When DT support for kirkwood was first introduced, there was no clock
infrastructure. As a result, we had to manually pass the
clock-frequency to the driver from the device node.
Unfortunately, on kirkwood, with minimal config or all module configs,
clock-frequency breaks booting because of_serial doesn't consume the
gate_clk when clock-frequency is defined.
The end result on kirkwood is that runit gets gated, and then the boot
fails when the kernel tries to write to the serial port.
Fix the issue by removing the clock-frequency parameter from all
kirkwood dts files.
Booted on dreamplug without earlyprintk and successfully logged in via
ttyS0.
Reported-by: Simon Baatz <gmbnomis@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Simon Baatz <gmbnomis@gmail.com>
Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jason Cooper <jason@lakedaemon.net>
Signed-off-by: Valentin Longchamp <valentin.longchamp@keymile.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch>
Signed-off-by: Jason Cooper <jason@lakedaemon.net>
This is a first attempt to support the km_kirkwood reference design with
a device tree. This km_kirkwood design is present in many Keymile
products. It is based on the Marvell Bobcat SOC which integrates a
Kirkwood CPU next to a big L2 Ethernet Switch. The Kirkwood in the SOC
is very similar to the "normal" one, but there are a few differences.
This initial support is minimal: the kernel can boot with network
(ge0), serial port and NAND functional.
Signed-off-by: Valentin Longchamp <valentin.longchamp@keymile.com>
Cc: Holger Brunck <holger.brunck@keymile.com>
Acked-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch>
Signed-off-by: Jason Cooper <jason@lakedaemon.net>