@@ -158,12 +158,28 @@ &pio {
vcc-pg-supply = <®_aldo1>;
};
-&r_i2c {
+&r_ir {
+ linux,rc-map-name = "rc-beelink-gs1";
+ status = "okay";
+};
+
+&r_pio {
+ /*
+ * FIXME: We can't add that supply for now since it would
+ * create a circular dependency between pinctrl, the regulator
+ * and the RSB Bus.
+ *
+ * vcc-pl-supply = <®_aldo1>;
+ */
+ vcc-pm-supply = <®_aldo1>;
+};
+
+&r_rsb {
status = "okay";
- axp805: pmic@36 {
+ axp805: pmic@745 {
compatible = "x-powers,axp805", "x-powers,axp806";
- reg = <0x36>;
+ reg = <0x745>;
interrupt-parent = <&r_intc>;
interrupts = <0 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_LOW>;
interrupt-controller;
@@ -281,22 +297,6 @@ sw {
};
};
-&r_ir {
- linux,rc-map-name = "rc-beelink-gs1";
- status = "okay";
-};
-
-&r_pio {
- /*
- * PL0 and PL1 are used for PMIC I2C
- * don't enable the pl-supply else
- * it will fail at boot
- *
- * vcc-pl-supply = <®_aldo1>;
- */
- vcc-pm-supply = <®_aldo1>;
-};
-
&rtc {
clocks = <&ext_osc32k>;
};
@@ -222,12 +222,16 @@ &pio {
vcc-pg-supply = <®_vcc_wifi_io>;
};
-&r_i2c {
+&r_ir {
+ status = "okay";
+};
+
+&r_rsb {
status = "okay";
- axp805: pmic@36 {
+ axp805: pmic@745 {
compatible = "x-powers,axp805", "x-powers,axp806";
- reg = <0x36>;
+ reg = <0x745>;
interrupt-parent = <&r_intc>;
interrupts = <0 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_LOW>;
interrupt-controller;
@@ -339,10 +343,6 @@ sw {
};
};
-&r_ir {
- status = "okay";
-};
-
&rtc {
clocks = <&ext_osc32k>;
};
@@ -128,12 +128,20 @@ &pio {
vcc-pg-supply = <®_aldo1>;
};
-&r_i2c {
+&r_ir {
+ status = "okay";
+};
+
+&r_pio {
+ vcc-pm-supply = <®_bldo3>;
+};
+
+&r_rsb {
status = "okay";
- axp805: pmic@36 {
+ axp805: pmic@745 {
compatible = "x-powers,axp805", "x-powers,axp806";
- reg = <0x36>;
+ reg = <0x745>;
interrupt-parent = <&r_intc>;
interrupts = <0 IRQ_TYPE_LEVEL_LOW>;
interrupt-controller;
@@ -248,14 +256,6 @@ sw {
};
};
-&r_ir {
- status = "okay";
-};
-
-&r_pio {
- vcc-pm-supply = <®_bldo3>;
-};
-
&rtc {
clocks = <&ext_osc32k>;
};
On boards where the only peripheral connected to PL0/PL1 is an X-Powers PMIC, configure the connection to use the RSB bus rather than the I2C bus. Compared to the I2C controller that shares the pins, the RSB controller allows a higher bus frequency, and it is more CPU-efficient. Signed-off-by: Samuel Holland <samuel@sholland.org> --- .../dts/allwinner/sun50i-h6-beelink-gs1.dts | 38 +++++++++---------- .../dts/allwinner/sun50i-h6-orangepi-3.dts | 14 +++---- .../dts/allwinner/sun50i-h6-orangepi.dtsi | 22 +++++------ 3 files changed, 37 insertions(+), 37 deletions(-)