diff -r ffa851df0825 -r 2fb8b9db1c86 symbian-qemu-0.9.1-12/dtc-trunk/Documentation/dts-format.txt --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/symbian-qemu-0.9.1-12/dtc-trunk/Documentation/dts-format.txt Fri Jul 31 15:01:17 2009 +0100 @@ -0,0 +1,110 @@ +Device Tree Source Format (version 1) +===================================== + +The Device Tree Source (DTS) format is a textual representation of a +device tree in a form that can be processed by dtc into a binary +device tree in the form expected by the kernel. The description below +is not a formal syntax definition of DTS, but describes the basic +constructs used to represent device trees. + +Node and property definitions +----------------------------- + +Device tree nodes are defined with a node name and unit address with +braces marking the start and end of the node definition. They may be +preceded by a label. + + [label:] node-name[@unit-address] { + [properties definitions] + [child nodes] + } + +Nodes may contain property definitions and/or child node +definitions. If both are present, properties must come before child +nodes. + +Property definitions are name value pairs in the form: + [label:] property-name = value; +except for properties with empty (zero length) value which have the +form: + [label:] property-name; + +Property values may be defined as an array of 32-bit integer cells, as +NUL-terminated strings, as bytestrings or a combination of these. + +* Arrays of cells are represented by angle brackets surrounding a + space separated list of C-style integers + + e.g. interrupts = <17 0xc>; + +* A 64-bit value is represented with two 32-bit cells. + + e.g. clock-frequency = <0x00000001 0x00000000>; + +* A NUL-terminated string value is represented using double quotes + (the property value is considered to include the terminating NUL + character). + + e.g. compatible = "simple-bus"; + +* A bytestring is enclosed in square brackets [] with each byte + represented by two hexadecimal digits. Spaces between each byte are + optional. + + e.g. local-mac-address = [00 00 12 34 56 78]; or equivalently + local-mac-address = [000012345678]; + +* Values may have several comma-separated components, which are + concatenated together. + e.g. compatible = "ns16550", "ns8250"; + example = <0xf00f0000 19>, "a strange property format"; + +* In a cell array a reference to another node will be expanded to that + node's phandle. References may by '&' followed by a node's label: + e.g. interrupt-parent = < &mpic >; + or they may be '&' followed by a node's full path in braces: + e.g. interrupt-parent = < &{/soc/interrupt-controller@40000} >; + +* Outside a cell array, a reference to another node will be expanded + to that node's full path. + e.g. ethernet0 = &EMAC0; + +* Labels may also appear before or after any component of a property + value, or between cells of a cell array, or between bytes of a + bytestring. + e.g. reg = reglabel: <0 sizelabel: 0x1000000>; + e.g. prop = [ab cd ef byte4: 00 ff fe]; + e.g. str = start: "string value" end: ; + + +File layout +----------- + +Version 1 DTS files have the overall layout: + /dts-v1/; + + [memory reservations] + + / { + [property definitions] + [child nodes] + }; + +* The "/dts-v1/;" must be present to identify the file as a version 1 + DTS (dts files without this tag will be treated by dtc as being in + the obsolete "version 0", which uses a different format for integers + amongst other small but incompatible changes). + +* Memory reservations define an entry for the device tree blob's + memory reservation table. They have the form: + e.g. /memreserve/
; + Where
and are 64-bit C-style integers. + +* The / { ... }; section defines the root node of the device tree. + +* C style (/* ... */) and C++ style (// ...) comments are supported. + + + + -- David Gibson + -- Yoder Stuart