@@ -232,9 +232,9 @@ qusb_phy_0: phy@79000 {
status = "disabled";
};
- pcie_qmp0: phy@86000 {
- compatible = "qcom,ipq8074-qmp-pcie-phy";
- reg = <0x00086000 0x1c4>;
+ pcie_qmp0: phy@84000 {
+ compatible = "qcom,ipq8074-qmp-gen3-pcie-phy";
+ reg = <0x00084000 0x1bc>;
#address-cells = <1>;
#size-cells = <1>;
ranges;
@@ -248,10 +248,11 @@ pcie_qmp0: phy@86000 {
"common";
status = "disabled";
- pcie_phy0: phy@86200 {
- reg = <0x86200 0x16c>,
- <0x86400 0x200>,
- <0x86800 0x4f4>;
+ pcie_phy0: phy@84200 {
+ reg = <0x84200 0x16c>,
+ <0x84400 0x200>,
+ <0x84800 0x1f0>,
+ <0x84c00 0xf4>;
#phy-cells = <0>;
#clock-cells = <0>;
clocks = <&gcc GCC_PCIE0_PIPE_CLK>;
IPQ8074 comes in 2 silicon versions: * v1 with 2x Gen2 PCIe ports and QMP PHY-s * v2 with 1x Gen3 and 1x Gen2 PCIe ports and QMP PHY-s v2 is the final and production version that is actually supported by the kernel, however it looks like PCIe related nodes were added for the v1 SoC. Now that we have Gen3 QMP PHY support, we can start fixing the PCIe support by fixing the Gen3 QMP PHY node first. Change the compatible to the Gen3 QMP PHY, correct the register space start and size, add the missing misc PCS register space. Fixes: 33057e1672fe ("ARM: dts: ipq8074: Add pcie nodes") Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com> --- arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/ipq8074.dtsi | 15 ++++++++------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)