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ChromeOS Embedded Controller
Google's ChromeOS EC is a Cortex-M device which talks to the AP and
implements various function such as keyboard and battery charging.
The EC can be connect through various means (I2C, SPI, LPC) and the
compatible string used depends on the interface. Each connection method has
its own driver which connects to the top level interface-agnostic EC driver.
Other Linux driver (such as cros-ec-keyb for the matrix keyboard) connect to
the top-level driver.
Required properties (I2C):
- compatible: "google,cros-ec-i2c"
- reg: I2C slave address
Required properties (SPI):
- compatible: "google,cros-ec-spi"
- reg: SPI chip select
Optional properties (SPI):
- google,cros-ec-spi-msg-delay: Some implementations of the EC require some
additional processing time in order to accept new transactions. If the delay
between transactions is not long enough the EC may not be able to respond
properly to subsequent transactions and cause them to hang. This property
specifies the delay, in usecs, introduced between transactions to account
for the time required by the EC to get back into a state in which new data
can be accepted.
Required properties (LPC):
- compatible: "google,cros-ec-lpc"
- reg: List of (IO address, size) pairs defining the interface uses
Example for I2C:
i2c@12CA0000 {
cros-ec@1e {
reg = <0x1e>;
compatible = "google,cros-ec-i2c";
interrupts = <14 0>;
interrupt-parent = <&wakeup_eint>;
wakeup-source;
};
Example for SPI:
spi@131b0000 {
ec@0 {
compatible = "google,cros-ec-spi";
reg = <0x0>;
interrupts = <14 0>;
interrupt-parent = <&wakeup_eint>;
wakeup-source;
spi-max-frequency = <5000000>;
controller-data {
cs-gpio = <&gpf0 3 4 3 0>;
samsung,spi-cs;
samsung,spi-feedback-delay = <2>;
};
};
};
Example for LPC is not supplied as it is not yet implemented.