summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/gic.txt
blob: cc56021eb60babea6c580bfbe594aca3c17dfce5 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
* ARM Generic Interrupt Controller

ARM SMP cores are often associated with a GIC, providing per processor
interrupts (PPI), shared processor interrupts (SPI) and software
generated interrupts (SGI).

Primary GIC is attached directly to the CPU and typically has PPIs and SGIs.
Secondary GICs are cascaded into the upward interrupt controller and do not
have PPIs or SGIs.

Main node required properties:

- compatible : should be one of:
	"arm,arm1176jzf-devchip-gic"
	"arm,arm11mp-gic"
	"arm,cortex-a15-gic"
	"arm,cortex-a7-gic"
	"arm,cortex-a9-gic"
	"arm,gic-400"
	"arm,pl390"
	"brcm,brahma-b15-gic"
	"qcom,msm-8660-qgic"
	"qcom,msm-qgic2"
- interrupt-controller : Identifies the node as an interrupt controller
- #interrupt-cells : Specifies the number of cells needed to encode an
  interrupt source.  The type shall be a <u32> and the value shall be 3.

  The 1st cell is the interrupt type; 0 for SPI interrupts, 1 for PPI
  interrupts.

  The 2nd cell contains the interrupt number for the interrupt type.
  SPI interrupts are in the range [0-987].  PPI interrupts are in the
  range [0-15].

  The 3rd cell is the flags, encoded as follows:
	bits[3:0] trigger type and level flags.
		1 = low-to-high edge triggered
		2 = high-to-low edge triggered (invalid for SPIs)
		4 = active high level-sensitive
		8 = active low level-sensitive (invalid for SPIs).
	bits[15:8] PPI interrupt cpu mask.  Each bit corresponds to each of
	the 8 possible cpus attached to the GIC.  A bit set to '1' indicated
	the interrupt is wired to that CPU.  Only valid for PPI interrupts.
	Also note that the configurability of PPI interrupts is IMPLEMENTATION
	DEFINED and as such not guaranteed to be present (most SoC available
	in 2014 seem to ignore the setting of this flag and use the hardware
	default value).

- reg : Specifies base physical address(s) and size of the GIC registers. The
  first region is the GIC distributor register base and size. The 2nd region is
  the GIC cpu interface register base and size.

Optional
- interrupts	: Interrupt source of the parent interrupt controller on
  secondary GICs, or VGIC maintenance interrupt on primary GIC (see
  below).

- cpu-offset	: per-cpu offset within the distributor and cpu interface
  regions, used when the GIC doesn't have banked registers. The offset is
  cpu-offset * cpu-nr.

- clocks        : List of phandle and clock-specific pairs, one for each entry
  in clock-names.
- clock-names   : List of names for the GIC clock input(s). Valid clock names
  depend on the GIC variant:
	"ic_clk" (for "arm,arm11mp-gic")
	"PERIPHCLKEN" (for "arm,cortex-a15-gic")
	"PERIPHCLK", "PERIPHCLKEN" (for "arm,cortex-a9-gic")
	"clk" (for "arm,gic-400")
	"gclk" (for "arm,pl390")

- power-domains : A phandle and PM domain specifier as defined by bindings of
		  the power controller specified by phandle, used when the GIC
		  is part of a Power or Clock Domain.


Example:

	intc: interrupt-controller@fff11000 {
		compatible = "arm,cortex-a9-gic";
		#interrupt-cells = <3>;
		#address-cells = <1>;
		interrupt-controller;
		reg = <0xfff11000 0x1000>,
		      <0xfff10100 0x100>;
	};


* GIC virtualization extensions (VGIC)

For ARM cores that support the virtualization extensions, additional
properties must be described (they only exist if the GIC is the
primary interrupt controller).

Required properties:

- reg : Additional regions specifying the base physical address and
  size of the VGIC registers. The first additional region is the GIC
  virtual interface control register base and size. The 2nd additional
  region is the GIC virtual cpu interface register base and size.

- interrupts : VGIC maintenance interrupt.

Example:

	interrupt-controller@2c001000 {
		compatible = "arm,cortex-a15-gic";
		#interrupt-cells = <3>;
		interrupt-controller;
		reg = <0x2c001000 0x1000>,
		      <0x2c002000 0x1000>,
		      <0x2c004000 0x2000>,
		      <0x2c006000 0x2000>;
		interrupts = <1 9 0xf04>;
	};


* GICv2m extension for MSI/MSI-x support (Optional)

Certain revisions of GIC-400 supports MSI/MSI-x via V2M register frame(s).
This is enabled by specifying v2m sub-node(s).

Required properties:

- compatible	    : The value here should contain "arm,gic-v2m-frame".

- msi-controller    : Identifies the node as an MSI controller.

- reg		    : GICv2m MSI interface register base and size

Optional properties:

- arm,msi-base-spi  : When the MSI_TYPER register contains an incorrect
  		      value, this property should contain the SPI base of
		      the MSI frame, overriding the HW value.

- arm,msi-num-spis  : When the MSI_TYPER register contains an incorrect
  		      value, this property should contain the number of
		      SPIs assigned to the frame, overriding the HW value.

Example:

	interrupt-controller@e1101000 {
		compatible = "arm,gic-400";
		#interrupt-cells = <3>;
		#address-cells = <2>;
		#size-cells = <2>;
		interrupt-controller;
		interrupts = <1 8 0xf04>;
		ranges = <0 0 0 0xe1100000 0 0x100000>;
		reg = <0x0 0xe1110000 0 0x01000>,
		      <0x0 0xe112f000 0 0x02000>,
		      <0x0 0xe1140000 0 0x10000>,
		      <0x0 0xe1160000 0 0x10000>;
		v2m0: v2m@0x8000 {
			compatible = "arm,gic-v2m-frame";
			msi-controller;
			reg = <0x0 0x80000 0 0x1000>;
		};

		....

		v2mN: v2m@0x9000 {
			compatible = "arm,gic-v2m-frame";
			msi-controller;
			reg = <0x0 0x90000 0 0x1000>;
		};
	};