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由 Kevin Cernekee 提交于
SoC peripherals can come in several different flavors: - little-endian: registers always need to be accessed in LE mode (so the kernel should perform a swap if the CPU is running BE) - big-endian: registers always need to be accessed in BE mode (so the kernel should perform a swap if the CPU is running LE) - native-endian: the bus will automatically swap accesses, so the kernel should never swap Introduce a function that checks an OF device node to see whether it contains a "big-endian" or "native-endian" property. For the former case, always return true. For the latter case, return true iff the kernel was built for BE (implying that the BE MMIO accessors do not perform a swap). Otherwise return false, assuming LE registers. LE registers are assumed by default because most existing drivers (libahci, serial8250, usb) always use readl/writel in the absence of instructions to the contrary, so that will be our fallback. Signed-off-by: NKevin Cernekee <cernekee@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: NPeter Hurley <peter@hurleysoftware.com> Acked-by: NGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Signed-off-by: NRob Herring <robh@kernel.org>
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