dt-bindings: msm/dsi: Use standard data lanes binding

The "qcom,data-lane-map" binding mentioned in the document is changed to
the more generic "data-lanes" property specified in:

Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/video-interfaces.txt

The previous binding expressed physical to logical data lane mappings,
the standard "data-lanes" binding uses logical to physical data lane
mappings. Update the docs to reflect this change. The example had the
property incorrectly named as "lanes", update this too.

The MSM DSI DT bindings aren't used anywhere at the moment, so
it's okay to update this property.

Acked-by: Rob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Archit Taneja <architt@codeaurora.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Archit Taneja 2016-06-09 11:51:33 +05:30 коммит произвёл Rob Clark
Родитель 60282cea5b
Коммит cb9b08e9c1
1 изменённых файлов: 19 добавлений и 18 удалений

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@ -49,29 +49,30 @@ Optional properties:
DSI Endpoint properties:
- remote-endpoint: set to phandle of the connected panel's endpoint.
See Documentation/devicetree/bindings/graph.txt for device graph info.
- qcom,data-lane-map: this describes how the logical DSI lanes are mapped
to the physical lanes on the given platform. The value contained in
index n describes what logical data lane is mapped to the physical data
lane n (DATAn, where n lies between 0 and 3).
- data-lanes: this describes how the physical DSI data lanes are mapped
to the logical lanes on the given platform. The value contained in
index n describes what physical lane is mapped to the logical lane n
(DATAn, where n lies between 0 and 3). The clock lane position is fixed
and can't be changed. Hence, they aren't a part of the DT bindings. For
more info, see Documentation/devicetree/bindings/media/video-interfaces.txt
For example:
qcom,data-lane-map = <3 0 1 2>;
data-lanes = <3 0 1 2>;
The above mapping describes that the logical data lane DATA3 is mapped to
the physical data lane DATA0, logical DATA0 to physical DATA1, logic DATA1
to phys DATA2 and logic DATA2 to phys DATA3.
The above mapping describes that the logical data lane DATA0 is mapped to
the physical data lane DATA3, logical DATA1 to physical DATA0, logic DATA2
to phys DATA1 and logic DATA3 to phys DATA2.
There are only a limited number of physical to logical mappings possible:
"0123": Logic 0->Phys 0; Logic 1->Phys 1; Logic 2->Phys 2; Logic 3->Phys 3;
"3012": Logic 3->Phys 0; Logic 0->Phys 1; Logic 1->Phys 2; Logic 2->Phys 3;
"2301": Logic 2->Phys 0; Logic 3->Phys 1; Logic 0->Phys 2; Logic 1->Phys 3;
"1230": Logic 1->Phys 0; Logic 2->Phys 1; Logic 3->Phys 2; Logic 0->Phys 3;
"0321": Logic 0->Phys 0; Logic 3->Phys 1; Logic 2->Phys 2; Logic 1->Phys 3;
"1032": Logic 1->Phys 0; Logic 0->Phys 1; Logic 3->Phys 2; Logic 2->Phys 3;
"2103": Logic 2->Phys 0; Logic 1->Phys 1; Logic 0->Phys 2; Logic 3->Phys 3;
"3210": Logic 3->Phys 0; Logic 2->Phys 1; Logic 1->Phys 2; Logic 0->Phys 3;
<0 1 2 3>
<1 2 3 0>
<2 3 0 1>
<3 0 1 2>
<0 3 2 1>
<1 0 3 2>
<2 1 0 3>
<3 2 1 0>
DSI PHY:
Required properties:
@ -156,7 +157,7 @@ Example:
port {
dsi0_out: endpoint {
remote-endpoint = <&panel_in>;
lanes = <0 1 2 3>;
data-lanes = <0 1 2 3>;
};
};
};