| AVR32 Port multiplexer configuration |
| ==================================== |
| |
| On AVR32 chips, most external I/O pins are routed through a port |
| multiplexer. There are currently two kinds of port multiplexer |
| hardware around with different register interfaces: |
| |
| * PIO (AT32AP700x; this is also used on ARM AT91 chips) |
| * GPIO (all other AVR32 chips) |
| |
| The "PIO" variant supports multiplexing up to two peripherals per pin |
| in addition to GPIO (software control). Each pin has configurable |
| pull-up, glitch filter, interrupt and multi-drive capabilities. |
| |
| The "GPIO" variant supports multiplexing up to four peripherals per |
| pin in addition to GPIO. Each pin has configurable |
| pull-up/pull-down/buskeeper, glitch filter, interrupt, open-drain and |
| schmitt-trigger capabilities, as well as configurable drive strength |
| and slew rate control. |
| |
| Both controllers are configured using the same API, but the functions |
| may accept different values for some parameters depending on the |
| actual portmux implementation, and some parameters may be ignored by |
| one of the implementation (e.g. the "PIO" implementation will ignore |
| the drive strength flags since the hardware doesn't support |
| configurable drive strength.) |
| |
| Selecting the portmux implementation |
| ------------------------------------ |
| Since u-boot is lacking a Kconfig-style configuration engine, the |
| portmux implementation must be selected manually by defining one of |
| the following symbols: |
| |
| CONFIG_PORTMUX_PIO |
| CONFIG_PORTMUX_GPIO |
| |
| depending on which implementation the chip in question uses. |
| |
| Identifying pins |
| ---------------- |
| The portmux configuration functions described below identify the pins |
| to act on based on two parameters: A "port" (i.e. a block of pins |
| that somehow belong together) and a pin mask. Both are defined in an |
| implementation-specific manner. |
| |
| The available ports are defined on the form |
| |
| #define PORTMUX_PORT_A (something) |
| |
| where "A" matches the identifier given in the chip's data sheet, and |
| "something" is whatever the portmux implementation needs to identify |
| the port (usually a memory address). |
| |
| The pin mask is a bitmask where each '1' bit indicates a pin to apply |
| the current operation to. The width of the bitmask may vary from port |
| to port, but it is never wider than 32 bits (which is the width of |
| 'unsigned long' on avr32). |
| |
| Selecting functions |
| ------------------- |
| Each pin can either be assigned to one of a predefined set of on-chip |
| peripherals, or it can be set up to be controlled by software. For the |
| former case, the portmux implementation defines an enum containing all |
| the possible peripheral functions that can be selected. For example, |
| the PIO implementation, which allows multiplexing two peripherals per |
| pin, defines it like this: |
| |
| enum portmux_function { |
| PORTMUX_FUNC_A, |
| PORTMUX_FUNC_B, |
| }; |
| |
| To configure a set of pins to be connected to a given peripheral |
| function, the following function is used. |
| |
| void portmux_select_peripheral(void *port, unsigned long pin_mask, |
| enum portmux_function func, unsigned long flags); |
| |
| To configure a set of pins to be controlled by software (GPIO), the |
| following function is used. In this case, no "function" argument is |
| required since "GPIO" is a function in its own right. |
| |
| void portmux_select_gpio(void *port, unsigned int pin_mask, |
| unsigned long flags); |
| |
| Both of these functions take a "flags" parameter which may be used to |
| alter the default configuration of the pin. This is a bitmask of |
| various flags defined in an implementation-specific way, but the names |
| of the flags are the same on all implementations. |
| |
| PORTMUX_DIR_OUTPUT |
| PORTMUX_DIR_INPUT |
| |
| These mutually-exclusive flags configure the initial direction of the |
| pins. PORTMUX_DIR_OUTPUT means that the pins are driven by the CPU, |
| while PORTMUX_DIR_INPUT means that the pins are tristated by the CPU. |
| These flags are ignored by portmux_select_peripheral(). |
| |
| PORTMUX_INIT_HIGH |
| PORTMUX_INIT_LOW |
| |
| These mutually-exclusive flags configure the initial state of the |
| pins: High (Vdd) or low (Vss). They are only effective when |
| portmux_select_gpio() is called with the PORTMUX_DIR_OUTPUT flag set. |
| |
| PORTMUX_PULL_UP |
| PORTMUX_PULL_DOWN |
| PORTMUX_BUSKEEPER |
| |
| These mutually-exclusive flags are used to enable any on-chip CMOS |
| resistors connected to the pins. PORTMUX_PULL_UP causes the pins to be |
| pulled up to Vdd, PORTMUX_PULL_DOWN causes the pins to be pulled down |
| to Vss, and PORTMUX_BUSKEEPER will keep the pins in whatever state |
| they were left in by whatever was driving them last. If none of the |
| flags are specified, the pins are left floating if no one are driving |
| them; this is only recommended for always-output pins (e.g. extern |
| address and control lines driven by the CPU.) |
| |
| Note that the "PIO" implementation will silently ignore the |
| PORTMUX_PULL_DOWN flag and interpret PORTMUX_BUSKEEPER as |
| PORTMUX_PULL_UP. |
| |
| PORTMUX_DRIVE_MIN |
| PORTMUX_DRIVE_LOW |
| PORTMUX_DRIVE_HIGH |
| PORTMUX_DRIVE_MAX |
| |
| These mutually-exclusive flags determine the drive strength of the |
| pins. PORTMUX_DRIVE_MIN will give low power-consumption, but may cause |
| corruption of high-speed signals. PORTMUX_DRIVE_MAX will give high |
| power-consumption, but may be necessary on pins toggling at very high |
| speeds. PORTMUX_DRIVE_LOW and PORTMUX_DRIVE_HIGH specify something in |
| between the other two. |
| |
| Note that setting the drive strength too high may cause excessive |
| overshoot and EMI problems, which may in turn cause signal corruption. |
| Also note that the "PIO" implementation will silently ignore these |
| flags. |
| |
| PORTMUX_OPEN_DRAIN |
| |
| This flag will configure the pins as "open drain", i.e. setting the |
| pin state to 0 will drive it low, while setting it to 1 will leave it |
| floating (or, in most cases, let it be pulled high by an internal or |
| external pull-up resistor.) In the data sheet for chips using the |
| "PIO" variant, this mode is called "multi-driver". |
| |
| Enabling specific peripherals |
| ----------------------------- |
| In addition to the above functions, each chip provides a set of |
| functions for setting up the port multiplexer to use a given |
| peripheral. The following are some of the functions available. |
| |
| All the functions below take a "drive_strength" parameter, which must |
| be one of the PORTMUX_DRIVE_x flags specified above. Any other |
| portmux flags will be silently filtered out. |
| |
| To set up the External Bus Interface (EBI), call |
| |
| void portmux_enable_ebi(unsigned int bus_width, |
| unsigned long flags, unsigned long drive_strength) |
| |
| where "bus_width" must be either 16 or 32. "flags" can be any |
| combination of the following flags. |
| |
| PORTMUX_EBI_CS(x) /* Enable chip select x */ |
| PORTMUX_EBI_NAND /* Enable NAND flash interface */ |
| PORTMUX_EBI_CF(x) /* Enable CompactFlash interface x */ |
| PORTMUX_EBI_NWAIT /* Enable NWAIT signal */ |
| |
| To set up a USART, call |
| |
| void portmux_enable_usartX(unsigned long drive_strength); |
| |
| where X is replaced by the USART instance to be configured. |
| |
| To set up an ethernet MAC: |
| |
| void portmux_enable_macbX(unsigned long flags, |
| unsigned long drive_strength); |
| |
| where X is replaced by the MACB instance to be configured. "flags" can |
| be any combination of the following flags. |
| |
| PORTMUX_MACB_RMII /* Just set up the RMII interface */ |
| PORTMUX_MACB_MII /* Set up full MII interface */ |
| PORTMUX_MACB_SPEED /* Enable the SPEED pin */ |
| |
| To set up the MMC controller: |
| |
| void portmux_enable_mmci(unsigned long slot, unsigned long flags |
| unsigned long drive_strength); |
| |
| where "slot" identifies which of the alternative SD card slots to |
| enable. "flags" can be any combination of the following flags: |
| |
| PORTMUX_MMCI_4BIT /* Enable 4-bit SD card interface */ |
| PORTMUX_MMCI_8BIT /* Enable 8-bit MMC+ interface */ |
| PORTMUX_MMCI_EXT_PULLUP /* Board has external pull-ups */ |
| |
| To set up a SPI controller: |
| |
| void portmux_enable_spiX(unsigned long cs_mask, |
| unsigned long drive_strength); |
| |
| where X is replaced by the SPI instance to be configured. "cs_mask" is |
| a 4-bit bitmask specifying which of the four standard chip select |
| lines to set up as GPIOs. |