Documentation / devicetree / bindings / regmap


Based on kernel version 6.12.4. Page generated on 2024-12-12 21:01 EST.

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Devicetree binding for regmap

Optional properties:

   little-endian,
   big-endian,
   native-endian:	See common-properties.txt for a definition

Note:
Regmap defaults to little-endian register access on MMIO based
devices, this is by far the most common setting. On CPU
architectures that typically run big-endian operating systems
(e.g. PowerPC), registers can be defined as big-endian and must
be marked that way in the devicetree.

On SoCs that can be operated in both big-endian and little-endian
modes, with a single hardware switch controlling both the endianness
of the CPU and a byteswap for MMIO registers (e.g. many Broadcom MIPS
chips), "native-endian" is used to allow using the same device tree
blob in both cases.

Examples:
Scenario 1 : a register set in big-endian mode.
dev: dev@40031000 {
	      compatible = "syscon";
	      reg = <0x40031000 0x1000>;
	      big-endian;
	      ...
};