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Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Jelonek
43562f97e7
realtek: dts: add link index cell to pcs-handle phandles
A SerDes can host multiple PCS links: QSGMII binds four ports to one
SerDes, USXGMII variants up to eight. Today pcs-handle references the
SerDes as a whole, with no way to express which link inside the SerDes
a port wants. The driver gets away with this because it carries its own
port->link bookkeeping and the link slot is implicit in DSA's port
iteration order -- functional, but the wiring information lives nowhere
in DT.

The upcoming fwnode_pcs migration moves PCS lookup to the generic
fwnode provider API, which disambiguates multiple instances per fwnode
via phandle cells. To make that landable as small, code-only commits,
the DT needs to carry the link index ahead of time.

Bump #pcs-cells from 0 to 1 on every SerDes node in the four SoC DTSIs
and append the link cell to every pcs-handle reference across boards
and the SWITCH_PORT_* macros. Cell values match the existing wiring:
0 for single-link SerDes (10GBase-R, SGMII, fiber, single-link
USXGMII), 0..3 per SerDes for QSGMII and USXGMII-QX, 0..7 for the
RTL9311 octal USXGMII layout.

No code reads the new cell yet -- of_parse_phandle_with_args() in the
PCS driver already cooperates with cells = 0 or 1, and the DSA glue
uses of_parse_phandle() which ignores cells entirely. The change is
runtime-neutral on its own; it exists so the follow-up code patches
can be a few lines each instead of dragging a bridge counter into the
driver to invent slot numbers DT could have provided directly.

Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/23539
Signed-off-by: Jonas Jelonek <jelonek.jonas@gmail.com>
2026-05-31 12:52:40 +02:00
Markus Stockhausen
d7de7cae1a realtek: dts: convert devices to PHY_C45()
Make the remaining devices use the new PHY_C45() macro. At least
those that have no extra attributes in the phy definitions.

Signed-off-by: Markus Stockhausen <markus.stockhausen@gmx.de>
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/22715
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
2026-04-01 14:12:14 +02:00
Markus Stockhausen
c1804cbc71 realtek: dts: cleanup of ethernet link speed
Realtek switches have a very simple network adapter for the SOC.
They can ship packets via DMA without further offloading features.
Even on the RTL931x devices they can barely reach 50MB/s. In the
dts there is a mix of 1G/10G definitions. To be consistent and
better reflect the performance set the link speed to 1000.
This is only cosmetic.

Signed-off-by: Markus Stockhausen <markus.stockhausen@gmx.de>
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/22639
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
2026-03-30 15:00:31 +02:00
Markus Stockhausen
8b969f7e27
realtek: mdio: drop realtek,smi-address property
A phy node in the dts has two properties:

- reg: the (overall) address of the phy
- realtek,smi-address: the address of the phy on its bus

This notation does not align with upstream. reg should be the address
of the phy on its bus. But where to get the overall address that is
needed for register writes to the hardware?

Luckily the mdio driver and the hardware design sync the ports and
phys (overall) addresses. Thus derive missing data from the dts port
nodes (below ethernet-ports). To realize this

- carve out the port mapping into a separate function to align with
  the upstream driver.
- do more sanity checks and catch more inconsistencies
- raise more/better errors via dev_err_probe()

With this commit all dts files must be rewritten as follows:

- if phy has no realtek,smi-address leave it as is
- if phy has realtek,smi-address, write that value into the reg
  property and drop realtek,smi-address.

Remark: This commit might bring some confusion about the phyXX and
phy@YY and <reg=YY> naming convention. To be somehow consistent with
the current port/phy identifiers from now on the dts will have:

- phyXX: where XX matches the port number
- phy@YY: where YY is the phy address on the mdio bus
- <reg=YY>: where YY is the phy address on the mdio bus

Signed-off-by: Markus Stockhausen <markus.stockhausen@gmx.de>
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/22236
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robert.marko@sartura.hr>
2026-03-21 22:26:02 +01:00
Markus Stockhausen
63729a8d6e realtek: dts: replace ports by ethernet-ports
In most drivers upstream use "ethernet-ports" instead of "ports"
in dts. Especially the upstream rtl9300 mdio driver uses this to
lookup the port/phy mapping. Do the same downstream. There is no
need to adapt the dsa driver because it scans the dts via
for_each_node_by_name(dn, "port").

Signed-off-by: Markus Stockhausen <markus.stockhausen@gmx.de>
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/22149
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
2026-03-01 14:19:36 +01:00
Bevan Weiss
b59a89bde6 realtek: rtl930x: Add Hasivo s1100wp-8gt-se (excl. PoE)
This commit adds support for Hasivo S1100WP-8GT-SE switch.

Device specification
--------------------
SoC Type:		Realtek RTL9303
RAM:		Samsung K4B2G1646F-BYMA (256MB DDR3 SDRAM)
Flash:		Fudan FM25Q128A (16 MB)
Ethernet:		8x RTL8221B 10/100/1000/2500Mbps PHY
LEDs:		2 LEDs + 4 LEDs/port
			1x power green (no control)
			1x system green (via RLT9303 GPIO)
			3x RJ45 LEDs/port (via HC595 shift registers on LED spi)
				1x Green
				1x Green/Orange
			1x Orange LED/port for PoE status (below RJ45, on STC8)
Button:		Reset
USB ports:		None
Bootloader:		Realtek U-Boot 2011.12.(3.6.6.55087) (Nov 13 2022 - 14:37:31)
Fan:		None installed (but board provision for temp/FET/fan)
POE:		2x HS104PTI for 802.3af/at/bt PoE (Not yet working)

Installing OpenWrt
------------------
1. UART RJ45 requires soldering a connector to the empty footprint (RJ1).
   (Amphenol RJHSEE380 or similar)
2. Connect to UART 38400@8n1, using Cisco Console Rollover cable (RS232)
3. Set computer IP to 192.168.0.111, and plug in with 2.5Gbps
4. Enter bootloader by pressing esc key during boot
5. Enter password `Hs2021cfgmg`
6. Type `XXXX` to get into U-Boot
7. Type `rtk network on`
8. Use tftp if you have a 2.5G link (other speeds won't work).
   If serial, you can increase baudrate in uboot with `setenv baudrate 115200`
9.1. `tftpboot 0x84f00000 <openwrt-initramfs-filename>`
9.2. Otherwise use serial transfer (Y modem): `loady 0x84f00000`
10. `bootm 0x84f00000`

Now you should be in OpenWRT, and can use sysupgrade to install.

Signed-off-by: Bevan Weiss <bevan.weiss@gmail.com>
Link: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/pull/21576
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
2026-01-28 00:43:16 +01:00