On PolarFire SoC, some peripherals (eg the PCI root port) are clocked by
"Clock Conditioning Circuitry" in the FPGA. The specific clock depends
on the FPGA bitstream & can be locked to one particular {D,P}LL - in the
Icicle Kit Reference Design v2022.09 or later this is/will be the case.
Linux v6.1+ will have a driver for this peripheral and devicetrees that
previously relied on "fixed-frequency" clock nodes have been switched
over to clock-controller nodes. The IOSCB region is represented in QEMU,
but the specific region of it that the CCCs occupy has not so v6.1-rcN
kernels fail to boot in QEMU.
Add the regions as unimplemented so that the status-quo in terms of boot
is maintained.
Acked-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
Signed-off-by: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@microchip.com>
Message-Id: <20221117225518.4102575-2-conor@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
This creates a model for PolarFire SoC IOSCB [1] module. It actually
contains lots of sub-modules like various PLLs to control different
peripherals. Only the mininum capabilities are emulated to make the
HSS DDR memory initialization codes happy. Lots of sub-modules are
created as an unimplemented devices.
[1] PF_SoC_RegMap_V1_1/MPFS250T/mpfs250t_ioscb_memmap_dri.htm in
https://www.microsemi.com/document-portal/doc_download/1244581-polarfire-soc-register-map
Signed-off-by: Bin Meng <bin.meng@windriver.com>
Reviewed-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
Message-id: 1603863010-15807-5-git-send-email-bmeng.cn@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>