Openwrt/target/linux/generic/patches-4.1/022-bcma-from-4.2.patch
Jonas Gorski a0c49ef46f generic: add linux 4.1 support
Boot tested: http://pastebin.com/L6aAb9xj

Signed-off-by: Álvaro Fernández Rojas <noltari@gmail.com>
[jogo:
  update to 4.1 final
  add patches added since submission
  delete patches applied in later rcs
  restore commit messages in 220-gc-sections and 304-mips_disable_fpu
  fix 050-backport_netfilter_rtcache to match new API
  update inlined dma ops with upstream changes
  add missing config symbols
  enabled CONFIG_MULTIUSER
  update kmod defintions for 4.1
]
Signed-off-by: Jonas Gorski <jogo@openwrt.org>

SVN-Revision: 46112
2015-06-22 12:27:59 +00:00

87 lines
2.6 KiB
Diff

--- a/drivers/bcma/driver_gpio.c
+++ b/drivers/bcma/driver_gpio.c
@@ -226,6 +226,7 @@ int bcma_gpio_init(struct bcma_drv_cc *c
chip->of_node = cc->core->dev.of_node;
#endif
switch (bus->chipinfo.id) {
+ case BCMA_CHIP_ID_BCM4707:
case BCMA_CHIP_ID_BCM5357:
case BCMA_CHIP_ID_BCM53572:
chip->ngpio = 32;
@@ -235,16 +236,17 @@ int bcma_gpio_init(struct bcma_drv_cc *c
}
/*
- * On MIPS we register GPIO devices (LEDs, buttons) using absolute GPIO
- * pin numbers. We don't have Device Tree there and we can't really use
- * relative (per chip) numbers.
- * So let's use predictable base for BCM47XX and "random" for all other.
+ * Register SoC GPIO devices with absolute GPIO pin base.
+ * On MIPS, we don't have Device Tree and we can't use relative (per chip)
+ * GPIO numbers.
+ * On some ARM devices, user space may want to access some system GPIO
+ * pins directly, which is easier to do with a predictable GPIO base.
*/
-#if IS_BUILTIN(CONFIG_BCM47XX)
- chip->base = bus->num * BCMA_GPIO_MAX_PINS;
-#else
- chip->base = -1;
-#endif
+ if (IS_BUILTIN(CONFIG_BCM47XX) ||
+ cc->core->bus->hosttype == BCMA_HOSTTYPE_SOC)
+ chip->base = bus->num * BCMA_GPIO_MAX_PINS;
+ else
+ chip->base = -1;
err = bcma_gpio_irq_domain_init(cc);
if (err)
--- a/drivers/bcma/Kconfig
+++ b/drivers/bcma/Kconfig
@@ -29,12 +29,6 @@ config BCMA_HOST_PCI
select BCMA_DRIVER_PCI
default y
-config BCMA_DRIVER_PCI_HOSTMODE
- bool "Driver for PCI core working in hostmode"
- depends on BCMA && MIPS && BCMA_HOST_PCI
- help
- PCI core hostmode operation (external PCI bus).
-
config BCMA_HOST_SOC
bool "Support for BCMA in a SoC"
depends on BCMA
@@ -61,6 +55,12 @@ config BCMA_DRIVER_PCI
This driver is also prerequisite for a hostmode PCIe core
support.
+config BCMA_DRIVER_PCI_HOSTMODE
+ bool "Driver for PCI core working in hostmode"
+ depends on BCMA && MIPS && BCMA_DRIVER_PCI
+ help
+ PCI core hostmode operation (external PCI bus).
+
config BCMA_DRIVER_MIPS
bool "BCMA Broadcom MIPS core driver"
depends on BCMA && MIPS
--- a/include/linux/bcma/bcma_driver_pci.h
+++ b/include/linux/bcma/bcma_driver_pci.h
@@ -246,7 +246,18 @@ static inline void bcma_core_pci_power_s
}
#endif
+#ifdef CONFIG_BCMA_DRIVER_PCI_HOSTMODE
extern int bcma_core_pci_pcibios_map_irq(const struct pci_dev *dev);
extern int bcma_core_pci_plat_dev_init(struct pci_dev *dev);
+#else
+static inline int bcma_core_pci_pcibios_map_irq(const struct pci_dev *dev)
+{
+ return -ENOTSUPP;
+}
+static inline int bcma_core_pci_plat_dev_init(struct pci_dev *dev)
+{
+ return -ENOTSUPP;
+}
+#endif
#endif /* LINUX_BCMA_DRIVER_PCI_H_ */