1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 ===================== 4 DM9000 Network driver 5 ===================== 6 7 Copyright 2008 Simtec Electronics, 8 9 Ben Dooks <ben@simtec.co.uk> <ben-linux@fluff.org> 10 11 12 Introduction 13 ------------ 14 15 This file describes how to use the DM9000 platform-device based network driver 16 that is contained in the files drivers/net/dm9000.c and drivers/net/dm9000.h. 17 18 The driver supports three DM9000 variants, the DM9000E which is the first chip 19 supported as well as the newer DM9000A and DM9000B devices. It is currently 20 maintained and tested by Ben Dooks, who should be CC: to any patches for this 21 driver. 22 23 24 Defining the platform device 25 ---------------------------- 26 27 The minimum set of resources attached to the platform device are as follows: 28 29 1) The physical address of the address register 30 2) The physical address of the data register 31 3) The IRQ line the device's interrupt pin is connected to. 32 33 These resources should be specified in that order, as the ordering of the 34 two address regions is important (the driver expects these to be address 35 and then data). 36 37 An example from arch/arm/mach-s3c/mach-bast.c is:: 38 39 static struct resource bast_dm9k_resource[] = { 40 [0] = { 41 .start = S3C2410_CS5 + BAST_PA_DM9000, 42 .end = S3C2410_CS5 + BAST_PA_DM9000 + 3, 43 .flags = IORESOURCE_MEM, 44 }, 45 [1] = { 46 .start = S3C2410_CS5 + BAST_PA_DM9000 + 0x40, 47 .end = S3C2410_CS5 + BAST_PA_DM9000 + 0x40 + 0x3f, 48 .flags = IORESOURCE_MEM, 49 }, 50 [2] = { 51 .start = IRQ_DM9000, 52 .end = IRQ_DM9000, 53 .flags = IORESOURCE_IRQ | IORESOURCE_IRQ_HIGHLEVEL, 54 } 55 }; 56 57 static struct platform_device bast_device_dm9k = { 58 .name = "dm9000", 59 .id = 0, 60 .num_resources = ARRAY_SIZE(bast_dm9k_resource), 61 .resource = bast_dm9k_resource, 62 }; 63 64 Note the setting of the IRQ trigger flag in bast_dm9k_resource[2].flags, 65 as this will generate a warning if it is not present. The trigger from 66 the flags field will be passed to request_irq() when registering the IRQ 67 handler to ensure that the IRQ is setup correctly. 68 69 This shows a typical platform device, without the optional configuration 70 platform data supplied. The next example uses the same resources, but adds 71 the optional platform data to pass extra configuration data:: 72 73 static struct dm9000_plat_data bast_dm9k_platdata = { 74 .flags = DM9000_PLATF_16BITONLY, 75 }; 76 77 static struct platform_device bast_device_dm9k = { 78 .name = "dm9000", 79 .id = 0, 80 .num_resources = ARRAY_SIZE(bast_dm9k_resource), 81 .resource = bast_dm9k_resource, 82 .dev = { 83 .platform_data = &bast_dm9k_platdata, 84 } 85 }; 86 87 The platform data is defined in include/linux/dm9000.h and described below. 88 89 90 Platform data 91 ------------- 92 93 Extra platform data for the DM9000 can describe the IO bus width to the 94 device, whether or not an external PHY is attached to the device and 95 the availability of an external configuration EEPROM. 96 97 The flags for the platform data .flags field are as follows: 98 99 DM9000_PLATF_8BITONLY 100 101 The IO should be done with 8bit operations. 102 103 DM9000_PLATF_16BITONLY 104 105 The IO should be done with 16bit operations. 106 107 DM9000_PLATF_32BITONLY 108 109 The IO should be done with 32bit operations. 110 111 DM9000_PLATF_EXT_PHY 112 113 The chip is connected to an external PHY. 114 115 DM9000_PLATF_NO_EEPROM 116 117 This can be used to signify that the board does not have an 118 EEPROM, or that the EEPROM should be hidden from the user. 119 120 DM9000_PLATF_SIMPLE_PHY 121 122 Switch to using the simpler PHY polling method which does not 123 try and read the MII PHY state regularly. This is only available 124 when using the internal PHY. See the section on link state polling 125 for more information. 126 127 The config symbol DM9000_FORCE_SIMPLE_PHY_POLL, Kconfig entry 128 "Force simple NSR based PHY polling" allows this flag to be 129 forced on at build time. 130 131 132 PHY Link state polling 133 ---------------------- 134 135 The driver keeps track of the link state and informs the network core 136 about link (carrier) availability. This is managed by several methods 137 depending on the version of the chip and on which PHY is being used. 138 139 For the internal PHY, the original (and currently default) method is 140 to read the MII state, either when the status changes if we have the 141 necessary interrupt support in the chip or every two seconds via a 142 periodic timer. 143 144 To reduce the overhead for the internal PHY, there is now the option 145 of using the DM9000_FORCE_SIMPLE_PHY_POLL config, or DM9000_PLATF_SIMPLE_PHY 146 platform data option to read the summary information without the 147 expensive MII accesses. This method is faster, but does not print 148 as much information. 149 150 When using an external PHY, the driver currently has to poll the MII 151 link status as there is no method for getting an interrupt on link change. 152 153 154 DM9000A / DM9000B 155 ----------------- 156 157 These chips are functionally similar to the DM9000E and are supported easily 158 by the same driver. The features are: 159 160 1) Interrupt on internal PHY state change. This means that the periodic 161 polling of the PHY status may be disabled on these devices when using 162 the internal PHY. 163 164 2) TCP/UDP checksum offloading, which the driver does not currently support. 165 166 167 ethtool 168 ------- 169 170 The driver supports the ethtool interface for access to the driver 171 state information, the PHY state and the EEPROM.
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