In some designs, the chip reset pin is connected to a GPIO, and this
GPIO needs to be set correctly before probing the driver, so add a
reset-gpios in the device tree.
Acked-by: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@microchip.com>
Reviewed-by: Lech Perczak <lech.perczak@camlingroup.com>
Tested-by: Hugo Villeneuve <hvilleneuve@dimonoff.com>
Reviewed-by: Hugo Villeneuve <hvilleneuve@dimonoff.com>
Signed-off-by: Hui Wang <hui.wang@canonical.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240618112620.152848-1-hui.wang@canonical.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
clocks:
maxItems: 1
+ reset-gpios:
+ maxItems: 1
+
clock-frequency:
description:
When there is no clock provider visible to the platform, this
examples:
- |
#include <dt-bindings/interrupt-controller/irq.h>
+ #include <dt-bindings/gpio/gpio.h>
i2c {
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <0>;
compatible = "nxp,sc16is752";
reg = <0x54>;
clocks = <&clk20m>;
+ reset-gpios = <&gpio5 13 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
interrupt-parent = <&gpio3>;
interrupts = <7 IRQ_TYPE_EDGE_FALLING>;
nxp,modem-control-line-ports = <0 1>; /* Ports 0 and 1 as modem control lines */