Re: [PATCH] ata: add AMD Seattle platform driver

From: Arnd Bergmann
Date: Thu Jan 07 2016 - 18:43:51 EST


On Thursday 07 January 2016 16:24:22 Brijesh Singh wrote:
> >> +
> >> +Examples:
> >> + sata0@e0300000 {
> >> + compatible = "amd,seattle-ahci";
> >> + reg = <0x0 0xe0300000 0x0 0xf0000>, <0x0 0xe0000078 0x0 0x1>;
> >
> > Looking at the register values, I doubt that the SGPIO is actually part of the
> > sata device. More likely, you are pointing in the middle of an actual
> > GPIO controller.
> >
>
> That address is SGPIO control register for SATA. The current hardware implementation to control activity LED is not ideal.

Of course its a control register "for" SATA, what I meant is that it's
not part "of" the SATA IP block, which is hopefully a standard AHCI
compliant part as required by SBSA.

> A57 does not have access to GPIO's connected to backplane controller
> instead SoC has exposed two SGPIO control registers (LSIOC_SGPIO_CONTROL0:
> 0xE000_0078 and LSIOC_SGPIO_CONTROL1: 0xE000_007C) to A57. All we
> need to do is to program these registers based on the disk activity.
> The firmware running on A5 reads the values and generate proper SGPIO
> timing and toggles the LEDs etc.

It still sounds like SGPIO is not part of the AHCI standard spec, but
rather a subset of a device called LSIOC.

> These registers are defined in SATA0/1 DSDT resource template and also
> documented in SoC BKDG. I just noticed that BKDG has wrong register
> definition so will ask documentation folks to fix that.
>
> This driver is using SGPIO LED control similar to sata_highbank [1]
> except bit bang GPIO (which is done by firmware).
>
> [1] http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/drivers/ata/sata_highbank.c#L140

This one is rather different: there is a single device that combines
registers for AHCI, the PHY attached to it and the LED. This is not
SBSA compliant of course, and it requires having a special driver.

What you have instead looks like a regular AHCI implementation that
should just work with the standard driver as long as you describe how
it gets its LEDs.

Arnd