.txt and stated requirements on 
> >> remote-endpoint
> >>   and data-lanes.
> >> - Corrected typo in example from csi to csi1.
> >> - Removed unnecessary #address-cells and #size-cells in example.
> >> - Removed setting of status from the example.
> >>
> >>  .../devicetree/bindings/media/bcm2835-unicam.txt   | 85 
> >> ++++++++++++++++++++++
> >>  1 file changed, 85 insertions(+)
> >>  create mode 100644 
> >> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/bcm2835-unicam.txt
> >>
> >> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/bcm2835-unicam.txt 
> >> b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/bcm2835-unicam.txt
> >> new file mode 100644
> >> index 0000000..7714fb3
> >> --- /dev/null
> >> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/bcm2835-unicam.txt
> >> @@ -0,0 +1,85 @@
> >> +Broadcom BCM283x Camera Interface (Unicam)
> >> +------------------------------------------
> >> +
> >> +The Unicam block on BCM283x SoCs is the receiver for either
> >> +CSI-2 or CCP2 data from image sensors or similar devices.
> >> +
> >> +The main platform using this SoC is the Raspberry Pi family of boards.
> >> +On the Pi the VideoCore firmware can also control this hardware block,
> >> +and driving it from two different processors will cause issues.
> >> +To avoid this, the firmware checks the device tree configuration
> >> +during boot. If it finds device tree nodes called csi0 or csi1 then
> >> +it will stop the firmware accessing the block, and it can then
> >> +safely be used via the device tree binding.
> >> +
> >> +Required properties:
> >> +===================
> >> +- compatible : must be "brcm,bcm2835-unicam".
> >> +- reg                : physical base address and length of the register 
> >> sets for the
> >> +               device.
> >> +- interrupts : should contain the IRQ line for this Unicam instance.
> >> +- clocks     : list of clock specifiers, corresponding to entries in
> >> +               clock-names property.
> >> +- clock-names        : must contain an "lp" entry, matching entries in the
> >> +               clocks property.
> >> +
> >> +Unicam supports a single port node. It should contain one 'port' child 
> >> node
> >> +with child 'endpoint' node. Please refer to the bindings defined in
> >> +Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/video-interfaces.txt.
> >> +
> >> +Within the endpoint node the "remote-endpoint" and "data-lanes" properties
> >> +are mandatory.
> >> +Data lane reordering is not supported so the data lanes must be in order,
> >> +starting at 1. The number of data lanes should represent the number of
> >> +usable lanes for the hardware block. That may be limited by either the 
> >> SoC or
> >> +how the platform presents the interface, and the lower value must be used.
> >> +
> >> +Lane reordering is not supported on the clock lane either, so the optional
> >> +property "clock-lane" will implicitly be <0>.
> >> +Similarly lane inversion is not supported, therefore "lane-polarities" 
> >> will
> >> +implicitly be <0 0 0 0 0>.
> >> +Neither of these values will be checked.
> >> +
> >> +Example:
> >> +     csi1: csi1@7e801000 {
> >> +             compatible = "brcm,bcm2835-unicam";
> >> +             reg = <0x7e801000 0x800>,
> >> +                   <0x7e802004 0x4>;
> >
> > sorry, i didn't noticed this before. I'm afraid this is using a small range 
> > of the CMI. Are there possible other users of this range? Does it make 
> > sense to handle this by a separate clock driver?
> 
> CMI (Clock Manager Image) consists of a total of 4 registers.
> 0x7e802000 is CMI_CAM0, with only bits 0-5 used for gating and
> inversion of the clock and data lanes (2 data lanes available on
> CAM0).
> 0x7e802004 is CMI_CAM1, with only bits 0-9 used for gating and
> inversion of the clock and data lanes (4 data lanes available on
> CAM1).
> 0x7e802008 is CMI_CAMTEST which I have no documentation or drivers for.
> 0x7e802010 is CMI_USBCTL. Only bit 6 is documented and is a reset. The
> default value is the required value. Nothing touches it that I can
> find.
> 
> The range listed only covers the one register associated with that
> Unicam instance, so no other users. The other two aren't touched.
> Do 16 active register bits solely for camera clock gating really
> warrant a full clock driver?

You should describe all the registers in DT, not just what the driver 
(currently) uses.

Rob

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