Based on kernel version 6.11
. Page generated on 2024-09-24 08:21 EST
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 | 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; ... }; |