The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System, Second Edition
Now available: The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System (Second Edition)


[ source navigation ] [ diff markup ] [ identifier search ] [ freetext search ] [ file search ] [ list types ] [ track identifier ]

FreeBSD/Linux Kernel Cross Reference
sys/contrib/device-tree/Bindings/serial/qcom,msm-uart.txt

Version: -  FREEBSD  -  FREEBSD-13-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-13-0  -  FREEBSD-12-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-12-0  -  FREEBSD-11-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-11-0  -  FREEBSD-10-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-10-0  -  FREEBSD-9-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-9-0  -  FREEBSD-8-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-8-0  -  FREEBSD-7-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-7-0  -  FREEBSD-6-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-6-0  -  FREEBSD-5-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-5-0  -  FREEBSD-4-STABLE  -  FREEBSD-3-STABLE  -  FREEBSD22  -  l41  -  OPENBSD  -  linux-2.6  -  MK84  -  PLAN9  -  xnu-8792 
SearchContext: -  none  -  3  -  10 

    1 * MSM Serial UART
    2 
    3 The MSM serial UART hardware is designed for low-speed use cases where a
    4 dma-engine isn't needed. From a software perspective it's mostly compatible
    5 with the MSM serial UARTDM except that it only supports reading and writing one
    6 character at a time.
    7 
    8 Required properties:
    9 - compatible: Should contain "qcom,msm-uart"
   10 - reg: Should contain UART register location and length.
   11 - interrupts: Should contain UART interrupt.
   12 - clocks: Should contain the core clock.
   13 - clock-names: Should be "core".
   14 
   15 Example:
   16 
   17 A uart device at 0xa9c00000 with interrupt 11.
   18 
   19 serial@a9c00000 {
   20         compatible = "qcom,msm-uart";
   21         reg = <0xa9c00000 0x1000>;
   22         interrupts = <11>;
   23         clocks = <&uart_cxc>;
   24         clock-names = "core";
   25 };

Cache object: fef75a86ebfb7613d45261b1f4e702c1


[ source navigation ] [ diff markup ] [ identifier search ] [ freetext search ] [ file search ] [ list types ] [ track identifier ]


This page is part of the FreeBSD/Linux Linux Kernel Cross-Reference, and was automatically generated using a modified version of the LXR engine.