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-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/ahci-platform.txt (renamed from Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/calxeda-sata.txt)5
-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/nvidia,tegra20-pinmux.txt132
-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/nvidia,tegra30-pinmux.txt132
-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/pinctrl-bindings.txt128
-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinmux/pinmux_nvidia.txt5
-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/sound/sgtl5000.txt2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/tegra-usb.txt3
7 files changed, 399 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/calxeda-sata.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/ahci-platform.txt
index 79caa5651f53..8bb8a76d42e8 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/calxeda-sata.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/ahci-platform.txt
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
-* Calxeda SATA Controller
+* AHCI SATA Controller
SATA nodes are defined to describe on-chip Serial ATA controllers.
Each SATA controller should have its own node.
Required properties:
-- compatible : compatible list, contains "calxeda,hb-ahci"
+- compatible : compatible list, contains "calxeda,hb-ahci" or "snps,spear-ahci"
- interrupts : <interrupt mapping for SATA IRQ>
- reg : <registers mapping>
@@ -14,4 +14,3 @@ Example:
reg = <0xffe08000 0x1000>;
interrupts = <115>;
};
-
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/nvidia,tegra20-pinmux.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/nvidia,tegra20-pinmux.txt
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..c8e578263ce2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/nvidia,tegra20-pinmux.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
+NVIDIA Tegra20 pinmux controller
+
+Required properties:
+- compatible: "nvidia,tegra20-pinmux"
+- reg: Should contain the register physical address and length for each of
+ the tri-state, mux, pull-up/down, and pad control register sets.
+
+Please refer to pinctrl-bindings.txt in this directory for details of the
+common pinctrl bindings used by client devices, including the meaning of the
+phrase "pin configuration node".
+
+Tegra's pin configuration nodes act as a container for an abitrary number of
+subnodes. Each of these subnodes represents some desired configuration for a
+pin, a group, or a list of pins or groups. This configuration can include the
+mux function to select on those pin(s)/group(s), and various pin configuration
+parameters, such as pull-up, tristate, drive strength, etc.
+
+The name of each subnode is not important; all subnodes should be enumerated
+and processed purely based on their content.
+
+Each subnode only affects those parameters that are explicitly listed. In
+other words, a subnode that lists a mux function but no pin configuration
+parameters implies no information about any pin configuration parameters.
+Similarly, a pin subnode that describes a pullup parameter implies no
+information about e.g. the mux function or tristate parameter. For this
+reason, even seemingly boolean values are actually tristates in this binding:
+unspecified, off, or on. Unspecified is represented as an absent property,
+and off/on are represented as integer values 0 and 1.
+
+Required subnode-properties:
+- nvidia,pins : An array of strings. Each string contains the name of a pin or
+ group. Valid values for these names are listed below.
+
+Optional subnode-properties:
+- nvidia,function: A string containing the name of the function to mux to the
+ pin or group. Valid values for function names are listed below. See the Tegra
+ TRM to determine which are valid for each pin or group.
+- nvidia,pull: Integer, representing the pull-down/up to apply to the pin.
+ 0: none, 1: down, 2: up.
+- nvidia,tristate: Integer.
+ 0: drive, 1: tristate.
+- nvidia,high-speed-mode: Integer. Enable high speed mode the pins.
+ 0: no, 1: yes.
+- nvidia,schmitt: Integer. Enables Schmitt Trigger on the input.
+ 0: no, 1: yes.
+- nvidia,low-power-mode: Integer. Valid values 0-3. 0 is least power, 3 is
+ most power. Controls the drive power or current. See "Low Power Mode"
+ or "LPMD1" and "LPMD0" in the Tegra TRM.
+- nvidia,pull-down-strength: Integer. Controls drive strength. 0 is weakest.
+ The range of valid values depends on the pingroup. See "CAL_DRVDN" in the
+ Tegra TRM.
+- nvidia,pull-up-strength: Integer. Controls drive strength. 0 is weakest.
+ The range of valid values depends on the pingroup. See "CAL_DRVUP" in the
+ Tegra TRM.
+- nvidia,slew-rate-rising: Integer. Controls rising signal slew rate. 0 is
+ fastest. The range of valid values depends on the pingroup. See
+ "DRVDN_SLWR" in the Tegra TRM.
+- nvidia,slew-rate-falling: Integer. Controls falling signal slew rate. 0 is
+ fastest. The range of valid values depends on the pingroup. See
+ "DRVUP_SLWF" in the Tegra TRM.
+
+Note that many of these properties are only valid for certain specific pins
+or groups. See the Tegra TRM and various pinmux spreadsheets for complete
+details regarding which groups support which functionality. The Linux pinctrl
+driver may also be a useful reference, since it consolidates, disambiguates,
+and corrects data from all those sources.
+
+Valid values for pin and group names are:
+
+ mux groups:
+
+ These all support nvidia,function, nvidia,tristate, and many support
+ nvidia,pull.
+
+ ata, atb, atc, atd, ate, cdev1, cdev2, crtp, csus, dap1, dap2, dap3, dap4,
+ ddc, dta, dtb, dtc, dtd, dte, dtf, gma, gmb, gmc, gmd, gme, gpu, gpu7,
+ gpv, hdint, i2cp, irrx, irtx, kbca, kbcb, kbcc, kbcd, kbce, kbcf, lcsn,
+ ld0, ld1, ld2, ld3, ld4, ld5, ld6, ld7, ld8, ld9, ld10, ld11, ld12, ld13,
+ ld14, ld15, ld16, ld17, ldc, ldi, lhp0, lhp1, lhp2, lhs, lm0, lm1, lpp,
+ lpw0, lpw1, lpw2, lsc0, lsc1, lsck, lsda, lsdi, lspi, lvp0, lvp1, lvs,
+ owc, pmc, pta, rm, sdb, sdc, sdd, sdio1, slxa, slxc, slxd, slxk, spdi,
+ spdo, spia, spib, spic, spid, spie, spif, spig, spih, uaa, uab, uac, uad,
+ uca, ucb, uda.
+
+ tristate groups:
+
+ These only support nvidia,pull.
+
+ ck32, ddrc, pmca, pmcb, pmcc, pmcd, pmce, xm2c, xm2d, ls, lc, ld17_0,
+ ld19_18, ld21_20, ld23_22.
+
+ drive groups:
+
+ With some exceptions, these support nvidia,high-speed-mode,
+ nvidia,schmitt, nvidia,low-power-mode, nvidia,pull-down-strength,
+ nvidia,pull-up-strength, nvidia,slew_rate-rising, nvidia,slew_rate-falling.
+
+ drive_ao1, drive_ao2, drive_at1, drive_at2, drive_cdev1, drive_cdev2,
+ drive_csus, drive_dap1, drive_dap2, drive_dap3, drive_dap4, drive_dbg,
+ drive_lcd1, drive_lcd2, drive_sdmmc2, drive_sdmmc3, drive_spi, drive_uaa,
+ drive_uab, drive_uart2, drive_uart3, drive_vi1, drive_vi2, drive_xm2a,
+ drive_xm2c, drive_xm2d, drive_xm2clk, drive_sdio1, drive_crt, drive_ddc,
+ drive_gma, drive_gmb, drive_gmc, drive_gmd, drive_gme, drive_owr,
+ drive_uda.
+
+Example:
+
+ pinctrl@70000000 {
+ compatible = "nvidia,tegra20-pinmux";
+ reg = < 0x70000014 0x10 /* Tri-state registers */
+ 0x70000080 0x20 /* Mux registers */
+ 0x700000a0 0x14 /* Pull-up/down registers */
+ 0x70000868 0xa8 >; /* Pad control registers */
+ };
+
+Example board file extract:
+
+ pinctrl@70000000 {
+ sdio4_default: sdio4_default {
+ atb {
+ nvidia,pins = "atb", "gma", "gme";
+ nvidia,function = "sdio4";
+ nvidia,pull = <0>;
+ nvidia,tristate = <0>;
+ };
+ };
+ };
+
+ sdhci@c8000600 {
+ pinctrl-names = "default";
+ pinctrl-0 = <&sdio4_default>;
+ };
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/nvidia,tegra30-pinmux.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/nvidia,tegra30-pinmux.txt
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..c275b70349c1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/nvidia,tegra30-pinmux.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
+NVIDIA Tegra30 pinmux controller
+
+The Tegra30 pinctrl binding is very similar to the Tegra20 pinctrl binding,
+as described in nvidia,tegra20-pinmux.txt. In fact, this document assumes
+that binding as a baseline, and only documents the differences between the
+two bindings.
+
+Required properties:
+- compatible: "nvidia,tegra30-pinmux"
+- reg: Should contain the register physical address and length for each of
+ the pad control and mux registers.
+
+Tegra30 adds the following optional properties for pin configuration subnodes:
+- nvidia,enable-input: Integer. Enable the pin's input path. 0: no, 1: yes.
+- nvidia,open-drain: Integer. Enable open drain mode. 0: no, 1: yes.
+- nvidia,lock: Integer. Lock the pin configuration against further changes
+ until reset. 0: no, 1: yes.
+- nvidia,io-reset: Integer. Reset the IO path. 0: no, 1: yes.
+
+As with Tegra20, see the Tegra TRM for complete details regarding which groups
+support which functionality.
+
+Valid values for pin and group names are:
+
+ per-pin mux groups:
+
+ These all support nvidia,function, nvidia,tristate, nvidia,pull,
+ nvidia,enable-input, nvidia,lock. Some support nvidia,open-drain,
+ nvidia,io-reset.
+
+ clk_32k_out_pa0, uart3_cts_n_pa1, dap2_fs_pa2, dap2_sclk_pa3,
+ dap2_din_pa4, dap2_dout_pa5, sdmmc3_clk_pa6, sdmmc3_cmd_pa7, gmi_a17_pb0,
+ gmi_a18_pb1, lcd_pwr0_pb2, lcd_pclk_pb3, sdmmc3_dat3_pb4, sdmmc3_dat2_pb5,
+ sdmmc3_dat1_pb6, sdmmc3_dat0_pb7, uart3_rts_n_pc0, lcd_pwr1_pc1,
+ uart2_txd_pc2, uart2_rxd_pc3, gen1_i2c_scl_pc4, gen1_i2c_sda_pc5,
+ lcd_pwr2_pc6, gmi_wp_n_pc7, sdmmc3_dat5_pd0, sdmmc3_dat4_pd1, lcd_dc1_pd2,
+ sdmmc3_dat6_pd3, sdmmc3_dat7_pd4, vi_d1_pd5, vi_vsync_pd6, vi_hsync_pd7,
+ lcd_d0_pe0, lcd_d1_pe1, lcd_d2_pe2, lcd_d3_pe3, lcd_d4_pe4, lcd_d5_pe5,
+ lcd_d6_pe6, lcd_d7_pe7, lcd_d8_pf0, lcd_d9_pf1, lcd_d10_pf2, lcd_d11_pf3,
+ lcd_d12_pf4, lcd_d13_pf5, lcd_d14_pf6, lcd_d15_pf7, gmi_ad0_pg0,
+ gmi_ad1_pg1, gmi_ad2_pg2, gmi_ad3_pg3, gmi_ad4_pg4, gmi_ad5_pg5,
+ gmi_ad6_pg6, gmi_ad7_pg7, gmi_ad8_ph0, gmi_ad9_ph1, gmi_ad10_ph2,
+ gmi_ad11_ph3, gmi_ad12_ph4, gmi_ad13_ph5, gmi_ad14_ph6, gmi_ad15_ph7,
+ gmi_wr_n_pi0, gmi_oe_n_pi1, gmi_dqs_pi2, gmi_cs6_n_pi3, gmi_rst_n_pi4,
+ gmi_iordy_pi5, gmi_cs7_n_pi6, gmi_wait_pi7, gmi_cs0_n_pj0, lcd_de_pj1,
+ gmi_cs1_n_pj2, lcd_hsync_pj3, lcd_vsync_pj4, uart2_cts_n_pj5,
+ uart2_rts_n_pj6, gmi_a16_pj7, gmi_adv_n_pk0, gmi_clk_pk1, gmi_cs4_n_pk2,
+ gmi_cs2_n_pk3, gmi_cs3_n_pk4, spdif_out_pk5, spdif_in_pk6, gmi_a19_pk7,
+ vi_d2_pl0, vi_d3_pl1, vi_d4_pl2, vi_d5_pl3, vi_d6_pl4, vi_d7_pl5,
+ vi_d8_pl6, vi_d9_pl7, lcd_d16_pm0, lcd_d17_pm1, lcd_d18_pm2, lcd_d19_pm3,
+ lcd_d20_pm4, lcd_d21_pm5, lcd_d22_pm6, lcd_d23_pm7, dap1_fs_pn0,
+ dap1_din_pn1, dap1_dout_pn2, dap1_sclk_pn3, lcd_cs0_n_pn4, lcd_sdout_pn5,
+ lcd_dc0_pn6, hdmi_int_pn7, ulpi_data7_po0, ulpi_data0_po1, ulpi_data1_po2,
+ ulpi_data2_po3, ulpi_data3_po4, ulpi_data4_po5, ulpi_data5_po6,
+ ulpi_data6_po7, dap3_fs_pp0, dap3_din_pp1, dap3_dout_pp2, dap3_sclk_pp3,
+ dap4_fs_pp4, dap4_din_pp5, dap4_dout_pp6, dap4_sclk_pp7, kb_col0_pq0,
+ kb_col1_pq1, kb_col2_pq2, kb_col3_pq3, kb_col4_pq4, kb_col5_pq5,
+ kb_col6_pq6, kb_col7_pq7, kb_row0_pr0, kb_row1_pr1, kb_row2_pr2,
+ kb_row3_pr3, kb_row4_pr4, kb_row5_pr5, kb_row6_pr6, kb_row7_pr7,
+ kb_row8_ps0, kb_row9_ps1, kb_row10_ps2, kb_row11_ps3, kb_row12_ps4,
+ kb_row13_ps5, kb_row14_ps6, kb_row15_ps7, vi_pclk_pt0, vi_mclk_pt1,
+ vi_d10_pt2, vi_d11_pt3, vi_d0_pt4, gen2_i2c_scl_pt5, gen2_i2c_sda_pt6,
+ sdmmc4_cmd_pt7, pu0, pu1, pu2, pu3, pu4, pu5, pu6, jtag_rtck_pu7, pv0,
+ pv1, pv2, pv3, ddc_scl_pv4, ddc_sda_pv5, crt_hsync_pv6, crt_vsync_pv7,
+ lcd_cs1_n_pw0, lcd_m1_pw1, spi2_cs1_n_pw2, spi2_cs2_n_pw3, clk1_out_pw4,
+ clk2_out_pw5, uart3_txd_pw6, uart3_rxd_pw7, spi2_mosi_px0, spi2_miso_px1,
+ spi2_sck_px2, spi2_cs0_n_px3, spi1_mosi_px4, spi1_sck_px5, spi1_cs0_n_px6,
+ spi1_miso_px7, ulpi_clk_py0, ulpi_dir_py1, ulpi_nxt_py2, ulpi_stp_py3,
+ sdmmc1_dat3_py4, sdmmc1_dat2_py5, sdmmc1_dat1_py6, sdmmc1_dat0_py7,
+ sdmmc1_clk_pz0, sdmmc1_cmd_pz1, lcd_sdin_pz2, lcd_wr_n_pz3, lcd_sck_pz4,
+ sys_clk_req_pz5, pwr_i2c_scl_pz6, pwr_i2c_sda_pz7, sdmmc4_dat0_paa0,
+ sdmmc4_dat1_paa1, sdmmc4_dat2_paa2, sdmmc4_dat3_paa3, sdmmc4_dat4_paa4,
+ sdmmc4_dat5_paa5, sdmmc4_dat6_paa6, sdmmc4_dat7_paa7, pbb0,
+ cam_i2c_scl_pbb1, cam_i2c_sda_pbb2, pbb3, pbb4, pbb5, pbb6, pbb7,
+ cam_mclk_pcc0, pcc1, pcc2, sdmmc4_rst_n_pcc3, sdmmc4_clk_pcc4,
+ clk2_req_pcc5, pex_l2_rst_n_pcc6, pex_l2_clkreq_n_pcc7,
+ pex_l0_prsnt_n_pdd0, pex_l0_rst_n_pdd1, pex_l0_clkreq_n_pdd2,
+ pex_wake_n_pdd3, pex_l1_prsnt_n_pdd4, pex_l1_rst_n_pdd5,
+ pex_l1_clkreq_n_pdd6, pex_l2_prsnt_n_pdd7, clk3_out_pee0, clk3_req_pee1,
+ clk1_req_pee2, hdmi_cec_pee3, clk_32k_in, core_pwr_req, cpu_pwr_req, owr,
+ pwr_int_n.
+
+ drive groups:
+
+ These all support nvidia,pull-down-strength, nvidia,pull-up-strength,
+ nvidia,slew_rate-rising, nvidia,slew_rate-falling. Most but not all
+ support nvidia,high-speed-mode, nvidia,schmitt, nvidia,low-power-mode.
+
+ ao1, ao2, at1, at2, at3, at4, at5, cdev1, cdev2, cec, crt, csus, dap1,
+ dap2, dap3, dap4, dbg, ddc, dev3, gma, gmb, gmc, gmd, gme, gmf, gmg,
+ gmh, gpv, lcd1, lcd2, owr, sdio1, sdio2, sdio3, spi, uaa, uab, uart2,
+ uart3, uda, vi1.
+
+Example:
+
+ pinctrl@70000000 {
+ compatible = "nvidia,tegra30-pinmux";
+ reg = < 0x70000868 0xd0 /* Pad control registers */
+ 0x70003000 0x3e0 >; /* Mux registers */
+ };
+
+Example board file extract:
+
+ pinctrl@70000000 {
+ sdmmc4_default: pinmux {
+ sdmmc4_clk_pcc4 {
+ nvidia,pins = "sdmmc4_clk_pcc4",
+ "sdmmc4_rst_n_pcc3";
+ nvidia,function = "sdmmc4";
+ nvidia,pull = <0>;
+ nvidia,tristate = <0>;
+ };
+ sdmmc4_dat0_paa0 {
+ nvidia,pins = "sdmmc4_dat0_paa0",
+ "sdmmc4_dat1_paa1",
+ "sdmmc4_dat2_paa2",
+ "sdmmc4_dat3_paa3",
+ "sdmmc4_dat4_paa4",
+ "sdmmc4_dat5_paa5",
+ "sdmmc4_dat6_paa6",
+ "sdmmc4_dat7_paa7";
+ nvidia,function = "sdmmc4";
+ nvidia,pull = <2>;
+ nvidia,tristate = <0>;
+ };
+ };
+ };
+
+ sdhci@78000400 {
+ pinctrl-names = "default";
+ pinctrl-0 = <&sdmmc4_default>;
+ };
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/pinctrl-bindings.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/pinctrl-bindings.txt
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..c95ea8278f87
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/pinctrl-bindings.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
+== Introduction ==
+
+Hardware modules that control pin multiplexing or configuration parameters
+such as pull-up/down, tri-state, drive-strength etc are designated as pin
+controllers. Each pin controller must be represented as a node in device tree,
+just like any other hardware module.
+
+Hardware modules whose signals are affected by pin configuration are
+designated client devices. Again, each client device must be represented as a
+node in device tree, just like any other hardware module.
+
+For a client device to operate correctly, certain pin controllers must
+set up certain specific pin configurations. Some client devices need a
+single static pin configuration, e.g. set up during initialization. Others
+need to reconfigure pins at run-time, for example to tri-state pins when the
+device is inactive. Hence, each client device can define a set of named
+states. The number and names of those states is defined by the client device's
+own binding.
+
+The common pinctrl bindings defined in this file provide an infrastructure
+for client device device tree nodes to map those state names to the pin
+configuration used by those states.
+
+Note that pin controllers themselves may also be client devices of themselves.
+For example, a pin controller may set up its own "active" state when the
+driver loads. This would allow representing a board's static pin configuration
+in a single place, rather than splitting it across multiple client device
+nodes. The decision to do this or not somewhat rests with the author of
+individual board device tree files, and any requirements imposed by the
+bindings for the individual client devices in use by that board, i.e. whether
+they require certain specific named states for dynamic pin configuration.
+
+== Pinctrl client devices ==
+
+For each client device individually, every pin state is assigned an integer
+ID. These numbers start at 0, and are contiguous. For each state ID, a unique
+property exists to define the pin configuration. Each state may also be
+assigned a name. When names are used, another property exists to map from
+those names to the integer IDs.
+
+Each client device's own binding determines the set of states the must be
+defined in its device tree node, and whether to define the set of state
+IDs that must be provided, or whether to define the set of state names that
+must be provided.
+
+Required properties:
+pinctrl-0: List of phandles, each pointing at a pin configuration
+ node. These referenced pin configuration nodes must be child
+ nodes of the pin controller that they configure. Multiple
+ entries may exist in this list so that multiple pin
+ controllers may be configured, or so that a state may be built
+ from multiple nodes for a single pin controller, each
+ contributing part of the overall configuration. See the next
+ section of this document for details of the format of these
+ pin configuration nodes.
+
+ In some cases, it may be useful to define a state, but for it
+ to be empty. This may be required when a common IP block is
+ used in an SoC either without a pin controller, or where the
+ pin controller does not affect the HW module in question. If
+ the binding for that IP block requires certain pin states to
+ exist, they must still be defined, but may be left empty.
+
+Optional properties:
+pinctrl-1: List of phandles, each pointing at a pin configuration
+ node within a pin controller.
+...
+pinctrl-n: List of phandles, each pointing at a pin configuration
+ node within a pin controller.
+pinctrl-names: The list of names to assign states. List entry 0 defines the
+ name for integer state ID 0, list entry 1 for state ID 1, and
+ so on.
+
+For example:
+
+ /* For a client device requiring named states */
+ device {
+ pinctrl-names = "active", "idle";
+ pinctrl-0 = <&state_0_node_a>;
+ pinctrl-1 = <&state_1_node_a &state_1_node_b>;
+ };
+
+ /* For the same device if using state IDs */
+ device {
+ pinctrl-0 = <&state_0_node_a>;
+ pinctrl-1 = <&state_1_node_a &state_1_node_b>;
+ };
+
+ /*
+ * For an IP block whose binding supports pin configuration,
+ * but in use on an SoC that doesn't have any pin control hardware
+ */
+ device {
+ pinctrl-names = "active", "idle";
+ pinctrl-0 = <>;
+ pinctrl-1 = <>;
+ };
+
+== Pin controller devices ==
+
+Pin controller devices should contain the pin configuration nodes that client
+devices reference.
+
+For example:
+
+ pincontroller {
+ ... /* Standard DT properties for the device itself elided */
+
+ state_0_node_a {
+ ...
+ };
+ state_1_node_a {
+ ...
+ };
+ state_1_node_b {
+ ...
+ };
+ }
+
+The contents of each of those pin configuration child nodes is defined
+entirely by the binding for the individual pin controller device. There
+exists no common standard for this content.
+
+The pin configuration nodes need not be direct children of the pin controller
+device; they may be grandchildren, for example. Whether this is legal, and
+whether there is any interaction between the child and intermediate parent
+nodes, is again defined entirely by the binding for the individual pin
+controller device.
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinmux/pinmux_nvidia.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinmux/pinmux_nvidia.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 36f82dbdd14d..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinmux/pinmux_nvidia.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
-NVIDIA Tegra 2 pinmux controller
-
-Required properties:
-- compatible : "nvidia,tegra20-pinmux"
-
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/sound/sgtl5000.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/sound/sgtl5000.txt
index 2c3cd413f042..9cc44449508d 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/sound/sgtl5000.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/sound/sgtl5000.txt
@@ -3,6 +3,8 @@
Required properties:
- compatible : "fsl,sgtl5000".
+- reg : the I2C address of the device
+
Example:
codec: sgtl5000@0a {
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/tegra-usb.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/tegra-usb.txt
index 007005ddbe12..e9b005dc7625 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/tegra-usb.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/tegra-usb.txt
@@ -12,6 +12,9 @@ Required properties :
- nvidia,vbus-gpio : If present, specifies a gpio that needs to be
activated for the bus to be powered.
+Required properties for phy_type == ulpi:
+ - nvidia,phy-reset-gpio : The GPIO used to reset the PHY.
+
Optional properties:
- dr_mode : dual role mode. Indicates the working mode for
nvidia,tegra20-ehci compatible controllers. Can be "host", "peripheral",