Marc Gonzalez <marc_gonza...@sigmadesigns.com> writes: > According to our HW dev, there is no provision for software to safely > disable RX DMA in the AU-NB8800 hardware block (ethernet DMA). Thus, > it is the responsibility of the SoC designer to provide such a feature. > > The nb8800_dma_stop() implementation is a clever hack that works most > of the times, but it breaks the DMA state machine in rare cases. > > Therefore, let's drop generic support. > > FWIW, tango chips provide a reset register. When the ethernet block > comes out of reset, DMA is disabled. > > Signed-off-by: Marc Gonzalez <marc_gonza...@sigmadesigns.com> > --- > drivers/net/ethernet/aurora/nb8800.c | 3 --- > 1 file changed, 3 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/aurora/nb8800.c > b/drivers/net/ethernet/aurora/nb8800.c > index e94159507847..26f719e2d6ca 100644 > --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/aurora/nb8800.c > +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/aurora/nb8800.c > @@ -1335,9 +1335,6 @@ static const struct nb8800_ops nb8800_tango4_ops = { > }; > > static const struct of_device_id nb8800_dt_ids[] = { > - { > - .compatible = "aurora,nb8800", > - }, > { > .compatible = "sigma,smp8642-ethernet", > .data = &nb8800_tangox_ops, > --
Please leave this. It works just fine on tango3. -- Måns Rullgård