| Specifying interrupt information for devices |
| ============================================ |
| |
| 1) Interrupt client nodes |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Nodes that describe devices which generate interrupts must contain an |
| "interrupts" property, an "interrupts-extended" property, or both. If both are |
| present, the latter should take precedence; the former may be provided simply |
| for compatibility with software that does not recognize the latter. These |
| properties contain a list of interrupt specifiers, one per output interrupt. The |
| format of the interrupt specifier is determined by the interrupt controller to |
| which the interrupts are routed; see section 2 below for details. |
| |
| Example: |
| interrupt-parent = <&intc1>; |
| interrupts = <5 0>, <6 0>; |
| |
| The "interrupt-parent" property is used to specify the controller to which |
| interrupts are routed and contains a single phandle referring to the interrupt |
| controller node. This property is inherited, so it may be specified in an |
| interrupt client node or in any of its parent nodes. Interrupts listed in the |
| "interrupts" property are always in reference to the node's interrupt parent. |
| |
| The "interrupts-extended" property is a special form for use when a node needs |
| to reference multiple interrupt parents. Each entry in this property contains |
| both the parent phandle and the interrupt specifier. "interrupts-extended" |
| should only be used when a device has multiple interrupt parents. |
| |
| Example: |
| interrupts-extended = <&intc1 5 1>, <&intc2 1 0>; |
| |
| A device node may contain either "interrupts" or "interrupts-extended", but not |
| both. If both properties are present, then the operating system should log an |
| error and use only the data in "interrupts". |
| |
| 2) Interrupt controller nodes |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| A device is marked as an interrupt controller with the "interrupt-controller" |
| property. This is a empty, boolean property. An additional "#interrupt-cells" |
| property defines the number of cells needed to specify a single interrupt. |
| |
| It is the responsibility of the interrupt controller's binding to define the |
| length and format of the interrupt specifier. The following two variants are |
| commonly used: |
| |
| a) one cell |
| ----------- |
| The #interrupt-cells property is set to 1 and the single cell defines the |
| index of the interrupt within the controller. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| vic: intc@10140000 { |
| compatible = "arm,versatile-vic"; |
| interrupt-controller; |
| #interrupt-cells = <1>; |
| reg = <0x10140000 0x1000>; |
| }; |
| |
| sic: intc@10003000 { |
| compatible = "arm,versatile-sic"; |
| interrupt-controller; |
| #interrupt-cells = <1>; |
| reg = <0x10003000 0x1000>; |
| interrupt-parent = <&vic>; |
| interrupts = <31>; /* Cascaded to vic */ |
| }; |
| |
| b) two cells |
| ------------ |
| The #interrupt-cells property is set to 2 and the first cell defines the |
| index of the interrupt within the controller, while the second cell is used |
| to specify any of the following flags: |
| - bits[3:0] trigger type and level flags |
| 1 = low-to-high edge triggered |
| 2 = high-to-low edge triggered |
| 4 = active high level-sensitive |
| 8 = active low level-sensitive |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| i2c@7000c000 { |
| gpioext: gpio-adnp@41 { |
| compatible = "ad,gpio-adnp"; |
| reg = <0x41>; |
| |
| interrupt-parent = <&gpio>; |
| interrupts = <160 1>; |
| |
| gpio-controller; |
| #gpio-cells = <1>; |
| |
| interrupt-controller; |
| #interrupt-cells = <2>; |
| |
| nr-gpios = <64>; |
| }; |
| |
| sx8634@2b { |
| compatible = "smtc,sx8634"; |
| reg = <0x2b>; |
| |
| interrupt-parent = <&gpioext>; |
| interrupts = <3 0x8>; |
| |
| #address-cells = <1>; |
| #size-cells = <0>; |
| |
| threshold = <0x40>; |
| sensitivity = <7>; |
| }; |
| }; |