@@ -214,7 +214,7 @@ rgmii_phy: ethernet-phy@1 {
&pcie2x1l1 {
linux,pci-domain = <1>;
pinctrl-names = "default";
- pinctrl-0 = <&pcie2_reset>;
+ pinctrl-0 = <&pcie30x1m1_pins>;
reset-gpios = <&gpio4 RK_PA2 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>;
status = "okay";
};
@@ -226,7 +226,7 @@ &pcie30phy {
&pcie3x4 {
linux,pci-domain = <0>;
pinctrl-names = "default";
- pinctrl-0 = <&pcie3_reset>;
+ pinctrl-0 = <&pcie30x4m1_pins>;
reset-gpios = <&gpio4 RK_PB6 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>;
vpcie3v3-supply = <&vcc3v3_pcie30>;
status = "okay";
@@ -245,17 +245,7 @@ hym8563_int: hym8563-int {
};
};
- pcie2 {
- pcie2_reset: pcie2-reset {
- rockchip,pins = <4 RK_PA2 RK_FUNC_GPIO &pcfg_pull_none>;
- };
- };
-
pcie3 {
- pcie3_reset: pcie3-reset {
- rockchip,pins = <4 RK_PB6 RK_FUNC_GPIO &pcfg_pull_none>;
- };
-
vcc3v3_pcie30_en: pcie3-reg {
rockchip,pins = <2 RK_PC5 RK_FUNC_GPIO &pcfg_pull_none>;
};
The RK3588 PCIe 3.0 controller seems to have unpredictable behavior when no CLKREQ/PERST/WAKE pins are configured in the pinmux. In particular, it will sometimes (varying between specific RK3588 chips, not over time) shut off the DBI block, and reads to this range will instead stall indefinitely. When this happens, it will prevent Linux from booting altogether. The PCIe driver will stall the CPU core once it attempts to read the version information from the DBI range. Fix this boot hang by adding the correct pinctrl configuration to the PCIe 3.0 device node, which is the proper thing to do anyway. While we're at it, also add the necessary configuration to the PCIe 2.0 node, which may or may not fix the equivalent problem over there -- but is the proper thing to do anyway. :) Fixes: 2806a69f3fef6 ("arm64: dts: rockchip: Add Turing RK1 SoM support") Signed-off-by: Sam Edwards <CFSworks@gmail.com> --- .../arm64/boot/dts/rockchip/rk3588-turing-rk1.dtsi | 14 ++------------ 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)