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There have been several changes to the am33xx.dtsi, so this patch re-syncs it with Linux. Let's add proper interconnect hierarchy for l4 interconnect instances with the related ti-sysc interconnect module data as documented in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/bus/ti-sysc.txt of the Linux kernel. With l4 interconnect hierarchy and ti-sysc interconnect target module data in place, we can simply move all the related child devices to their proper location and enable probing using ti-sysc. The am33xx-clock.dtsi file is the same as that of the Linux kernel, except for the reg property of the node l4-wkup-clkctrl@0. As for the am33xx.dtsi file, all the devices with drivers not yet implemented and those I was able to test with this patch have been moved to am33xx-l4.dtsi. In case of any regressions, problem devices can be reverted by moving them back and removing the related interconnect target module node. Signed-off-by:
Dario Binacchi <dariobin@libero.it>
There have been several changes to the am33xx.dtsi, so this patch re-syncs it with Linux. Let's add proper interconnect hierarchy for l4 interconnect instances with the related ti-sysc interconnect module data as documented in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/bus/ti-sysc.txt of the Linux kernel. With l4 interconnect hierarchy and ti-sysc interconnect target module data in place, we can simply move all the related child devices to their proper location and enable probing using ti-sysc. The am33xx-clock.dtsi file is the same as that of the Linux kernel, except for the reg property of the node l4-wkup-clkctrl@0. As for the am33xx.dtsi file, all the devices with drivers not yet implemented and those I was able to test with this patch have been moved to am33xx-l4.dtsi. In case of any regressions, problem devices can be reverted by moving them back and removing the related interconnect target module node. Signed-off-by:
Dario Binacchi <dariobin@libero.it>