Devicetree API
This is a reference page for the <zephyr/devicetree.h>
API. The API is macro
based. Use of these macros has no impact on scheduling. They can be used from
any calling context and at file scope.
Some of these – the ones beginning with DT_INST_
– require a special
macro named DT_DRV_COMPAT
to be defined before they can be used; these are
discussed individually below. These macros are generally meant for use within
device drivers, though they can be used outside of
drivers with appropriate care.
Generic APIs
The APIs in this section can be used anywhere and do not require
DT_DRV_COMPAT
to be defined.
Node identifiers and helpers
A node identifier is a way to refer to a devicetree node at C preprocessor time. While node identifiers are not C values, you can use them to access devicetree data in C rvalue form using, for example, the Property access API.
The root node /
has node identifier DT_ROOT
. You can create node
identifiers for other devicetree nodes using DT_PATH()
,
DT_NODELABEL()
, DT_ALIAS()
, and DT_INST()
.
There are also DT_PARENT()
and DT_CHILD()
macros which can be
used to create node identifiers for a given node’s parent node or a particular
child node, respectively.
The following macros create or operate on node identifiers.
- group devicetree-generic-id
Defines
-
DT_INVALID_NODE
Name for an invalid node identifier.
This supports cases where factored macros can be invoked from paths where devicetree data may or may not be available. It is a preprocessor identifier that does not match any valid devicetree node identifier.
-
DT_ROOT
Node identifier for the root node in the devicetree.
-
DT_PATH(...)
Get a node identifier for a devicetree path.
The arguments to this macro are the names of non-root nodes in the tree required to reach the desired node, starting from the root. Non-alphanumeric characters in each name must be converted to underscores to form valid C tokens, and letters must be lowercased.
Example devicetree fragment:
/ { soc { serial1: serial@40001000 { status = "okay"; current-speed = <115200>; ... }; }; };
You can use
DT_PATH(soc, serial_40001000)
to get a node identifier for theserial@40001000
node. Node labels likeserial1
cannot be used as DT_PATH() arguments; use DT_NODELABEL() for those instead.Example usage with DT_PROP() to get the
current-speed
property:DT_PROP(DT_PATH(soc, serial_40001000), current_speed) // 115200
(The
current-speed
property is also inlowercase-and-underscores
form when used with this API.)When determining arguments to DT_PATH():
the first argument corresponds to a child node of the root (
soc
above)a second argument corresponds to a child of the first argument (
serial_40001000
above, from the node nameserial@40001000
after lowercasing and changing@
to_
)and so on for deeper nodes in the desired node’s path
Note
This macro returns a node identifier from path components. To get a path string from a node identifier, use DT_NODE_PATH() instead.
- Parameters:
... – lowercase-and-underscores node names along the node’s path, with each name given as a separate argument
- Returns:
node identifier for the node with that path
-
DT_NODELABEL(label)
Get a node identifier for a node label.
Convert non-alphanumeric characters in the node label to underscores to form valid C tokens, and lowercase all letters. Note that node labels are not the same thing as label properties.
Example devicetree fragment:
serial1: serial@40001000 { label = "UART_0"; status = "okay"; current-speed = <115200>; ... };
The only node label in this example is
serial1
.The string
UART_0
is not a node label; it’s the value of a property named label.You can use
DT_NODELABEL(serial1)
to get a node identifier for theserial@40001000
node. Example usage with DT_PROP() to get the current-speed property:DT_PROP(DT_NODELABEL(serial1), current_speed) // 115200
Another example devicetree fragment:
cpu@0 { L2_0: l2-cache { cache-level = <2>; ... }; };
Example usage to get the cache-level property:
DT_PROP(DT_NODELABEL(l2_0), cache_level) // 2
Notice how
L2_0
in the devicetree is lowercased tol2_0
in the DT_NODELABEL() argument.- Parameters:
label – lowercase-and-underscores node label name
- Returns:
node identifier for the node with that label
-
DT_ALIAS(alias)
Get a node identifier from /aliases.
This macro’s argument is a property of the
/aliases
node. It returns a node identifier for the node which is aliased. Convert non-alphanumeric characters in the alias property to underscores to form valid C tokens, and lowercase all letters.Example devicetree fragment:
/ { aliases { my-serial = &serial1; }; soc { serial1: serial@40001000 { status = "okay"; current-speed = <115200>; ... }; }; };
You can use DT_ALIAS(my_serial) to get a node identifier for the
serial@40001000
node. Notice howmy-serial
in the devicetree becomesmy_serial
in the DT_ALIAS() argument. Example usage with DT_PROP() to get the current-speed property:DT_PROP(DT_ALIAS(my_serial), current_speed) // 115200
- Parameters:
alias – lowercase-and-underscores alias name.
- Returns:
node identifier for the node with that alias
-
DT_INST(inst, compat)
Get a node identifier for an instance of a compatible.
All nodes with a particular compatible property value are assigned instance numbers, which are zero-based indexes specific to that compatible. You can get a node identifier for these nodes by passing DT_INST() an instance number,
inst
, along with the lowercase-and-underscores version of the compatible,compat
.Instance numbers have the following properties:
for each compatible, instance numbers start at 0 and are contiguous
exactly one instance number is assigned for each node with a compatible, including disabled nodes
enabled nodes (status property is
okay
or missing) are assigned the instance numbers starting from 0, and disabled nodes have instance numbers which are greater than those of any enabled node
No other guarantees are made. In particular:
instance numbers in no way reflect any numbering scheme that might exist in SoC documentation, node labels or unit addresses, or properties of the /aliases node (use DT_NODELABEL() or DT_ALIAS() for those)
there is no general guarantee that the same node will have the same instance number between builds, even if you are building the same application again in the same build directory
Example devicetree fragment:
serial1: serial@40001000 { compatible = "vnd,soc-serial"; status = "disabled"; current-speed = <9600>; ... }; serial2: serial@40002000 { compatible = "vnd,soc-serial"; status = "okay"; current-speed = <57600>; ... }; serial3: serial@40003000 { compatible = "vnd,soc-serial"; current-speed = <115200>; ... };
Assuming no other nodes in the devicetree have compatible
"vnd,soc-serial"
, that compatible has nodes with instance numbers 0, 1, and 2.The nodes
serial@40002000
andserial@40003000
are both enabled, so their instance numbers are 0 and 1, but no guarantees are made regarding which node has which instance number.Since
serial@40001000
is the only disabled node, it has instance number 2, since disabled nodes are assigned the largest instance numbers. Therefore:// Could be 57600 or 115200. There is no way to be sure: // either serial@40002000 or serial@40003000 could // have instance number 0, so this could be the current-speed // property of either of those nodes. DT_PROP(DT_INST(0, vnd_soc_serial), current_speed) // Could be 57600 or 115200, for the same reason. // If the above expression expands to 57600, then // this expands to 115200, and vice-versa. DT_PROP(DT_INST(1, vnd_soc_serial), current_speed) // 9600, because there is only one disabled node, and // disabled nodes are "at the end" of the instance // number "list". DT_PROP(DT_INST(2, vnd_soc_serial), current_speed)
Notice how
"vnd,soc-serial"
in the devicetree becomesvnd_soc_serial
(without quotes) in the DT_INST() arguments. (As usual,current-speed
in the devicetree becomescurrent_speed
as well.)Nodes whose
compatible
property has multiple values are assigned independent instance numbers for each compatible.- Parameters:
inst – instance number for compatible
compat
compat – lowercase-and-underscores compatible, without quotes
- Returns:
node identifier for the node with that instance number and compatible
-
DT_PARENT(node_id)
Get a node identifier for a parent node.
Example devicetree fragment:
parent: parent-node { child: child-node { ... }; };
The following are equivalent ways to get the same node identifier:
DT_NODELABEL(parent) DT_PARENT(DT_NODELABEL(child))
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
a node identifier for the node’s parent
-
DT_GPARENT(node_id)
Get a node identifier for a grandparent node.
Example devicetree fragment:
gparent: grandparent-node { parent: parent-node { child: child-node { ... } }; };
The following are equivalent ways to get the same node identifier:
DT_GPARENT(DT_NODELABEL(child)) DT_PARENT(DT_PARENT(DT_NODELABEL(child))
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
a node identifier for the node’s parent’s parent
-
DT_CHILD(node_id, child)
Get a node identifier for a child node.
Example devicetree fragment:
/ { soc-label: soc { serial1: serial@40001000 { status = "okay"; current-speed = <115200>; ... }; }; };
Example usage with DT_PROP() to get the status of the
serial@40001000
node:#define SOC_NODE DT_NODELABEL(soc_label) DT_PROP(DT_CHILD(SOC_NODE, serial_40001000), status) // "okay"
Node labels like
serial1
cannot be used as thechild
argument to this macro. Use DT_NODELABEL() for that instead.You can also use DT_FOREACH_CHILD() to iterate over node identifiers for all of a node’s children.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
child – lowercase-and-underscores child node name
- Returns:
node identifier for the node with the name referred to by ‘child’
-
DT_COMPAT_GET_ANY_STATUS_OKAY(compat)
Get a node identifier for a status
okay
node with a compatible.Use this if you want to get an arbitrary enabled node with a given compatible, and you do not care which one you get. If any enabled nodes with the given compatible exist, a node identifier for one of them is returned. Otherwise, DT_INVALID_NODE is returned.
Example devicetree fragment:
node-a { compatible = "vnd,device"; status = "okay"; }; node-b { compatible = "vnd,device"; status = "okay"; }; node-c { compatible = "vnd,device"; status = "disabled"; };
Example usage:
DT_COMPAT_GET_ANY_STATUS_OKAY(vnd_device)
This expands to a node identifier for either
node-a
ornode-b
. It will not expand to a node identifier fornode-c
, because that node does not have statusokay
.- Parameters:
compat – lowercase-and-underscores compatible, without quotes
- Returns:
node identifier for a node with that compatible, or DT_INVALID_NODE
-
DT_NODE_PATH(node_id)
Get a devicetree node’s full path as a string literal.
This returns the path to a node from a node identifier. To get a node identifier from path components instead, use DT_PATH().
Example devicetree fragment:
/ { soc { node: my-node@12345678 { ... }; }; };
Example usage:
DT_NODE_PATH(DT_NODELABEL(node)) // "/soc/my-node@12345678" DT_NODE_PATH(DT_PATH(soc)) // "/soc" DT_NODE_PATH(DT_ROOT) // "/"
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
the node’s full path in the devicetree
-
DT_NODE_FULL_NAME(node_id)
Get a devicetree node’s name with unit-address as a string literal.
This returns the node name and unit-address from a node identifier.
Example devicetree fragment:
/ { soc { node: my-node@12345678 { ... }; }; };
Example usage:
DT_NODE_FULL_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(node)) // "my-node@12345678"
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
the node’s name with unit-address as a string in the devicetree
-
DT_NODE_CHILD_IDX(node_id)
Get a devicetree node’s index into its parent’s list of children.
Indexes are zero-based.
It is an error to use this macro with the root node.
Example devicetree fragment:
parent { c1: child-1 {}; c2: child-2 {}; };
Example usage:
DT_NODE_CHILD_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(c1)) // 0 DT_NODE_CHILD_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(c2)) // 1
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
the node’s index in its parent node’s list of children
-
DT_CHILD_NUM(node_id)
Get the number of child nodes of a given node.
- Parameters:
node_id – a node identifier
- Returns:
Number of child nodes
-
DT_CHILD_NUM_STATUS_OKAY(node_id)
Get the number of child nodes of a given node which child nodes’ status are okay.
- Parameters:
node_id – a node identifier
- Returns:
Number of child nodes which status are okay
-
DT_SAME_NODE(node_id1, node_id2)
Do
node_id1
andnode_id2
refer to the same node?Both
node_id1
andnode_id2
must be node identifiers for nodes that exist in the devicetree (if unsure, you can check with DT_NODE_EXISTS()).The expansion evaluates to 0 or 1, but may not be a literal integer 0 or 1.
- Parameters:
node_id1 – first node identifier
node_id2 – second node identifier
- Returns:
an expression that evaluates to 1 if the node identifiers refer to the same node, and evaluates to 0 otherwise
-
DT_NODELABEL_STRING_ARRAY(node_id)
Get a devicetree node’s node labels as an array of strings.
Example devicetree fragment:
foo: bar: node@deadbeef {};
Example usage:
DT_NODELABEL_STRING_ARRAY(DT_NODELABEL(foo))
This expands to:
{ "foo", "bar", }
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
an array initializer for an array of the node’s node labels as strings
-
DT_INVALID_NODE
Property access
The following general-purpose macros can be used to access node properties. There are special-purpose APIs for accessing the ranges property, reg property and interrupts property.
Property values can be read using these macros even if the node is disabled, as long as it has a matching binding.
- group devicetree-generic-prop
Defines
-
DT_PROP(node_id, prop)
Get a devicetree property value.
For properties whose bindings have the following types, this macro expands to:
string: a string literal
boolean:
0
if the property is false, or1
if it is trueint: the property’s value as an integer literal
array, uint8-array, string-array: an initializer expression in braces, whose elements are integer or string literals (like
{0, 1, 2}
,{"hello", "world"}
, etc.)phandle: a node identifier for the node with that phandle
A property’s type is usually defined by its binding. In some special cases, it has an assumed type defined by the devicetree specification even when no binding is available:
compatible
has type string-array,status
has type string, andinterrupt-controller
has type boolean.For other properties or properties with unknown type due to a missing binding, behavior is undefined.
For usage examples, see DT_PATH(), DT_ALIAS(), DT_NODELABEL(), and DT_INST() above.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
a representation of the property’s value
-
DT_PROP_LEN(node_id, prop)
Get a property’s logical length.
Here, “length” is a number of elements, which may differ from the property’s size in bytes.
The return value depends on the property’s type:
for types array, string-array, and uint8-array, this expands to the number of elements in the array
for type phandles, this expands to the number of phandles
for type phandle-array, this expands to the number of phandle and specifier blocks in the property
for type phandle, this expands to 1 (so that a phandle can be treated as a degenerate case of phandles with length 1)
for type string, this expands to 1 (so that a string can be treated as a degenerate case of string-array with length 1)
These properties are handled as special cases:
reg property: use
DT_NUM_REGS(node_id)
insteadinterrupts property: use
DT_NUM_IRQS(node_id)
instead
It is an error to use this macro with the
ranges
,dma-ranges
,reg
orinterrupts
properties.For other properties, behavior is undefined.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – a lowercase-and-underscores property with a logical length
- Returns:
the property’s length
-
DT_PROP_LEN_OR(node_id, prop, default_value)
Like DT_PROP_LEN(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the property is defined (as determined by DT_NODE_HAS_PROP()), this expands to DT_PROP_LEN(node_id, prop). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – a lowercase-and-underscores property with a logical length
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the property’s length or the given default value
-
DT_PROP_HAS_IDX(node_id, prop, idx)
Is index
idx
valid for an array type property?If this returns 1, then DT_PROP_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, idx) or DT_PHA_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, idx, …) are valid at index
idx
. If it returns 0, it is an error to use those macros with that index.These properties are handled as special cases:
reg
property: use DT_REG_HAS_IDX(node_id, idx) insteadinterrupts
property: use DT_IRQ_HAS_IDX(node_id, idx) instead
It is an error to use this macro with the
reg
orinterrupts
properties.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – a lowercase-and-underscores property with a logical length
idx – index to check
- Returns:
An expression which evaluates to 1 if
idx
is a valid index into the given property, and 0 otherwise.
-
DT_PROP_HAS_NAME(node_id, prop, name)
Is name
name
available in afoo-names
property?This property is handled as special case:
interrupts
property: use DT_IRQ_HAS_NAME(node_id, idx) instead
It is an error to use this macro with the
interrupts
property.Example devicetree fragment:
nx: node-x { foos = <&bar xx yy>, <&baz xx zz>; foo-names = "event", "error"; status = "okay"; };
Example usage:
DT_PROP_HAS_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(nx), foos, event) // 1 DT_PROP_HAS_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(nx), foos, failure) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – a lowercase-and-underscores
prop-names
type propertyname – a lowercase-and-underscores name to check
- Returns:
An expression which evaluates to 1 if “name” is an available name into the given property, and 0 otherwise.
-
DT_PROP_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, idx)
Get the value at index
idx
in an array type property.It might help to read the argument order as being similar to
node->property[index]
.The return value depends on the property’s type:
for types array, string-array, uint8-array, and phandles, this expands to the idx-th array element as an integer, string literal, integer, and node identifier respectively
for type phandle, idx must be 0 and the expansion is a node identifier (this treats phandle like a phandles of length 1)
for type string, idx must be 0 and the expansion is the entire string (this treats string like string-array of length 1)
These properties are handled as special cases:
reg
: use DT_REG_ADDR_BY_IDX() or DT_REG_SIZE_BY_IDX() insteadinterrupts
: use DT_IRQ_BY_IDX()ranges
: use DT_NUM_RANGES()dma-ranges
: it is an error to use this property with DT_PROP_BY_IDX()
For properties of other types, behavior is undefined.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – the index to get
- Returns:
a representation of the idx-th element of the property
-
DT_PROP_OR(node_id, prop, default_value)
Like DT_PROP(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the value exists, this expands to DT_PROP(node_id, prop). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the property’s value or
default_value
-
DT_ENUM_IDX(node_id, prop)
Get a property value’s index into its enumeration values.
The return values start at zero.
Example devicetree fragment:
usb1: usb@12340000 { maximum-speed = "full-speed"; }; usb2: usb@12341000 { maximum-speed = "super-speed"; };
Example bindings fragment:
properties: maximum-speed: type: string enum: - "low-speed" - "full-speed" - "high-speed" - "super-speed"
Example usage:
DT_ENUM_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(usb1), maximum_speed) // 1 DT_ENUM_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(usb2), maximum_speed) // 3
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
zero-based index of the property’s value in its enum: list
-
DT_ENUM_IDX_OR(node_id, prop, default_idx_value)
Like DT_ENUM_IDX(), but with a fallback to a default enum index.
If the value exists, this expands to its zero based index value thanks to DT_ENUM_IDX(node_id, prop).
Otherwise, this expands to provided default index enum value.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_idx_value – a fallback index value to expand to
- Returns:
zero-based index of the property’s value in its enum if present, default_idx_value otherwise
-
DT_ENUM_HAS_VALUE(node_id, prop, value)
Does a node enumeration property have a given value?
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
value – lowercase-and-underscores enumeration value
- Returns:
1 if the node property has the value value, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_STRING_TOKEN(node_id, prop)
Get a string property’s value as a token.
This removes “the quotes” from a string property’s value, converting any non-alphanumeric characters to underscores. This can be useful, for example, when programmatically using the value to form a C variable or code.
DT_STRING_TOKEN() can only be used for properties with string type.
It is an error to use DT_STRING_TOKEN() in other circumstances.
Example devicetree fragment:
n1: node-1 { prop = "foo"; }; n2: node-2 { prop = "FOO"; } n3: node-3 { prop = "123 foo"; };
Example bindings fragment:
properties: prop: type: string
Example usage:
DT_STRING_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop) // foo DT_STRING_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop) // FOO DT_STRING_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n3), prop) // 123_foo
Notice how:
Unlike C identifiers, the property values may begin with a number. It’s the user’s responsibility not to use such values as the name of a C identifier.
The uppercased
"FOO"
in the DTS remainsFOO
as a token. It is not converted tofoo
.The whitespace in the DTS
"123 foo"
string is converted to123_foo
as a token.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
the value of
prop
as a token, i.e. without any quotes and with special characters converted to underscores
-
DT_STRING_TOKEN_OR(node_id, prop, default_value)
Like DT_STRING_TOKEN(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the value exists, this expands to DT_STRING_TOKEN(node_id, prop). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the property’s value as a token, or
default_value
-
DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN(node_id, prop)
Like DT_STRING_TOKEN(), but uppercased.
This removes “the quotes” from a string property’s value, converting any non-alphanumeric characters to underscores, and capitalizing the result. This can be useful, for example, when programmatically using the value to form a C variable or code.
DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN() can only be used for properties with string type.
It is an error to use DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN() in other circumstances.
Example devicetree fragment:
n1: node-1 { prop = "foo"; }; n2: node-2 { prop = "123 foo"; };
Example bindings fragment:
properties: prop: type: string
Example usage:
DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop) // FOO DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop) // 123_FOO
Notice how:
Unlike C identifiers, the property values may begin with a number. It’s the user’s responsibility not to use such values as the name of a C identifier.
The lowercased
"foo"
in the DTS becomesFOO
as a token, i.e. it is uppercased.The whitespace in the DTS
"123 foo"
string is converted to123_FOO
as a token, i.e. it is uppercased and whitespace becomes an underscore.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
the value of
prop
as an uppercased token, i.e. without any quotes and with special characters converted to underscores
-
DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_OR(node_id, prop, default_value)
Like DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the value exists, this expands to DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN(node_id, prop). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the property’s value as an uppercased token, or
default_value
-
DT_STRING_UNQUOTED(node_id, prop)
Get a string property’s value as an unquoted sequence of tokens.
This removes “the quotes” from string-valued properties. That can be useful, for example, when defining floating point values as a string in devicetree that you would like to use to initialize a float or double variable in C.
DT_STRING_UNQUOTED() can only be used for properties with string type.
It is an error to use DT_STRING_UNQUOTED() in other circumstances.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example bindings fragment:n1: node-1 { prop = "12.7"; }; n2: node-2 { prop = "0.5"; } n3: node-3 { prop = "A B C"; };
Example usage:properties: prop: type: string
DT_STRING_UNQUOTED(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop) // 12.7 DT_STRING_UNQUOTED(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop) // 0.5 DT_STRING_UNQUOTED(DT_NODELABEL(n3), prop) // A B C
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
the property’s value as a sequence of tokens, with no quotes
-
DT_STRING_UNQUOTED_OR(node_id, prop, default_value)
Like DT_STRING_UNQUOTED(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the value exists, this expands to DT_STRING_UNQUOTED(node_id, prop). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the property’s value as a sequence of tokens, with no quotes, or
default_value
-
DT_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, idx)
Get an element out of a string-array property as a token.
This removes “the quotes” from an element in the array, and converts non-alphanumeric characters to underscores. That can be useful, for example, when programmatically using the value to form a C variable or code.
DT_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX() can only be used for properties with string-array type.
It is an error to use DT_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX() in other circumstances.
Example devicetree fragment:
n1: node-1 { prop = "f1", "F2"; }; n2: node-2 { prop = "123 foo", "456 FOO"; };
Example bindings fragment:
properties: prop: type: string-array
Example usage:
DT_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop, 0) // f1 DT_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop, 1) // F2 DT_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop, 0) // 123_foo DT_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop, 1) // 456_FOO
For more information, see DT_STRING_TOKEN.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – the index to get
- Returns:
the element in
prop
at indexidx
as a token
-
DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, idx)
Like DT_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX(), but uppercased.
This removes “the quotes” and capitalizes an element in the array, and converts non-alphanumeric characters to underscores. That can be useful, for example, when programmatically using the value to form a C variable or code.
DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_BY_IDX() can only be used for properties with string-array type.
It is an error to use DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_BY_IDX() in other circumstances.
Example devicetree fragment:
n1: node-1 { prop = "f1", "F2"; }; n2: node-2 { prop = "123 foo", "456 FOO"; };
Example bindings fragment:
properties: prop: type: string-array
Example usage:
DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop, 0) // F1 DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop, 1) // F2 DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop, 0) // 123_FOO DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop, 1) // 456_FOO
For more information, see DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – the index to get
- Returns:
the element in
prop
at indexidx
as an uppercased token
-
DT_STRING_UNQUOTED_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, idx)
Get a string array item value as an unquoted sequence of tokens.
This removes “the quotes” from string-valued item. That can be useful, for example, when defining floating point values as a string in devicetree that you would like to use to initialize a float or double variable in C.
DT_STRING_UNQUOTED_BY_IDX() can only be used for properties with string-array type.
It is an error to use DT_STRING_UNQUOTED_BY_IDX() in other circumstances.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example bindings fragment:n1: node-1 { prop = "12.7", "34.1"; }; n2: node-2 { prop = "A B", "C D"; }
Example usage:properties: prop: type: string-array
DT_STRING_UNQUOTED_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop, 0) // 12.7 DT_STRING_UNQUOTED_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), prop, 1) // 34.1 DT_STRING_UNQUOTED_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop, 0) // A B DT_STRING_UNQUOTED_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), prop, 1) // C D
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – the index to get
- Returns:
the property’s value as a sequence of tokens, with no quotes
-
DT_PROP_BY_PHANDLE_IDX(node_id, phs, idx, prop)
Get a property value from a phandle in a property.
This is a shorthand for:
DT_PROP(DT_PHANDLE_BY_IDX(node_id, phs, idx), prop)
That is,
prop
is a property of the phandle’s node, not a property ofnode_id
.Example devicetree fragment:
n1: node-1 { foo = <&n2 &n3>; }; n2: node-2 { bar = <42>; }; n3: node-3 { baz = <43>; };
Example usage:
#define N1 DT_NODELABEL(n1) DT_PROP_BY_PHANDLE_IDX(N1, foo, 0, bar) // 42 DT_PROP_BY_PHANDLE_IDX(N1, foo, 1, baz) // 43
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
phs – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle
,phandles
, orphandle-array
idx – logical index into
phs
, which must be zero ifphs
has typephandle
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property of the phandle’s node
- Returns:
the property’s value
-
DT_PROP_BY_PHANDLE_IDX_OR(node_id, phs, idx, prop, default_value)
Like DT_PROP_BY_PHANDLE_IDX(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the value exists, this expands to DT_PROP_BY_PHANDLE_IDX(node_id, phs,idx, prop). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
phs – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle
,phandles
, orphandle-array
idx – logical index into
phs
, which must be zero ifphs
has typephandle
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property of the phandle’s node
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the property’s value
-
DT_PROP_BY_PHANDLE(node_id, ph, prop)
Get a property value from a phandle’s node.
This is equivalent to DT_PROP_BY_PHANDLE_IDX(node_id, ph, 0, prop).
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
ph – lowercase-and-underscores property of
node_id
with typephandle
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property of the phandle’s node
- Returns:
the property’s value
-
DT_PHA_BY_IDX(node_id, pha, idx, cell)
Get a phandle-array specifier cell value at an index.
It might help to read the argument order as being similar to
node->phandle_array[index].cell
. That is, the cell value is in thepha
property ofnode_id
, inside the specifier at indexidx
.Example devicetree fragment:
gpio0: gpio@abcd1234 { #gpio-cells = <2>; }; gpio1: gpio@1234abcd { #gpio-cells = <2>; }; led: led_0 { gpios = <&gpio0 17 0x1>, <&gpio1 5 0x3>; };
Bindings fragment for the
gpio0
andgpio1
nodes:gpio-cells: - pin - flags
Above,
gpios
has two elements:index 0 has specifier <17 0x1>, so its
pin
cell is 17, and itsflags
cell is 0x1index 1 has specifier <5 0x3>, so
pin
is 5 andflags
is 0x3
Example usage:
#define LED DT_NODELABEL(led) DT_PHA_BY_IDX(LED, gpios, 0, pin) // 17 DT_PHA_BY_IDX(LED, gpios, 1, flags) // 0x3
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
idx – logical index into
pha
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name within the specifier at
pha
indexidx
- Returns:
the cell’s value
-
DT_PHA_BY_IDX_OR(node_id, pha, idx, cell, default_value)
Like DT_PHA_BY_IDX(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the value exists, this expands to DT_PHA_BY_IDX(node_id, pha,idx, cell). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
idx – logical index into
pha
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name within the specifier at
pha
indexidx
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the cell’s value or
default_value
-
DT_PHA(node_id, pha, cell)
Equivalent to DT_PHA_BY_IDX(node_id, pha, 0, cell)
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell’s value
-
DT_PHA_OR(node_id, pha, cell, default_value)
Like DT_PHA(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the value exists, this expands to DT_PHA(node_id, pha, cell). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the cell’s value or
default_value
-
DT_PHA_BY_NAME(node_id, pha, name, cell)
Get a value within a phandle-array specifier by name.
This is like DT_PHA_BY_IDX(), except it treats
pha
as a structure where each array element has a name.It might help to read the argument order as being similar to
node->phandle_struct.name.cell
. That is, the cell value is in thepha
property ofnode_id
, treated as a data structure where each array element has a name.Example devicetree fragment:
n: node { io-channels = <&adc1 10>, <&adc2 20>; io-channel-names = "SENSOR", "BANDGAP"; };
Bindings fragment for the “adc1” and “adc2” nodes:
io-channel-cells: - input
Example usage:
DT_PHA_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), io_channels, sensor, input) // 10 DT_PHA_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), io_channels, bandgap, input) // 20
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a specifier in
pha
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name in the named specifier
- Returns:
the cell’s value
-
DT_PHA_BY_NAME_OR(node_id, pha, name, cell, default_value)
Like DT_PHA_BY_NAME(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.If the value exists, this expands to DT_PHA_BY_NAME(node_id, pha,name, cell). The
default_value
parameter is not expanded in this case.Otherwise, this expands to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a specifier in
pha
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name in the named specifier
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the cell’s value or
default_value
-
DT_PHANDLE_BY_NAME(node_id, pha, name)
Get a phandle’s node identifier from a phandle array by
name
.It might help to read the argument order as being similar to
node->phandle_struct.name.phandle
. That is, the phandle array is treated as a structure with named elements. The return value is the node identifier for a phandle inside the structure.Example devicetree fragment:
adc1: adc@abcd1234 { foobar = "ADC_1"; }; adc2: adc@1234abcd { foobar = "ADC_2"; }; n: node { io-channels = <&adc1 10>, <&adc2 20>; io-channel-names = "SENSOR", "BANDGAP"; };
Above, “io-channels” has two elements:
the element named
"SENSOR"
has phandle&adc1
the element named
"BANDGAP"
has phandle&adc2
Example usage:
#define NODE DT_NODELABEL(n) DT_PROP(DT_PHANDLE_BY_NAME(NODE, io_channels, sensor), foobar) // "ADC_1" DT_PROP(DT_PHANDLE_BY_NAME(NODE, io_channels, bandgap), foobar) // "ADC_2"
Notice how devicetree properties and names are lowercased, and non-alphanumeric characters are converted to underscores.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of an element in
pha
- Returns:
a node identifier for the node with that phandle
-
DT_PHANDLE_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, idx)
Get a node identifier for a phandle in a property.
When a node’s value at a logical index contains a phandle, this macro returns a node identifier for the node with that phandle.
Therefore, if
prop
has typephandle
,idx
must be zero. (Aphandle
type is treated as aphandles
with a fixed length of 1).Example devicetree fragment:
n1: node-1 { foo = <&n2 &n3>; }; n2: node-2 { ... }; n3: node-3 { ... };
Above,
foo
has type phandles and has two elements:index 0 has phandle
&n2
, which isnode-2
’s phandleindex 1 has phandle
&n3
, which isnode-3
’s phandle
Example usage:
#define N1 DT_NODELABEL(n1) DT_PHANDLE_BY_IDX(N1, foo, 0) // node identifier for node-2 DT_PHANDLE_BY_IDX(N1, foo, 1) // node identifier for node-3
Behavior is analogous for phandle-arrays.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name in
node_id
with typephandle
,phandles
orphandle-array
idx – index into
prop
- Returns:
node identifier for the node with the phandle at that index
-
DT_PHANDLE(node_id, prop)
Get a node identifier for a phandle property’s value.
This is equivalent to DT_PHANDLE_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, 0). Its primary benefit is readability when
prop
has typephandle
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property of
node_id
with typephandle
- Returns:
a node identifier for the node pointed to by “ph”
-
DT_PROP(node_id, prop)
ranges
property
Use these APIs instead of Property access to access the
ranges
property. Because this property’s semantics are defined by the
devicetree specification, these macros can be used even for nodes without
matching bindings. However, they take on special semantics when the node’s
binding indicates it is a PCIe bus node, as defined in the
PCI Bus Binding to: IEEE Std 1275-1994 Standard for Boot (Initialization Configuration) Firmware
- group devicetree-ranges-prop
Defines
-
DT_NUM_RANGES(node_id)
Get the number of range blocks in the ranges property.
Use this instead of DT_PROP_LEN(node_id, ranges).
Example devicetree fragment:
pcie0: pcie@0 { compatible = "pcie-controller"; reg = <0 1>; #address-cells = <3>; #size-cells = <2>; ranges = <0x1000000 0 0 0 0x3eff0000 0 0x10000>, <0x2000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x2eff0000>, <0x3000000 0x80 0 0x80 0 0x80 0>; }; other: other@1 { reg = <1 1>; ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x0 0x3eff0000 0x10000>, <0x0 0x10000000 0x0 0x10000000 0x2eff0000>; };
Example usage:
DT_NUM_RANGES(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0)) // 3 DT_NUM_RANGES(DT_NODELABEL(other)) // 2
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
-
DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(node_id, idx)
Is
idx
a valid range block index?If this returns 1, then DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx), DT_RANGES_PARENT_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx) or DT_RANGES_LENGTH_BY_IDX(node_id, idx) are valid. For DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx) the return value of DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(node_id, idx) will indicate validity. If it returns 0, it is an error to use those macros with index
idx
, including DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx).Example devicetree fragment:
pcie0: pcie@0 { compatible = "pcie-controller"; reg = <0 1>; #address-cells = <3>; #size-cells = <2>; ranges = <0x1000000 0 0 0 0x3eff0000 0 0x10000>, <0x2000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x2eff0000>, <0x3000000 0x80 0 0x80 0 0x80 0>; }; other: other@1 { reg = <1 1>; ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x0 0x3eff0000 0x10000>, <0x0 0x10000000 0x0 0x10000000 0x2eff0000>; };
Example usage:
DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 0) // 1 DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 1) // 1 DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 2) // 1 DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 3) // 0 DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 0) // 1 DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 1) // 1 DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 2) // 0 DT_RANGES_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 3) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – index to check
- Returns:
1 if
idx
is a valid register block index, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(node_id, idx)
Does a ranges property have child bus flags at index?
If this returns 1, then DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx) is valid. If it returns 0, it is an error to use this macro with index
idx
. This macro only returns 1 for PCIe buses (i.e. nodes whose bindings specify they are “pcie” bus nodes.)Example devicetree fragment:
parent { #address-cells = <2>; pcie0: pcie@0 { compatible = "pcie-controller"; reg = <0 0 1>; #address-cells = <3>; #size-cells = <2>; ranges = <0x1000000 0 0 0 0x3eff0000 0 0x10000>, <0x2000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x2eff0000>, <0x3000000 0x80 0 0x80 0 0x80 0>; }; other: other@1 { reg = <0 1 1>; ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x0 0x3eff0000 0x10000>, <0x0 0x10000000 0x0 0x10000000 0x2eff0000>; }; };
Example usage:
DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 0) // 1 DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 1) // 1 DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 2) // 1 DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 3) // 0 DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 0) // 0 DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 1) // 0 DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 2) // 0 DT_RANGES_HAS_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_AT_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 3) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into the ranges array
- Returns:
1 if
idx
is a valid child bus flags index, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the ranges property child bus flags at index.
When the node is a PCIe bus, the Child Bus Address has an extra cell used to store some flags, thus this cell is extracted from the Child Bus Address as Child Bus Flags field.
Example devicetree fragments:
parent { #address-cells = <2>; pcie0: pcie@0 { compatible = "pcie-controller"; reg = <0 0 1>; #address-cells = <3>; #size-cells = <2>; ranges = <0x1000000 0 0 0 0x3eff0000 0 0x10000>, <0x2000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x2eff0000>, <0x3000000 0x80 0 0x80 0 0x80 0>; }; };
Example usage:
DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 0) // 0x1000000 DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 1) // 0x2000000 DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 2) // 0x3000000
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into the ranges array
- Returns:
range child bus flags field at idx
-
DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the ranges property child bus address at index.
When the node is a PCIe bus, the Child Bus Address has an extra cell used to store some flags, thus this cell is removed from the Child Bus Address.
Example devicetree fragments:
parent { #address-cells = <2>; pcie0: pcie@0 { compatible = "pcie-controller"; reg = <0 0 1>; #address-cells = <3>; #size-cells = <2>; ranges = <0x1000000 0 0 0 0x3eff0000 0 0x10000>, <0x2000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x2eff0000>, <0x3000000 0x80 0 0x80 0 0x80 0>; }; other: other@1 { reg = <0 1 1>; ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x0 0x3eff0000 0x10000>, <0x0 0x10000000 0x0 0x10000000 0x2eff0000>; }; };
Example usage:
DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 0) // 0 DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 1) // 0x10000000 DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 2) // 0x8000000000 DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 0) // 0 DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 1) // 0x10000000
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into the ranges array
- Returns:
range child bus address field at idx
-
DT_RANGES_PARENT_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the ranges property parent bus address at index.
Similarly to DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(), this properly accounts for child bus flags cells when the node is a PCIe bus.
Example devicetree fragment:
parent { #address-cells = <2>; pcie0: pcie@0 { compatible = "pcie-controller"; reg = <0 0 1>; #address-cells = <3>; #size-cells = <2>; ranges = <0x1000000 0 0 0 0x3eff0000 0 0x10000>, <0x2000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x2eff0000>, <0x3000000 0x80 0 0x80 0 0x80 0>; }; other: other@1 { reg = <0 1 1>; ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x0 0x3eff0000 0x10000>, <0x0 0x10000000 0x0 0x10000000 0x2eff0000>; }; };
Example usage:
DT_RANGES_PARENT_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 0) // 0x3eff0000 DT_RANGES_PARENT_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 1) // 0x10000000 DT_RANGES_PARENT_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 2) // 0x8000000000 DT_RANGES_PARENT_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 0) // 0x3eff0000 DT_RANGES_PARENT_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 1) // 0x10000000
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into the ranges array
- Returns:
range parent bus address field at idx
-
DT_RANGES_LENGTH_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the ranges property length at index.
Similarly to DT_RANGES_CHILD_BUS_ADDRESS_BY_IDX(), this properly accounts for child bus flags cells when the node is a PCIe bus.
Example devicetree fragment:
parent { #address-cells = <2>; pcie0: pcie@0 { compatible = "pcie-controller"; reg = <0 0 1>; #address-cells = <3>; #size-cells = <2>; ranges = <0x1000000 0 0 0 0x3eff0000 0 0x10000>, <0x2000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x10000000 0 0x2eff0000>, <0x3000000 0x80 0 0x80 0 0x80 0>; }; other: other@1 { reg = <0 1 1>; ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x0 0x3eff0000 0x10000>, <0x0 0x10000000 0x0 0x10000000 0x2eff0000>; }; };
Example usage:
DT_RANGES_LENGTH_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 0) // 0x10000 DT_RANGES_LENGTH_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 1) // 0x2eff0000 DT_RANGES_LENGTH_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(pcie0), 2) // 0x8000000000 DT_RANGES_LENGTH_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 0) // 0x10000 DT_RANGES_LENGTH_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(other), 1) // 0x2eff0000
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into the ranges array
- Returns:
range length field at idx
-
DT_FOREACH_RANGE(node_id, fn)
Invokes
fn
for each entry ofnode_id
ranges property.The macro
fn
must take two parameters,node_id
which will be the node identifier of the node with the ranges property andidx
the index of the ranges block.Example devicetree fragment:
n: node@0 { reg = <0 0 1>; ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x0 0x3eff0000 0x10000>, <0x0 0x10000000 0x0 0x10000000 0x2eff0000>; };
Example usage:
#define RANGE_LENGTH(node_id, idx) DT_RANGES_LENGTH_BY_IDX(node_id, idx), const uint64_t *ranges_length[] = { DT_FOREACH_RANGE(DT_NODELABEL(n), RANGE_LENGTH) };
This expands to:
const char *ranges_length[] = { 0x10000, 0x2eff0000, };
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
-
DT_NUM_RANGES(node_id)
reg
property
Use these APIs instead of Property access to access the
reg
property. Because this property’s semantics are defined by the
devicetree specification, these macros can be used even for nodes without
matching bindings.
- group devicetree-reg-prop
Defines
-
DT_NUM_REGS(node_id)
Get the number of register blocks in the reg property.
Use this instead of DT_PROP_LEN(node_id, reg).
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
Number of register blocks in the node’s “reg” property.
-
DT_REG_HAS_IDX(node_id, idx)
Is
idx
a valid register block index?If this returns 1, then DT_REG_ADDR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx) or DT_REG_SIZE_BY_IDX(node_id, idx) are valid. If it returns 0, it is an error to use those macros with index
idx
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – index to check
- Returns:
1 if
idx
is a valid register block index, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_REG_HAS_NAME(node_id, name)
Is
name
a valid register block name?If this returns 1, then DT_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME(node_id, name) or DT_REG_SIZE_BY_NAME(node_id, name) are valid. If it returns 0, it is an error to use those macros with name
name
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – name to check
- Returns:
1 if
name
is a valid register block name, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_REG_ADDR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the base address of the register block at index
idx
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – index of the register whose address to return
- Returns:
address of the idx-th register block
-
DT_REG_SIZE_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the size of the register block at index
idx
.This is the size of an individual register block, not the total number of register blocks in the property; use DT_NUM_REGS() for that.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – index of the register whose size to return
- Returns:
size of the idx-th register block
-
DT_REG_ADDR(node_id)
Get a node’s (only) register block address.
Equivalent to DT_REG_ADDR_BY_IDX(node_id, 0).
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
node’s register block address
-
DT_REG_ADDR_U64(node_id)
64-bit version of DT_REG_ADDR()
This macro version adds the appropriate suffix for 64-bit unsigned integer literals. Note that this macro is equivalent to DT_REG_ADDR() in linker/ASM context.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
node’s register block address
-
DT_REG_SIZE(node_id)
Get a node’s (only) register block size.
Equivalent to DT_REG_SIZE_BY_IDX(node_id, 0).
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
node’s only register block’s size
-
DT_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get a register block’s base address by name.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
- Returns:
address of the register block specified by name
-
DT_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME_OR(node_id, name, default_value)
Like DT_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
address of the register block specified by name if present,
default_value
otherwise
-
DT_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME_U64(node_id, name)
64-bit version of DT_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME()
This macro version adds the appropriate suffix for 64-bit unsigned integer literals. Note that this macro is equivalent to DT_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME() in linker/ASM context.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
- Returns:
address of the register block specified by name
-
DT_REG_SIZE_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get a register block’s size by name.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
- Returns:
size of the register block specified by name
-
DT_REG_SIZE_BY_NAME_OR(node_id, name, default_value)
Like DT_REG_SIZE_BY_NAME(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
size of the register block specified by name if present,
default_value
otherwise
-
DT_NUM_REGS(node_id)
interrupts
property
Use these APIs instead of Property access to access the
interrupts
property.
Because this property’s semantics are defined by the devicetree specification, some of these macros can be used even for nodes without matching bindings. This does not apply to macros which take cell names as arguments.
- group devicetree-interrupts-prop
Defines
-
DT_NUM_IRQS(node_id)
Get the number of interrupt sources for the node.
Use this instead of DT_PROP_LEN(node_id, interrupts).
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
Number of interrupt specifiers in the node’s “interrupts” property.
-
DT_NUM_NODELABELS(node_id)
Get the number of node labels that a node has.
Example devicetree fragment:
/ { foo {}; bar: bar@1000 {}; baz: baz2: baz@2000 {}; };
Example usage:
DT_NUM_NODELABELS(DT_PATH(foo)) // 0 DT_NUM_NODELABELS(DT_NODELABEL(bar)) // 1 DT_NUM_NODELABELS(DT_NODELABEL(baz)) // 2
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
number of node labels that the node has
-
DT_IRQ_LEVEL(node_id)
Get the interrupt level for the node.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
interrupt level
-
DT_IRQ_HAS_IDX(node_id, idx)
Is
idx
a valid interrupt index?If this returns 1, then DT_IRQ_BY_IDX(node_id, idx) is valid. If it returns 0, it is an error to use that macro with this index.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – index to check
- Returns:
1 if the idx is valid for the interrupt property 0 otherwise.
-
DT_IRQ_HAS_CELL_AT_IDX(node_id, idx, cell)
Does an interrupts property have a named cell specifier at an index? If this returns 1, then DT_IRQ_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, cell) is valid.
If it returns 0, it is an error to use that macro.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – index to check
cell – named cell value whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the named cell exists in the interrupt specifier at index idx 0 otherwise.
-
DT_IRQ_HAS_CELL(node_id, cell)
Equivalent to DT_IRQ_HAS_CELL_AT_IDX(node_id, 0, cell)
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
cell – named cell value whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the named cell exists in the interrupt specifier at index 0 0 otherwise.
-
DT_IRQ_HAS_NAME(node_id, name)
Does an interrupts property have a named specifier value at an index? If this returns 1, then DT_IRQ_BY_NAME(node_id, name, cell) is valid.
If it returns 0, it is an error to use that macro.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores interrupt specifier name
- Returns:
1 if “name” is a valid named specifier 0 otherwise.
-
DT_IRQ_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, cell)
Get a value within an interrupt specifier at an index.
It might help to read the argument order as being similar to “node->interrupts[index].cell”.
This can be used to get information about an individual interrupt when a device generates more than one.
Example devicetree fragment:
my-serial: serial@abcd1234 { interrupts = < 33 0 >, < 34 1 >; };
Assuming the node’s interrupt domain has “#interrupt-cells = <2>;” and the individual cells in each interrupt specifier are named “irq” and “priority” by the node’s binding, here are some examples:
#define SERIAL DT_NODELABEL(my_serial) Example usage Value ------------- ----- DT_IRQ_BY_IDX(SERIAL, 0, irq) 33 DT_IRQ_BY_IDX(SERIAL, 0, priority) 0 DT_IRQ_BY_IDX(SERIAL, 1, irq, 34 DT_IRQ_BY_IDX(SERIAL, 1, priority) 1
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into the interrupt specifier array
cell – cell name specifier
- Returns:
the named value at the specifier given by the index
-
DT_IRQ_BY_NAME(node_id, name, cell)
Get a value within an interrupt specifier by name.
It might help to read the argument order as being similar to
node->interrupts.name.cell
.This can be used to get information about an individual interrupt when a device generates more than one, if the bindings give each interrupt specifier a name.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores interrupt specifier name
cell – cell name specifier
- Returns:
the named value at the specifier given by the index
-
DT_IRQ(node_id, cell)
Get an interrupt specifier’s value Equivalent to DT_IRQ_BY_IDX(node_id, 0, cell).
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
cell – cell name specifier
- Returns:
the named value at that index
-
DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get an interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller by index.
gpio0: gpio0 { interrupt-controller; #interrupt-cells = <2>; }; foo: foo { interrupt-parent = <&gpio0>; interrupts = <1 1>, <2 2>; }; bar: bar { interrupts-extended = <&gpio0 3 3>, <&pic0 4>; }; pic0: pic0 { interrupt-controller; #interrupt-cells = <1>; qux: qux { interrupts = <5>, <6>; interrupt-names = "int1", "int2"; }; };
Example usage:
DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(foo), 0) // &gpio0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(foo), 1) // &gpio0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(bar), 0) // &gpio0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(bar), 1) // &pic0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(qux), 0) // &pic0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(qux), 1) // &pic0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – interrupt specifier’s index
- Returns:
node_id of interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller
-
DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get an interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller by name.
gpio0: gpio0 { interrupt-controller; #interrupt-cells = <2>; }; foo: foo { interrupt-parent = <&gpio0>; interrupts = <1 1>, <2 2>; interrupt-names = "int1", "int2"; }; bar: bar { interrupts-extended = <&gpio0 3 3>, <&pic0 4>; interrupt-names = "int1", "int2"; }; pic0: pic0 { interrupt-controller; #interrupt-cells = <1>; qux: qux { interrupts = <5>, <6>; interrupt-names = "int1", "int2"; }; };
Example usage:
DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(foo), int1) // &gpio0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(foo), int2) // &gpio0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(bar), int1) // &gpio0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(bar), int2) // &pic0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(qux), int1) // &pic0 DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(qux), int2) // &pic0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – interrupt specifier’s name
- Returns:
node_id of interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller
-
DT_IRQ_INTC(node_id)
Get an interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller.
gpio0: gpio0 { interrupt-controller; #interrupt-cells = <2>; }; foo: foo { interrupt-parent = <&gpio0>; interrupts = <1 1>; }; bar: bar { interrupts-extended = <&gpio0 3 3>; }; pic0: pic0 { interrupt-controller; #interrupt-cells = <1>; qux: qux { interrupts = <5>; }; };
Example usage:
DT_IRQ_INTC(DT_NODELABEL(foo)) // &gpio0 DT_IRQ_INTC(DT_NODELABEL(bar)) // &gpio0 DT_IRQ_INTC(DT_NODELABEL(qux)) // &pic0
See also
Note
Equivalent to DT_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
node_id of interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller
-
DT_IRQN_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the node’s Zephyr interrupt number at index If
CONFIG_MULTI_LEVEL_INTERRUPTS
is enabled, the interrupt number at index will be multi-level encoded.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into the interrupt specifier array
- Returns:
the Zephyr interrupt number
-
DT_IRQN(node_id)
Get a node’s (only) irq number.
Equivalent to DT_IRQ(node_id, irq). This is provided as a convenience for the common case where a node generates exactly one interrupt, and the IRQ number is in a cell named
irq
.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
the interrupt number for the node’s only interrupt
-
DT_NUM_IRQS(node_id)
For-each macros
There is currently only one “generic” for-each macro,
DT_FOREACH_CHILD()
, which allows iterating over the children of a
devicetree node.
There are special-purpose for-each macros, like
DT_INST_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY()
, but these require DT_DRV_COMPAT
to
be defined before use.
- group devicetree-generic-foreach
Defines
-
DT_FOREACH_NODE(fn)
Invokes
fn
for every node in the tree.The macro
fn
must take one parameter, which will be a node identifier. The macro is expanded once for each node in the tree. The order that nodes are visited in is not specified.- Parameters:
fn – macro to invoke
-
DT_FOREACH_NODE_VARGS(fn, ...)
Invokes
fn
for every node in the tree with multiple arguments.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.The macro is expanded once for each node in the tree. The order that nodes are visited in is not specified.
- Parameters:
fn – macro to invoke
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY_NODE(fn)
Invokes
fn
for every statusokay
node in the tree.The macro
fn
must take one parameter, which will be a node identifier. The macro is expanded once for each node in the tree with statusokay
(as usual, a missing status property is treated as statusokay
). The order that nodes are visited in is not specified.- Parameters:
fn – macro to invoke
-
DT_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY_NODE_VARGS(fn, ...)
Invokes
fn
for every statusokay
node in the tree with multiple arguments.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.The macro is expanded once for each node in the tree with status
okay
(as usual, a missing status property is treated as statusokay
). The order that nodes are visited in is not specified.- Parameters:
fn – macro to invoke
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_CHILD(node_id, fn)
Invokes
fn
for each child ofnode_id
.The macro
fn
must take one parameter, which will be the node identifier of a child node ofnode_id
.The children will be iterated over in the same order as they appear in the final devicetree.
Example devicetree fragment:
n: node { child-1 { foobar = "foo"; }; child-2 { foobar = "bar"; }; };
Example usage:
#define FOOBAR_AND_COMMA(node_id) DT_PROP(node_id, foobar), const char *child_foobars[] = { DT_FOREACH_CHILD(DT_NODELABEL(n), FOOBAR_AND_COMMA) };
This expands to:
const char *child_foobars[] = { "foo", "bar", };
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
-
DT_FOREACH_CHILD_SEP(node_id, fn, sep)
Invokes
fn
for each child ofnode_id
with a separator.The macro
fn
must take one parameter, which will be the node identifier of a child node ofnode_id
.Example devicetree fragment:
n: node { child-1 { ... }; child-2 { ... }; };
Example usage:
const char *child_names[] = { DT_FOREACH_CHILD_SEP(DT_NODELABEL(n), DT_NODE_FULL_NAME, (,)) };
This expands to:
const char *child_names[] = { "child-1", "child-2" };
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
-
DT_FOREACH_CHILD_VARGS(node_id, fn, ...)
Invokes
fn
for each child ofnode_id
with multiple arguments.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the child node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.The children will be iterated over in the same order as they appear in the final devicetree.
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_CHILD_SEP_VARGS(node_id, fn, sep, ...)
Invokes
fn
for each child ofnode_id
with separator and multiple arguments.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the child node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_CHILD_STATUS_OKAY(node_id, fn)
Call
fn
on the child nodes with statusokay
The macro
fn
should take one argument, which is the node identifier for the child node.As usual, both a missing status and an
ok
status are treated asokay
.The children will be iterated over in the same order as they appear in the final devicetree.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
-
DT_FOREACH_CHILD_STATUS_OKAY_SEP(node_id, fn, sep)
Call
fn
on the child nodes with statusokay
with separator.The macro
fn
should take one argument, which is the node identifier for the child node.As usual, both a missing status and an
ok
status are treated asokay
.See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
-
DT_FOREACH_CHILD_STATUS_OKAY_VARGS(node_id, fn, ...)
Call
fn
on the child nodes with statusokay
with multiple arguments.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the child node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.As usual, both a missing status and an
ok
status are treated asokay
.The children will be iterated over in the same order as they appear in the final devicetree.
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_CHILD_STATUS_OKAY_SEP_VARGS(node_id, fn, sep, ...)
Call
fn
on the child nodes with statusokay
with separator and multiple arguments.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the child node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.As usual, both a missing status and an
ok
status are treated asokay
.See also
DT_FOREACH_CHILD_SEP_STATUS_OKAY
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
fn – macro to invoke
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM(node_id, prop, fn)
Invokes
fn
for each element in the value of propertyprop
.The macro
fn
must take three parameters: fn(node_id, prop, idx).node_id
andprop
are the same as what is passed to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM(), andidx
is the current index into the array. Theidx
values are integer literals starting from 0.The
prop
argument must refer to a property that can be passed to DT_PROP_LEN().Example devicetree fragment:
n: node { my-ints = <1 2 3>; };
Example usage:
#define TIMES_TWO(node_id, prop, idx) \ (2 * DT_PROP_BY_IDX(node_id, prop, idx)), int array[] = { DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM(DT_NODELABEL(n), my_ints, TIMES_TWO) };
This expands to:
int array[] = { (2 * 1), (2 * 2), (2 * 3), };
In general, this macro expands to:
wherefn(node_id, prop, 0) fn(node_id, prop, 1) [...] fn(node_id, prop, n-1)
n
is the number of elements inprop
, as it would be returned byDT_PROP_LEN(node_id, prop)
.See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
fn – macro to invoke
-
DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_SEP(node_id, prop, fn, sep)
Invokes
fn
for each element in the value of propertyprop
with separator.Example devicetree fragment:
n: node { my-gpios = <&gpioa 0 GPIO_ACTICE_HIGH>, <&gpiob 1 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; };
Example usage:
struct gpio_dt_spec specs[] = { DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_SEP(DT_NODELABEL(n), my_gpios, GPIO_DT_SPEC_GET_BY_IDX, (,)) };
This expands as a first step to:
struct gpio_dt_spec specs[] = { GPIO_DT_SPEC_GET_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), my_gpios, 0), GPIO_DT_SPEC_GET_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), my_gpios, 1) };
The
prop
parameter has the same restrictions as the same parameter given to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM().See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
fn – macro to invoke
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
-
DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_VARGS(node_id, prop, fn, ...)
Invokes
fn
for each element in the value of propertyprop
with multiple arguments.The macro
fn
must take multiple parameters:fn(node_id, prop, idx, ...)
.node_id
andprop
are the same as what is passed to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM(), andidx
is the current index into the array. Theidx
values are integer literals starting from 0. The remaining arguments are passed-in by the caller.The
prop
parameter has the same restrictions as the same parameter given to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM().See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
fn – macro to invoke
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_SEP_VARGS(node_id, prop, fn, sep, ...)
Invokes
fn
for each element in the value of propertyprop
with multiple arguments and a separator.The
prop
parameter has the same restrictions as the same parameter given to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM().See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
fn – macro to invoke
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
... – variable number of arguments to pass to fn
-
DT_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY(compat, fn)
Invokes
fn
for each statusokay
node of a compatible.This macro expands to:
where eachfn(node_id_1) fn(node_id_2) ... fn(node_id_n)
node_id_<i>
is a node identifier for some node with compatiblecompat
and statusokay
. Whitespace is added between expansions as shown above.Example devicetree fragment:
/ { a { compatible = "foo"; status = "okay"; }; b { compatible = "foo"; status = "disabled"; }; c { compatible = "foo"; }; };
Example usage:
DT_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY(foo, DT_NODE_PATH)
This expands to one of the following:
“One of the following” is because no guarantees are made about the order that node identifiers are passed to"/a" "/c" "/c" "/a"
fn
in the expansion.(The
/c
string literal is present because a missing status property is always treated as if the status were set tookay
.)Note also that
fn
is responsible for adding commas, semicolons, or other terminators as needed.- Parameters:
compat – lowercase-and-underscores devicetree compatible
fn – Macro to call for each enabled node. Must accept a node_id as its only parameter.
-
DT_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY_VARGS(compat, fn, ...)
Invokes
fn
for each statusokay
node of a compatible with multiple arguments.This is like DT_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY() except you can also pass additional arguments to
fn
.Example devicetree fragment:
/ { a { compatible = "foo"; val = <3>; }; b { compatible = "foo"; val = <4>; }; };
Example usage:
#define MY_FN(node_id, operator) DT_PROP(node_id, val) operator x = DT_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY_VARGS(foo, MY_FN, +) 0;
This expands to one of the following:
x = 3 + 4 + 0; x = 4 + 3 + 0;
i.e. it sets
x
to 7. As with DT_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY(), there are no guarantees about the order nodes appear in the expansion.- Parameters:
compat – lowercase-and-underscores devicetree compatible
fn – Macro to call for each enabled node. Must accept a node_id as its only parameter.
... – Additional arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_NODELABEL(node_id, fn)
Invokes
fn
for each node label of a given node.The order of the node labels in this macro’s expansion matches the order in the final devicetree, with duplicates removed.
Node labels are passed to
fn
as tokens. Note that devicetree node labels are always valid C tokens (see “6.2 Labels” in Devicetree Specification v0.4 for details). The node labels are passed as tokens tofn
as-is, without any lowercasing or conversion of special characters to underscores.Example devicetree fragment:
foo: bar: FOO: node@deadbeef {};
Example usage:
int foo = 1; int bar = 2; int FOO = 3; #define FN(nodelabel) + nodelabel int sum = 0 DT_FOREACH_NODELABEL(DT_NODELABEL(foo), FN)
This expands to:
int sum = 0 + 1 + 2 + 3;
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier whose node labels to use
fn – macro which will be passed each node label in order
-
DT_FOREACH_NODELABEL_VARGS(node_id, fn, ...)
Invokes
fn
for each node label of a given node with multiple arguments.This is like DT_FOREACH_NODELABEL() except you can also pass additional arguments to
fn
.Example devicetree fragment:
foo: bar: node@deadbeef {};
Example usage:
int foo = 0; int bar = 1; #define VAR_PLUS(nodelabel, to_add) int nodelabel ## _added = nodelabel + to_add; DT_FOREACH_NODELABEL_VARGS(DT_NODELABEL(foo), VAR_PLUS, 1)
This expands to:
int foo = 0; int bar = 1; int foo_added = foo + 1; int bar_added = bar + 1;
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier whose node labels to use
fn – macro which will be passed each node label in order
... – additional arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_FOREACH_NODE(fn)
Existence checks
This section documents miscellaneous macros that can be used to test if a node
exists, how many nodes of a certain type exist, whether a node has certain
properties, etc. Some macros used for special purposes (such as
DT_IRQ_HAS_IDX()
and all macros which require DT_DRV_COMPAT
) are
documented elsewhere on this page.
- group devicetree-generic-exist
Defines
-
DT_NODE_EXISTS(node_id)
Does a node identifier refer to a node?
Tests whether a node identifier refers to a node which exists, i.e. is defined in the devicetree.
It doesn’t matter whether or not the node has a matching binding, or what the node’s status value is. This is purely a check of whether the node exists at all.
- Parameters:
node_id – a node identifier
- Returns:
1 if the node identifier refers to a node, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_NODE_HAS_STATUS(node_id, status)
Does a node identifier refer to a node with a status?
Example uses:
DT_NODE_HAS_STATUS(DT_PATH(soc, i2c_12340000), okay) DT_NODE_HAS_STATUS(DT_PATH(soc, i2c_12340000), disabled)
Tests whether a node identifier refers to a node which:
exists in the devicetree, and
has a status property matching the second argument (except that either a missing status or an
ok
status in the devicetree is treated as if it wereokay
instead)
- Parameters:
node_id – a node identifier
status – a status as one of the tokens okay or disabled, not a string
- Returns:
1 if the node has the given status, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_HAS_COMPAT_STATUS_OKAY(compat)
Does the devicetree have a status
okay
node with a compatible?Test for whether the devicetree has any nodes with status
okay
and the given compatible. That is, this returns 1 if and only if there is at least onenode_id
for which both of these expressions return 1:DT_NODE_HAS_STATUS(node_id, okay) DT_NODE_HAS_COMPAT(node_id, compat)
As usual, both a missing status and an
ok
status are treated asokay
.- Parameters:
compat – lowercase-and-underscores compatible, without quotes
- Returns:
1 if both of the above conditions are met, 0 otherwise
-
DT_NUM_INST_STATUS_OKAY(compat)
Get the number of instances of a given compatible with status
okay
- Parameters:
compat – lowercase-and-underscores compatible, without quotes
- Returns:
Number of instances with status
okay
-
DT_NODE_HAS_COMPAT(node_id, compat)
Does a devicetree node match a compatible?
Example devicetree fragment:
n: node { compatible = "vnd,specific-device", "generic-device"; }
Example usages which evaluate to 1:
DT_NODE_HAS_COMPAT(DT_NODELABEL(n), vnd_specific_device) DT_NODE_HAS_COMPAT(DT_NODELABEL(n), generic_device)
This macro only uses the value of the compatible property. Whether or not a particular compatible has a matching binding has no effect on its value, nor does the node’s status.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
compat – lowercase-and-underscores compatible, without quotes
- Returns:
1 if the node’s compatible property contains
compat
, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_NODE_HAS_COMPAT_STATUS(node_id, compat, status)
Does a devicetree node have a compatible and status?
This is equivalent to:
(DT_NODE_HAS_COMPAT(node_id, compat) && DT_NODE_HAS_STATUS(node_id, status))
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
compat – lowercase-and-underscores compatible, without quotes
status – okay or disabled as a token, not a string
-
DT_NODE_HAS_PROP(node_id, prop)
Does a devicetree node have a property?
Tests whether a devicetree node has a property defined.
This tests whether the property is defined at all, not whether a boolean property is true or false. To get a boolean property’s truth value, use DT_PROP(node_id, prop) instead.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
1 if the node has the property, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_PHA_HAS_CELL_AT_IDX(node_id, pha, idx, cell)
Does a phandle array have a named cell specifier at an index?
If this returns 1, then the phandle-array property
pha
has a cell namedcell
at indexidx
, and therefore DT_PHA_BY_IDX(node_id,pha, idx, cell) is valid. If it returns 0, it’s an error to use DT_PHA_BY_IDX() with the same arguments.- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
idx – index to check within
pha
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name whose existence to check at index
idx
- Returns:
1 if the named cell exists in the specifier at index idx, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_PHA_HAS_CELL(node_id, pha, cell)
Equivalent to DT_PHA_HAS_CELL_AT_IDX(node_id, pha, 0, cell)
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name whose existence to check at index
idx
- Returns:
1 if the named cell exists in the specifier at index 0, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_NODE_EXISTS(node_id)
Inter-node dependencies
The devicetree.h
API has some support for tracking dependencies between
nodes. Dependency tracking relies on a binary “depends on” relation between
devicetree nodes, which is defined as the transitive closure of the following “directly
depends on” relation:
every non-root node directly depends on its parent node
a node directly depends on any nodes its properties refer to by phandle
a node directly depends on its
interrupt-parent
if it has aninterrupts
propertya parent node inherits all dependencies from its child nodes
A dependency ordering of a devicetree is a list of its nodes, where each node
n
appears earlier in the list than any nodes that depend on n
. A node’s
dependency ordinal is then its zero-based index in that list. Thus, for two
distinct devicetree nodes n1
and n2
with dependency ordinals d1
and
d2
, we have:
d1 != d2
if
n1
depends onn2
, thend1 > d2
d1 > d2
does not necessarily imply thatn1
depends onn2
The Zephyr build system chooses a dependency ordering of the final devicetree and assigns a dependency ordinal to each node. Dependency related information can be accessed using the following macros. The exact dependency ordering chosen is an implementation detail, but cyclic dependencies are detected and cause errors, so it’s safe to assume there are none when using these macros.
There are instance number-based conveniences as well; see
DT_INST_DEP_ORD()
and subsequent documentation.
- group devicetree-dep-ord
Defines
-
DT_DEP_ORD(node_id)
Get a node’s dependency ordinal.
- Parameters:
node_id – Node identifier
- Returns:
the node’s dependency ordinal as an integer literal
-
DT_DEP_ORD_STR_SORTABLE(node_id)
Get a node’s dependency ordinal in string sortable form.
- Parameters:
node_id – Node identifier
- Returns:
the node’s dependency ordinal as a zero-padded integer literal
-
DT_REQUIRES_DEP_ORDS(node_id)
Get a list of dependency ordinals of a node’s direct dependencies.
There is a comma after each ordinal in the expansion, including the last one:
The one case DT_REQUIRES_DEP_ORDS() expands to nothing is when given the root node identifierDT_REQUIRES_DEP_ORDS(my_node) // required_ord_1, ..., required_ord_n,
DT_ROOT
as argument. The root has no direct dependencies; every other node at least depends on its parent.- Parameters:
node_id – Node identifier
- Returns:
a list of dependency ordinals, with each ordinal followed by a comma (
,
), or an empty expansion
-
DT_SUPPORTS_DEP_ORDS(node_id)
Get a list of dependency ordinals of what depends directly on a node.
There is a comma after each ordinal in the expansion, including the last one:
DT_SUPPORTS_DEP_ORDS() may expand to nothing. This happens whenDT_SUPPORTS_DEP_ORDS(my_node) // supported_ord_1, ..., supported_ord_n,
node_id
refers to a leaf node that nothing else depends on.- Parameters:
node_id – Node identifier
- Returns:
a list of dependency ordinals, with each ordinal followed by a comma (
,
), or an empty expansion
-
DT_INST_DEP_ORD(inst)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s dependency ordinal.
Equivalent to DT_DEP_ORD(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
The instance’s dependency ordinal
-
DT_INST_REQUIRES_DEP_ORDS(inst)
Get a list of dependency ordinals of a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s direct dependencies.
Equivalent to DT_REQUIRES_DEP_ORDS(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
a list of dependency ordinals for the nodes the instance depends on directly
-
DT_INST_SUPPORTS_DEP_ORDS(inst)
Get a list of dependency ordinals of what depends directly on a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance.
Equivalent to DT_SUPPORTS_DEP_ORDS(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
a list of node identifiers for the nodes that depend directly on the instance
-
DT_DEP_ORD(node_id)
Bus helpers
Zephyr’s devicetree bindings language supports a bus:
key which allows
bindings to declare that nodes with a given compatible describe system buses.
In this case, child nodes are considered to be on a bus of the given type, and
the following APIs may be used.
- group devicetree-generic-bus
Defines
-
DT_BUS(node_id)
Node’s bus controller.
Get the node identifier of the node’s bus controller. This can be used with DT_PROP() to get properties of the bus controller.
It is an error to use this with nodes which do not have bus controllers.
Example devicetree fragment:
i2c@deadbeef { status = "okay"; clock-frequency = < 100000 >; i2c_device: accelerometer@12 { ... }; };
Example usage:
DT_PROP(DT_BUS(DT_NODELABEL(i2c_device)), clock_frequency) // 100000
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
a node identifier for the node’s bus controller
-
DT_ON_BUS(node_id, bus)
Is a node on a bus of a given type?
Example devicetree overlay:
&i2c0 { temp: temperature-sensor@76 { compatible = "vnd,some-sensor"; reg = <0x76>; }; };
Example usage, assuming
i2c0
is an I2C bus controller node, and thereforetemp
is on an I2C bus:DT_ON_BUS(DT_NODELABEL(temp), i2c) // 1 DT_ON_BUS(DT_NODELABEL(temp), spi) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
bus – lowercase-and-underscores bus type as a C token (i.e. without quotes)
- Returns:
1 if the node is on a bus of the given type, 0 otherwise
-
DT_BUS(node_id)
Instance-based APIs
These are recommended for use within device drivers. To use them, define
DT_DRV_COMPAT
to the lowercase-and-underscores compatible the device driver
implements support for. Here is an example devicetree fragment:
serial@40001000 {
compatible = "vnd,serial";
status = "okay";
current-speed = <115200>;
};
Example usage, assuming serial@40001000
is the only enabled node
with compatible vnd,serial
:
#define DT_DRV_COMPAT vnd_serial
DT_DRV_INST(0) // node identifier for serial@40001000
DT_INST_PROP(0, current_speed) // 115200
Warning
Be careful making assumptions about instance numbers. See DT_INST()
for the API guarantees.
As shown above, the DT_INST_*
APIs are conveniences for addressing nodes by
instance number. They are almost all defined in terms of one of the
Generic APIs. The equivalent generic API can be found by
removing INST_
from the macro name. For example, DT_INST_PROP(inst,
prop)
is equivalent to DT_PROP(DT_DRV_INST(inst), prop)
. Similarly,
DT_INST_REG_ADDR(inst)
is equivalent to DT_REG_ADDR(DT_DRV_INST(inst))
,
and so on. There are some exceptions: DT_ANY_INST_ON_BUS_STATUS_OKAY()
and DT_INST_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY()
are special-purpose helpers without
straightforward generic equivalents.
Since DT_DRV_INST()
requires DT_DRV_COMPAT
to be defined, it’s an error
to use any of these without that macro defined.
Note that there are also helpers available for specific hardware; these are documented in Hardware specific APIs.
- group devicetree-inst
Defines
-
DT_DRV_INST(inst)
Node identifier for an instance of a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
compatible.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
a node identifier for the node with
DT_DRV_COMPAT
compatible and instance numberinst
-
DT_INST_PARENT(inst)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
parent’s node identifier.See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
a node identifier for the instance’s parent
-
DT_INST_GPARENT(inst)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
grandparent’s node identifier.See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
a node identifier for the instance’s grandparent
-
DT_INST_CHILD(inst, child)
Get a node identifier for a child node of DT_DRV_INST(inst)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
child – lowercase-and-underscores child node name
- Returns:
node identifier for the node with the name referred to by ‘child’
-
DT_INST_CHILD_NUM(inst)
Get the number of child nodes of a given node.
This is equivalent to
See also
- Parameters:
inst – Devicetree instance number
- Returns:
Number of child nodes
-
DT_INST_CHILD_NUM_STATUS_OKAY(inst)
Get the number of child nodes of a given node.
This is equivalent to
- Parameters:
inst – Devicetree instance number
- Returns:
Number of child nodes which status are okay
-
DT_INST_NODELABEL_STRING_ARRAY(inst)
Get a string array of DT_DRV_INST(inst)’s node labels.
Equivalent to DT_NODELABEL_STRING_ARRAY(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
an array initializer for an array of the instance’s node labels as strings
-
DT_INST_NUM_NODELABELS(inst)
Get the number of node labels by instance number.
Equivalent to DT_NUM_NODELABELS(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
the number of node labels that the node with that instance number has
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_CHILD(inst, fn)
Call
fn
on all child nodes of DT_DRV_INST(inst).The macro
fn
should take one argument, which is the node identifier for the child node.The children will be iterated over in the same order as they appear in the final devicetree.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro to invoke on each child node identifier
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_CHILD_SEP(inst, fn, sep)
Call
fn
on all child nodes of DT_DRV_INST(inst) with a separator.The macro
fn
should take one argument, which is the node identifier for the child node.See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro to invoke on each child node identifier
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_CHILD_VARGS(inst, fn, ...)
Call
fn
on all child nodes of DT_DRV_INST(inst).The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the child node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.The children will be iterated over in the same order as they appear in the final devicetree.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro to invoke on each child node identifier
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_CHILD_SEP_VARGS(inst, fn, sep, ...)
Call
fn
on all child nodes of DT_DRV_INST(inst) with separator.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the child node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro to invoke on each child node identifier
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_CHILD_STATUS_OKAY(inst, fn)
Call
fn
on all child nodes of DT_DRV_INST(inst) with statusokay
.The macro
fn
should take one argument, which is the node identifier for the child node.See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro to invoke on each child node identifier
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_CHILD_STATUS_OKAY_SEP(inst, fn, sep)
Call
fn
on all child nodes of DT_DRV_INST(inst) with statusokay
and with separator.The macro
fn
should take one argument, which is the node identifier for the child node.See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro to invoke on each child node identifier
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_CHILD_STATUS_OKAY_VARGS(inst, fn, ...)
Call
fn
on all child nodes of DT_DRV_INST(inst) with statusokay
and multiple arguments.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the child node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro to invoke on each child node identifier
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_CHILD_STATUS_OKAY_SEP_VARGS(inst, fn, sep, ...)
Call
fn
on all child nodes of DT_DRV_INST(inst) with statusokay
and with separator and multiple arguments.The macro
fn
takes multiple arguments. The first should be the node identifier for the child node. The remaining are passed-in by the caller.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro to invoke on each child node identifier
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_INST_ENUM_IDX(inst, prop)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
value’s index into its enumeration values.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
zero-based index of the property’s value in its enum: list
-
DT_INST_ENUM_IDX_OR(inst, prop, default_idx_value)
Like DT_INST_ENUM_IDX(), but with a fallback to a default enum index.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_idx_value – a fallback index value to expand to
- Returns:
zero-based index of the property’s value in its enum if present, default_idx_value otherwise
-
DT_INST_ENUM_HAS_VALUE(inst, prop, value)
Does a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
enumeration property have a given value?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
value – lowercase-and-underscores enumeration value
- Returns:
1 if the node property has the value value, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_PROP(inst, prop)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance property.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
a representation of the property’s value
-
DT_INST_PROP_LEN(inst, prop)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
property length.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
logical length of the property
-
DT_INST_PROP_HAS_IDX(inst, prop, idx)
Is index
idx
valid for an array type property on aDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – index to check
- Returns:
1 if
idx
is a valid index into the given property, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_PROP_HAS_NAME(inst, prop, name)
Is name
name
available in afoo-names
property?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – a lowercase-and-underscores
prop-names
type propertyname – a lowercase-and-underscores name to check
- Returns:
An expression which evaluates to 1 if
name
is an available name into the given property, and 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_PROP_BY_IDX(inst, prop, idx)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
element value in an array property.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – the index to get
- Returns:
a representation of the idx-th element of the property
-
DT_INST_PROP_OR(inst, prop, default_value)
Like DT_INST_PROP(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
DT_INST_PROP(inst, prop) or
default_value
-
DT_INST_PROP_LEN_OR(inst, prop, default_value)
Like DT_INST_PROP_LEN(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
DT_INST_PROP_LEN(inst, prop) or
default_value
-
DT_INST_STRING_TOKEN(inst, prop)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s string property’s value as a token.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
the value of
prop
as a token, i.e. without any quotes and with special characters converted to underscores
-
DT_INST_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN(inst, prop)
Like DT_INST_STRING_TOKEN(), but uppercased.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
the value of
prop
as an uppercased token, i.e. without any quotes and with special characters converted to underscores
-
DT_INST_STRING_UNQUOTED(inst, prop)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s string property’s value as an unquoted sequence of tokens.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
the value of
prop
as a sequence of tokens, with no quotes
-
DT_INST_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX(inst, prop, idx)
Get an element out of string-array property as a token.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – the index to get
- Returns:
the element in
prop
at indexidx
as a token
-
DT_INST_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_BY_IDX(inst, prop, idx)
Like DT_INST_STRING_TOKEN_BY_IDX(), but uppercased.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – the index to get
- Returns:
the element in
prop
at indexidx
as an uppercased token
-
DT_INST_STRING_UNQUOTED_BY_IDX(inst, prop, idx)
Get an element out of string-array property as an unquoted sequence of tokens.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
idx – the index to get
- Returns:
the value of
prop
at indexidx
as a sequence of tokens, with no quotes
-
DT_INST_PROP_BY_PHANDLE(inst, ph, prop)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s property value from a phandle’s node.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
ph – lowercase-and-underscores property of
inst
with typephandle
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property of the phandle’s node
- Returns:
the value of
prop
as described in the DT_PROP() documentation
-
DT_INST_PROP_BY_PHANDLE_IDX(inst, phs, idx, prop)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s property value from a phandle in a property.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
phs – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle
,phandles
, orphandle-array
idx – logical index into “phs”, which must be zero if “phs” has type
phandle
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property of the phandle’s node
- Returns:
the value of
prop
as described in the DT_PROP() documentation
-
DT_INST_PHA_BY_IDX(inst, pha, idx, cell)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s phandle-array specifier value at an index.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
idx – logical index into the property
pha
cell – binding’s cell name within the specifier at index
idx
- Returns:
the value of the cell inside the specifier at index
idx
-
DT_INST_PHA_BY_IDX_OR(inst, pha, idx, cell, default_value)
Like DT_INST_PHA_BY_IDX(), but with a fallback to default_value.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
idx – logical index into the property
pha
cell – binding’s cell name within the specifier at index
idx
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
DT_INST_PHA_BY_IDX(inst, pha, idx, cell) or default_value
-
DT_INST_PHA(inst, pha, cell)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s phandle-array specifier value Equivalent to DT_INST_PHA_BY_IDX(inst, pha, 0, cell)- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
cell – binding’s cell name for the specifier at
pha
index 0
- Returns:
the cell value
-
DT_INST_PHA_OR(inst, pha, cell, default_value)
Like DT_INST_PHA(), but with a fallback to default_value.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
cell – binding’s cell name for the specifier at
pha
index 0default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
DT_INST_PHA(inst, pha, cell) or default_value
-
DT_INST_PHA_BY_NAME(inst, pha, name, cell)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s value within a phandle-array specifier by name.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a specifier in
pha
cell – binding’s cell name for the named specifier
- Returns:
the cell value
-
DT_INST_PHA_BY_NAME_OR(inst, pha, name, cell, default_value)
Like DT_INST_PHA_BY_NAME(), but with a fallback to default_value.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a specifier in
pha
cell – binding’s cell name for the named specifier
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
DT_INST_PHA_BY_NAME(inst, pha, name, cell) or default_value
-
DT_INST_PHANDLE_BY_NAME(inst, pha, name)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s phandle node identifier from a phandle array by name.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of an element in
pha
- Returns:
node identifier for the phandle at the element named “name”
-
DT_INST_PHANDLE_BY_IDX(inst, prop, idx)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s node identifier for a phandle in a property.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name in
inst
with typephandle
,phandles
orphandle-array
idx – index into
prop
- Returns:
a node identifier for the phandle at index
idx
inprop
-
DT_INST_PHANDLE(inst, prop)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s node identifier for a phandle property’s value.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property of
inst
with typephandle
- Returns:
a node identifier for the node pointed to by “ph”
-
DT_INST_REG_HAS_IDX(inst, idx)
is
idx
a valid register block index on aDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – index to check
- Returns:
1 if
idx
is a valid register block index, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_REG_HAS_NAME(inst, name)
is
name
a valid register block name on aDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – name to check
- Returns:
1 if
name
is a valid register block name, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_REG_ADDR_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s idx-th register block’s address.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – index of the register whose address to return
- Returns:
address of the instance’s idx-th register block
-
DT_INST_REG_SIZE_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance’s idx-th register block’s size.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – index of the register whose size to return
- Returns:
size of the instance’s idx-th register block
-
DT_INST_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
’s register block address by name.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
- Returns:
address of the register block with the given
name
-
DT_INST_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME_OR(inst, name, default_value)
Like DT_INST_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
address of the register block specified by name if present,
default_value
otherwise
-
DT_INST_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME_U64(inst, name)
64-bit version of DT_INST_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME()
This macro version adds the appropriate suffix for 64-bit unsigned integer literals. Note that this macro is equivalent to DT_INST_REG_ADDR_BY_NAME() in linker/ASM context.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
- Returns:
address of the register block with the given
name
-
DT_INST_REG_SIZE_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
’s register block size by name.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
- Returns:
size of the register block with the given
name
-
DT_INST_REG_SIZE_BY_NAME_OR(inst, name, default_value)
Like DT_INST_REG_SIZE_BY_NAME(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores register specifier name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
size of the register block specified by name if present,
default_value
otherwise
-
DT_INST_REG_ADDR(inst)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
’s (only) register block address.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
instance’s register block address
-
DT_INST_REG_ADDR_U64(inst)
64-bit version of DT_INST_REG_ADDR()
This macro version adds the appropriate suffix for 64-bit unsigned integer literals. Note that this macro is equivalent to DT_INST_REG_ADDR() in linker/ASM context.
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
instance’s register block address
-
DT_INST_REG_SIZE(inst)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
’s (only) register block size.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
instance’s register block size
-
DT_INST_IRQ_LEVEL(inst)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
interrupt level.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
interrupt level
-
DT_INST_IRQ_BY_IDX(inst, idx, cell)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
interrupt specifier value at an index.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – logical index into the interrupt specifier array
cell – cell name specifier
- Returns:
the named value at the specifier given by the index
-
DT_INST_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller by index.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – interrupt specifier’s index
- Returns:
node_id of interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller
-
DT_INST_IRQ_INTC_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller by name.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – interrupt specifier’s name
- Returns:
node_id of interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller
-
DT_INST_IRQ_INTC(inst)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller.See also
Note
Equivalent to DT_INST_IRQ_INTC_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
node_id of interrupt specifier’s interrupt controller
-
DT_INST_IRQ_BY_NAME(inst, name, cell)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
interrupt specifier value by name.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores interrupt specifier name
cell – cell name specifier
- Returns:
the named value at the specifier given by the index
-
DT_INST_IRQ(inst, cell)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
interrupt specifier’s value.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
cell – cell name specifier
- Returns:
the named value at that index
-
DT_INST_IRQN(inst)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
’s (only) irq number.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
the interrupt number for the node’s only interrupt
-
DT_INST_IRQN_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
’s irq number at index.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – logical index into the interrupt specifier array
- Returns:
the interrupt number for the node’s idx-th interrupt
-
DT_INST_BUS(inst)
Get a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
’s bus node identifier.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
node identifier for the instance’s bus node
-
DT_INST_ON_BUS(inst, bus)
Test if a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
’s bus type is a given type.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
bus – a binding’s bus type as a C token, lowercased and without quotes
- Returns:
1 if the given instance is on a bus of the given type, 0 otherwise
-
DT_INST_STRING_TOKEN_OR(inst, name, default_value)
Like DT_INST_STRING_TOKEN(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
if
prop
exists, its value as a token, i.e. without any quotes and with special characters converted to underscores. Otherwisedefault_value
-
DT_INST_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN_OR(inst, name, default_value)
Like DT_INST_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the property’s value as an uppercased token, or
default_value
-
DT_INST_STRING_UNQUOTED_OR(inst, name, default_value)
Like DT_INST_STRING_UNQUOTED(), but with a fallback to
default_value
.- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores property name
default_value – a fallback value to expand to
- Returns:
the property’s value as a sequence of tokens, with no quotes, or
default_value
-
DT_HAS_COMPAT_ON_BUS_STATUS_OKAY(compat, bus)
-
DT_ANY_INST_ON_BUS_STATUS_OKAY(bus)
Test if any
DT_DRV_COMPAT
node is on a bus of a given type and has status okay.This is a special-purpose macro which can be useful when writing drivers for devices which can appear on multiple buses. One example is a sensor device which may be wired on an I2C or SPI bus.
Example devicetree overlay:
&i2c0 { temp: temperature-sensor@76 { compatible = "vnd,some-sensor"; reg = <0x76>; }; };
Example usage, assuming
i2c0
is an I2C bus controller node, and thereforetemp
is on an I2C bus:#define DT_DRV_COMPAT vnd_some_sensor DT_ANY_INST_ON_BUS_STATUS_OKAY(i2c) // 1
- Parameters:
bus – a binding’s bus type as a C token, lowercased and without quotes
- Returns:
1 if any enabled node with that compatible is on that bus type, 0 otherwise
-
DT_ANY_INST_HAS_PROP_STATUS_OKAY(prop)
Check if any
DT_DRV_COMPAT
node with statusokay
has a given property.Example devicetree overlay:
&i2c0 { sensor0: sensor@0 { compatible = "vnd,some-sensor"; status = "okay"; reg = <0>; foo = <1>; bar = <2>; }; sensor1: sensor@1 { compatible = "vnd,some-sensor"; status = "okay"; reg = <1>; foo = <2>; }; sensor2: sensor@2 { compatible = "vnd,some-sensor"; status = "disabled"; reg = <2>; baz = <1>; }; };
Example usage:
#define DT_DRV_COMPAT vnd_some_sensor DT_ANY_INST_HAS_PROP_STATUS_OKAY(foo) // 1 DT_ANY_INST_HAS_PROP_STATUS_OKAY(bar) // 1 DT_ANY_INST_HAS_PROP_STATUS_OKAY(baz) // 0
- Parameters:
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY(fn)
Call
fn
on all nodes with compatibleDT_DRV_COMPAT
and statusokay
This macro calls
fn(inst)
on eachinst
number that refers to a node with statusokay
. Whitespace is added between invocations.Example devicetree fragment:
a { compatible = "vnd,device"; status = "okay"; foobar = "DEV_A"; }; b { compatible = "vnd,device"; status = "okay"; foobar = "DEV_B"; }; c { compatible = "vnd,device"; status = "disabled"; foobar = "DEV_C"; };
Example usage:
#define DT_DRV_COMPAT vnd_device #define MY_FN(inst) DT_INST_PROP(inst, foobar), DT_INST_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY(MY_FN)
This expands to:
MY_FN(0) MY_FN(1)
and from there, to either this:
or this:"DEV_A", "DEV_B",
No guarantees are made about the order that a and b appear in the expansion."DEV_B", "DEV_A",
Note that
fn
is responsible for adding commas, semicolons, or other separators or terminators.Device drivers should use this macro whenever possible to instantiate a struct device for each enabled node in the devicetree of the driver’s compatible
DT_DRV_COMPAT
.- Parameters:
fn – Macro to call for each enabled node. Must accept an instance number as its only parameter.
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_STATUS_OKAY_VARGS(fn, ...)
Call
fn
on all nodes with compatibleDT_DRV_COMPAT
and statusokay
with multiple arguments.See also
- Parameters:
fn – Macro to call for each enabled node. Must accept an instance number as its only parameter.
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_NODELABEL(inst, fn)
Call
fn
on all node labels for a givenDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance.Equivalent to DT_FOREACH_NODELABEL(DT_DRV_INST(inst), fn).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro which will be passed each node label for the node with that instance number
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_NODELABEL_VARGS(inst, fn, ...)
Call
fn
on all node labels for a givenDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance with multiple arguments.Equivalent to DT_FOREACH_NODELABEL_VARGS(DT_DRV_INST(inst), fn, …).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
fn – macro which will be passed each node label for the node with that instance number
... – additional arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM(inst, prop, fn)
Invokes
fn
for each element of propertyprop
for aDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance.Equivalent to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM(DT_DRV_INST(inst), prop, fn).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
fn – macro to invoke
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_SEP(inst, prop, fn, sep)
Invokes
fn
for each element of propertyprop
for aDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance with a separator.Equivalent to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_SEP(DT_DRV_INST(inst), prop, fn, sep).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
fn – macro to invoke
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_VARGS(inst, prop, fn, ...)
Invokes
fn
for each element of propertyprop
for aDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance with multiple arguments.Equivalent to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_VARGS(DT_DRV_INST(inst), prop, fn, VA_ARGS)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
fn – macro to invoke
... – variable number of arguments to pass to
fn
-
DT_INST_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_SEP_VARGS(inst, prop, fn, sep, ...)
Invokes
fn
for each element of propertyprop
for aDT_DRV_COMPAT
instance with multiple arguments and a separator.Equivalent to DT_FOREACH_PROP_ELEM_SEP_VARGS(DT_DRV_INST(inst), prop, fn, sep, VA_ARGS)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
fn – macro to invoke
sep – Separator (e.g. comma or semicolon). Must be in parentheses; this is required to enable providing a comma as separator.
... – variable number of arguments to pass to fn
-
DT_INST_NODE_HAS_PROP(inst, prop)
Does a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance have a property?
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name
- Returns:
1 if the instance has the property, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_NODE_HAS_COMPAT(inst, compat)
Does a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance have the compatible?
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
compat – lowercase-and-underscores compatible, without quotes
- Returns:
1 if the instance matches the compatible, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_PHA_HAS_CELL_AT_IDX(inst, pha, idx, cell)
Does a phandle array have a named cell specifier at an index for a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
idx – index to check
cell – named cell value whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the named
cell
exists in the specifier at indexidx
, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_PHA_HAS_CELL(inst, pha, cell)
Does a phandle array have a named cell specifier at index 0 for a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pha – lowercase-and-underscores property with type
phandle-array
cell – named cell value whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the named
cell
exists in the specifier at index 0, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_IRQ_HAS_IDX(inst, idx)
is index valid for interrupt property on a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – logical index into the interrupt specifier array
- Returns:
1 if the
idx
is valid for the interrupt property 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_IRQ_HAS_CELL_AT_IDX(inst, idx, cell)
Does a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance have an interrupt named cell specifier?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – index to check
cell – named cell value whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the named
cell
exists in the interrupt specifier at indexidx
0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_IRQ_HAS_CELL(inst, cell)
Does a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance have an interrupt value?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
cell – named cell value whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the named
cell
exists in the interrupt specifier at index 0 0 otherwise.
-
DT_INST_IRQ_HAS_NAME(inst, name)
Does a
DT_DRV_COMPAT
instance have an interrupt value?- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores interrupt specifier name
- Returns:
1 if
name
is a valid named specifier
-
DT_DRV_INST(inst)
Hardware specific APIs
The following APIs can also be used by including <devicetree.h>
;
no additional include is needed.
CAN
These conveniences may be used for nodes which describe CAN controllers/transceivers, and properties related to them.
- group devicetree-can
Defines
-
DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MIN_BITRATE(node_id, min)
Get the minimum transceiver bitrate for a CAN controller.
The bitrate will be limited to the minimum bitrate supported by the CAN controller. If no CAN transceiver is present in the devicetree, the minimum bitrate will be that of the CAN controller.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:transceiver0: can-phy0 { compatible = "vnd,can-transceiver"; min-bitrate = <15000>; max-bitrate = <1000000>; #phy-cells = <0>; }; can0: can@... { compatible = "vnd,can-controller"; phys = <&transceiver0>; }; can1: can@... { compatible = "vnd,can-controller"; can-transceiver { min-bitrate = <25000>; max-bitrate = <2000000>; }; }; can2: can@... { compatible = "vnd,can-controller"; can-transceiver { max-bitrate = <2000000>; }; };
DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MIN_BITRATE(DT_NODELABEL(can0), 10000) // 15000 DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MIN_BITRATE(DT_NODELABEL(can1), 0) // 250000 DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MIN_BITRATE(DT_NODELABEL(can1), 50000) // 500000 DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MIN_BITRATE(DT_NODELABEL(can2), 0) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
min – minimum bitrate supported by the CAN controller
- Returns:
the minimum bitrate supported by the CAN controller/transceiver combination
-
DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MAX_BITRATE(node_id, max)
Get the maximum transceiver bitrate for a CAN controller.
The bitrate will be limited to the maximum bitrate supported by the CAN controller. If no CAN transceiver is present in the devicetree, the maximum bitrate will be that of the CAN controller.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:transceiver0: can-phy0 { compatible = "vnd,can-transceiver"; max-bitrate = <1000000>; #phy-cells = <0>; }; can0: can@... { compatible = "vnd,can-controller"; phys = <&transceiver0>; }; can1: can@... { compatible = "vnd,can-controller"; can-transceiver { max-bitrate = <2000000>; }; };
DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MAX_BITRATE(DT_NODELABEL(can0), 5000000) // 1000000 DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MAX_BITRATE(DT_NODELABEL(can1), 5000000) // 2000000 DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MAX_BITRATE(DT_NODELABEL(can1), 1000000) // 1000000
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
max – maximum bitrate supported by the CAN controller
- Returns:
the maximum bitrate supported by the CAN controller/transceiver combination
-
DT_INST_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MIN_BITRATE(inst, min)
Get the minimum transceiver bitrate for a DT_DRV_COMPAT CAN controller.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
min – minimum bitrate supported by the CAN controller
- Returns:
the minimum bitrate supported by the CAN controller/transceiver combination
-
DT_INST_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MAX_BITRATE(inst, max)
Get the maximum transceiver bitrate for a DT_DRV_COMPAT CAN controller.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
max – maximum bitrate supported by the CAN controller
- Returns:
the maximum bitrate supported by the CAN controller/transceiver combination
-
DT_CAN_TRANSCEIVER_MIN_BITRATE(node_id, min)
Clocks
These conveniences may be used for nodes which describe clock sources, and properties related to them.
- group devicetree-clocks
Defines
-
DT_CLOCKS_HAS_IDX(node_id, idx)
Test if a node has a clocks phandle-array property at a given index.
This expands to 1 if the given index is valid clocks property phandle-array index. Otherwise, it expands to 0.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n1: node-1 { clocks = <...>, <...>; }; n2: node-2 { clocks = <...>; };
DT_CLOCKS_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 0) // 1 DT_CLOCKS_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 1) // 1 DT_CLOCKS_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 2) // 0 DT_CLOCKS_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), 1) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier; may or may not have any clocks property
idx – index of a clocks property phandle-array whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the index exists, 0 otherwise
-
DT_CLOCKS_HAS_NAME(node_id, name)
Test if a node has a clock-names array property holds a given name.
This expands to 1 if the name is available as clocks-name array property cell. Otherwise, it expands to 0.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n1: node-1 { clocks = <...>, <...>; clock-names = "alpha", "beta"; }; n2: node-2 { clocks = <...>; clock-names = "alpha"; };
DT_CLOCKS_HAS_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n1), alpha) // 1 DT_CLOCKS_HAS_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n1), beta) // 1 DT_CLOCKS_HAS_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n2), beta) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier; may or may not have any clock-names property.
name – lowercase-and-underscores clock-names cell value name to check
- Returns:
1 if the clock name exists, 0 otherwise
-
DT_NUM_CLOCKS(node_id)
Get the number of elements in a clocks property.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n1: node-1 { clocks = <&foo>, <&bar>; }; n2: node-2 { clocks = <&foo>; };
DT_NUM_CLOCKS(DT_NODELABEL(n1)) // 2 DT_NUM_CLOCKS(DT_NODELABEL(n2)) // 1
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier with a clocks property
- Returns:
number of elements in the property
-
DT_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a “clocks” phandle-array property at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:clk1: clock-controller@... { ... }; clk2: clock-controller@... { ... }; n: node { clocks = <&clk1 10 20>, <&clk2 30 40>; };
DT_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0)) // DT_NODELABEL(clk1) DT_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1)) // DT_NODELABEL(clk2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into “clocks”
- Returns:
the node identifier for the clock controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_CLOCKS_CTLR(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
a node identifier for the clocks controller at index 0 in “clocks”
-
DT_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a clocks phandle-array property by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:clk1: clock-controller@... { ... }; clk2: clock-controller@... { ... }; n: node { clocks = <&clk1 10 20>, <&clk2 30 40>; clock-names = "alpha", "beta"; };
DT_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), beta) // DT_NODELABEL(clk2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a clocks element as defined by the node’s clock-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the clock controller referenced by name
-
DT_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, cell)
Get a clock specifier’s cell value at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,clock compatible:clk1: clock-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,clock"; #clock-cells = < 2 >; }; n: node { clocks = < &clk1 10 20 >, < &clk1 30 40 >; };
Example usage:clock-cells: - bus - bits
DT_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0, bus) // 10 DT_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1, bits) // 40
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a clocks property
idx – logical index into clocks property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_NAME(node_id, name, cell)
Get a clock specifier’s cell value by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,clock compatible:clk1: clock-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,clock"; #clock-cells = < 2 >; }; n: node { clocks = < &clk1 10 20 >, < &clk1 30 40 >; clock-names = "alpha", "beta"; };
Example usage:clock-cells: - bus - bits
DT_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), alpha, bus) // 10 DT_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), beta, bits) // 40
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a clocks property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a clocks element as defined by the node’s clock-names property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_CLOCKS_CELL(node_id, cell)
Equivalent to DT_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, 0, cell)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a clocks property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index 0
-
DT_INST_CLOCKS_HAS_IDX(inst, idx)
Equivalent to DT_CLOCKS_HAS_IDX(DT_DRV_INST(inst), idx)
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number; may or may not have any clocks property
idx – index of a clocks property phandle-array whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the index exists, 0 otherwise
-
DT_INST_CLOCKS_HAS_NAME(inst, name)
Equivalent to DT_CLOCK_HAS_NAME(DT_DRV_INST(inst), name)
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number; may or may not have any clock-names property.
name – lowercase-and-underscores clock-names cell value name to check
- Returns:
1 if the clock name exists, 0 otherwise
-
DT_INST_NUM_CLOCKS(inst)
Equivalent to DT_NUM_CLOCKS(DT_DRV_INST(inst))
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
number of elements in the clocks property
-
DT_INST_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a “clocks” phandle-array property at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – logical index into “clocks”
- Returns:
the node identifier for the clock controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_CLOCKS_CTLR(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
a node identifier for the clocks controller at index 0 in “clocks”
-
DT_INST_CLOCKS_CTLR_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a clocks phandle-array property by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a clocks element as defined by the node’s clock-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the clock controller referenced by the named element
-
DT_INST_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, idx, cell)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s clock specifier’s cell value at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into clocks property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_NAME(inst, name, cell)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s clock specifier’s cell value by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a clocks element as defined by the node’s clock-names property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_INST_CLOCKS_CELL(inst, cell)
Equivalent to DT_INST_CLOCKS_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, 0, cell)
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the value of the cell inside the specifier at index 0
-
DT_CLOCKS_HAS_IDX(node_id, idx)
DMA
These conveniences may be used for nodes which describe direct memory access controllers or channels, and properties related to them.
- group devicetree-dmas
Defines
-
DT_DMAS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the node identifier for the DMA controller from a dmas property at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:dma1: dma@... { ... }; dma2: dma@... { ... }; n: node { dmas = <&dma1 1 2 0x400 0x3>, <&dma2 6 3 0x404 0x5>; };
DT_DMAS_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0) // DT_NODELABEL(dma1) DT_DMAS_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1) // DT_NODELABEL(dma2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a dmas property
idx – logical index into dmas property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the DMA controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_DMAS_CTLR_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get the node identifier for the DMA controller from a dmas property by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:dma1: dma@... { ... }; dma2: dma@... { ... }; n: node { dmas = <&dma1 1 2 0x400 0x3>, <&dma2 6 3 0x404 0x5>; dma-names = "tx", "rx"; };
DT_DMAS_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), tx) // DT_NODELABEL(dma1) DT_DMAS_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), rx) // DT_NODELABEL(dma2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a dmas property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a dmas element as defined by the node’s dma-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the DMA controller in the named element
-
DT_DMAS_CTLR(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_DMAS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a dmas property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the DMA controller at index 0 in the node’s “dmas” property
-
DT_INST_DMAS_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get the node identifier for the DMA controller from a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s dmas property at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into dmas property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the DMA controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_DMAS_CTLR_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get the node identifier for the DMA controller from a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s dmas property by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a dmas element as defined by the node’s dma-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the DMA controller in the named element
-
DT_INST_DMAS_CTLR(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_DMAS_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
the node identifier for the DMA controller at index 0 in the instance’s “dmas” property
-
DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, cell)
Get a DMA specifier’s cell value at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,dma compatible:dma1: dma@... { compatible = "vnd,dma"; #dma-cells = <2>; }; dma2: dma@... { compatible = "vnd,dma"; #dma-cells = <2>; }; n: node { dmas = <&dma1 1 0x400>, <&dma2 6 0x404>; };
Example usage:dma-cells: - channel - config
DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0, channel) // 1 DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1, channel) // 6 DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0, config) // 0x400 DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1, config) // 0x404
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a dmas property
idx – logical index into dmas property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_DMAS_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, idx, cell)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s DMA specifier’s cell value at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into dmas property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_NAME(node_id, name, cell)
Get a DMA specifier’s cell value by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,dma compatible:dma1: dma@... { compatible = "vnd,dma"; #dma-cells = <2>; }; dma2: dma@... { compatible = "vnd,dma"; #dma-cells = <2>; }; n: node { dmas = <&dma1 1 0x400>, <&dma2 6 0x404>; dma-names = "tx", "rx"; };
Example usage:dma-cells: - channel - config
DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), tx, channel) // 1 DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), rx, channel) // 6 DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), tx, config) // 0x400 DT_DMAS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), rx, config) // 0x404
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a dmas property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a dmas element as defined by the node’s dma-names property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_INST_DMAS_CELL_BY_NAME(inst, name, cell)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s DMA specifier’s cell value by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a dmas element as defined by the node’s dma-names property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_DMAS_HAS_IDX(node_id, idx)
Is index “idx” valid for a dmas property?
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a dmas property
idx – logical index into dmas property
- Returns:
1 if the “dmas” property has index “idx”, 0 otherwise
-
DT_INST_DMAS_HAS_IDX(inst, idx)
Is index “idx” valid for a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s dmas property?
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into dmas property
- Returns:
1 if the “dmas” property has a specifier at index “idx”, 0 otherwise
-
DT_DMAS_HAS_NAME(node_id, name)
Does a dmas property have a named element?
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a dmas property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a dmas element as defined by the node’s dma-names property
- Returns:
1 if the dmas property has the named element, 0 otherwise
-
DT_INST_DMAS_HAS_NAME(inst, name)
Does a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s dmas property have a named element?
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a dmas element as defined by the node’s dma-names property
- Returns:
1 if the dmas property has the named element, 0 otherwise
-
DT_DMAS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Fixed flash partitions
These conveniences may be used for the special-purpose fixed-partitions
compatible used to encode information about flash memory partitions in the
device tree. See See fixed-partition
for more details.
- group devicetree-fixed-partition
Defines
-
DT_NODE_BY_FIXED_PARTITION_LABEL(label)
Get a node identifier for a fixed partition with a given label property.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:flash@... { partitions { compatible = "fixed-partitions"; boot_partition: partition@0 { label = "mcuboot"; }; slot0_partition: partition@c000 { label = "image-0"; }; ... }; };
DT_NODE_BY_FIXED_PARTITION_LABEL(mcuboot) // node identifier for boot_partition DT_NODE_BY_FIXED_PARTITION_LABEL(image_0) // node identifier for slot0_partition
- Parameters:
label – lowercase-and-underscores label property value
- Returns:
a node identifier for the partition with that label property
-
DT_HAS_FIXED_PARTITION_LABEL(label)
Test if a fixed partition with a given label property exists.
- Parameters:
label – lowercase-and-underscores label property value
- Returns:
1 if any “fixed-partitions” child node has the given label, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_FIXED_PARTITION_EXISTS(node_id)
Test if fixed-partition compatible node exists.
- Parameters:
node_id – DTS node to test
- Returns:
1 if node exists and is fixed-partition compatible, 0 otherwise.
-
DT_FIXED_PARTITION_ID(node_id)
Get a numeric identifier for a fixed partition.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a fixed-partitions child node
- Returns:
the partition’s ID, a unique zero-based index number
-
DT_MEM_FROM_FIXED_PARTITION(node_id)
Get the node identifier of the flash memory for a partition.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a fixed-partitions child node
- Returns:
the node identifier of the internal memory that contains the fixed-partitions node, or DT_INVALID_NODE if it doesn’t exist.
-
DT_MTD_FROM_FIXED_PARTITION(node_id)
Get the node identifier of the flash controller for a partition.
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a fixed-partitions child node
- Returns:
the node identifier of the memory technology device that contains the fixed-partitions node.
-
DT_FIXED_PARTITION_ADDR(node_id)
Get the absolute address of a fixed partition.
Example devicetree fragment:
Here, the “storage” partition is seen to belong to flash memory starting at address 0x1000000. The partition’s unit address of 0x3a000 represents an offset inside that flash memory.&flash_controller { flash@1000000 { compatible = "soc-nv-flash"; partitions { compatible = "fixed-partitions"; storage_partition: partition@3a000 { label = "storage"; }; }; }; };
Example usage:
This macro can only be used with partitions of internal memory addressable by the CPU. Otherwise, it may produce a compile-time error, such as: __REG_IDX_0_VAL_ADDRESS’ undeclared`.DT_FIXED_PARTITION_ADDR(DT_NODELABEL(storage_partition)) // 0x103a000
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a fixed-partitions child node
- Returns:
the partition’s offset plus the base address of the flash node containing it.
-
DT_NODE_BY_FIXED_PARTITION_LABEL(label)
GPIO
These conveniences may be used for nodes which describe GPIO controllers/pins, and properties related to them.
- group devicetree-gpio
Defines
-
DT_GPIO_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, gpio_pha, idx)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a gpio phandle-array property at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:gpio1: gpio@... { }; gpio2: gpio@... { }; n: node { gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>, <&gpio2 30 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; };
DT_GPIO_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), gpios, 1) // DT_NODELABEL(gpio2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
idx – logical index into “gpio_pha”
- Returns:
the node identifier for the gpio controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_GPIO_CTLR(node_id, gpio_pha)
Equivalent to DT_GPIO_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, gpio_pha, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
- Returns:
a node identifier for the gpio controller at index 0 in “gpio_pha”
-
DT_GPIO_PIN_BY_IDX(node_id, gpio_pha, idx)
Get a GPIO specifier’s pin cell at an index.
This macro only works for GPIO specifiers with cells named “pin”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,gpio compatible:gpio1: gpio@... { compatible = "vnd,gpio"; #gpio-cells = <2>; }; gpio2: gpio@... { compatible = "vnd,gpio"; #gpio-cells = <2>; }; n: node { gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>, <&gpio2 30 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; };
Example usage:gpio-cells: - pin - flags
DT_GPIO_PIN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), gpios, 0) // 10 DT_GPIO_PIN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), gpios, 1) // 30
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
idx – logical index into “gpio_pha”
- Returns:
the pin cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_GPIO_PIN(node_id, gpio_pha)
Equivalent to DT_GPIO_PIN_BY_IDX(node_id, gpio_pha, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
- Returns:
the pin cell value at index 0
-
DT_GPIO_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, gpio_pha, idx)
Get a GPIO specifier’s flags cell at an index.
This macro expects GPIO specifiers with cells named “flags”. If there is no “flags” cell in the GPIO specifier, zero is returned. Refer to the node’s binding to check specifier cell names if necessary.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,gpio compatible:gpio1: gpio@... { compatible = "vnd,gpio"; #gpio-cells = <2>; }; gpio2: gpio@... { compatible = "vnd,gpio"; #gpio-cells = <2>; }; n: node { gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>, <&gpio2 30 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; };
Example usage:gpio-cells: - pin - flags
DT_GPIO_FLAGS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), gpios, 0) // GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW DT_GPIO_FLAGS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), gpios, 1) // GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
idx – logical index into “gpio_pha”
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index “idx”, or zero if there is none
-
DT_GPIO_FLAGS(node_id, gpio_pha)
Equivalent to DT_GPIO_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, gpio_pha, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index 0, or zero if there is none
-
DT_NUM_GPIO_HOGS(node_id)
Get the number of GPIO hogs in a node.
This expands to the number of hogged GPIOs, or zero if there are none.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,gpio compatible:gpio1: gpio@... { compatible = "vnd,gpio"; #gpio-cells = <2>; n1: node-1 { gpio-hog; gpios = <0 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>, <1 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; output-high; }; n2: node-2 { gpio-hog; gpios = <3 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; output-low; }; };
Example usage:gpio-cells: - pin - flags
DT_NUM_GPIO_HOGS(DT_NODELABEL(n1)) // 2 DT_NUM_GPIO_HOGS(DT_NODELABEL(n2)) // 1
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier; may or may not be a GPIO hog node.
- Returns:
number of hogged GPIOs in the node
-
DT_GPIO_HOG_PIN_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get a GPIO hog specifier’s pin cell at an index.
This macro only works for GPIO specifiers with cells named “pin”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,gpio compatible:gpio1: gpio@... { compatible = "vnd,gpio"; #gpio-cells = <2>; n1: node-1 { gpio-hog; gpios = <0 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>, <1 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; output-high; }; n2: node-2 { gpio-hog; gpios = <3 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; output-low; }; };
Example usage:gpio-cells: - pin - flags
DT_GPIO_HOG_PIN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 0) // 0 DT_GPIO_HOG_PIN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 1) // 1 DT_GPIO_HOG_PIN_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), 0) // 3
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into “gpios”
- Returns:
the pin cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_GPIO_HOG_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get a GPIO hog specifier’s flags cell at an index.
This macro expects GPIO specifiers with cells named “flags”. If there is no “flags” cell in the GPIO specifier, zero is returned. Refer to the node’s binding to check specifier cell names if necessary.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,gpio compatible:gpio1: gpio@... { compatible = "vnd,gpio"; #gpio-cells = <2>; n1: node-1 { gpio-hog; gpios = <0 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>, <1 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; output-high; }; n2: node-2 { gpio-hog; gpios = <3 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; output-low; }; };
Example usage:gpio-cells: - pin - flags
DT_GPIO_HOG_FLAGS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 0) // GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH DT_GPIO_HOG_FLAGS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 1) // GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW DT_GPIO_HOG_FLAGS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), 0) // GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into “gpios”
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index “idx”, or zero if there is none
-
DT_INST_GPIO_PIN_BY_IDX(inst, gpio_pha, idx)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s GPIO specifier’s pin cell value at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
idx – logical index into “gpio_pha”
- Returns:
the pin cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_GPIO_PIN(inst, gpio_pha)
Equivalent to DT_INST_GPIO_PIN_BY_IDX(inst, gpio_pha, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
- Returns:
the pin cell value at index 0
-
DT_INST_GPIO_FLAGS_BY_IDX(inst, gpio_pha, idx)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s GPIO specifier’s flags cell at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
idx – logical index into “gpio_pha”
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index “idx”, or zero if there is none
-
DT_INST_GPIO_FLAGS(inst, gpio_pha)
Equivalent to DT_INST_GPIO_FLAGS_BY_IDX(inst, gpio_pha, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
gpio_pha – lowercase-and-underscores GPIO property with type “phandle-array”
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index 0, or zero if there is none
-
DT_GPIO_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, gpio_pha, idx)
IO channels
These are commonly used by device drivers which need to use IO channels (e.g. ADC or DAC channels) for conversion.
- group devicetree-io-channels
Defines
-
DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the node identifier for the node referenced by an io-channels property at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:adc1: adc@... { ... }; adc2: adc@... { ... }; n: node { io-channels = <&adc1 10>, <&adc2 20>; };
DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0) // DT_NODELABEL(adc1) DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1) // DT_NODELABEL(adc2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with an io-channels property
idx – logical index into io-channels property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the node referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get the node identifier for the node referenced by an io-channels property by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:adc1: adc@... { ... }; adc2: adc@... { ... }; n: node { io-channels = <&adc1 10>, <&adc2 20>; io-channel-names = "SENSOR", "BANDGAP"; };
DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), sensor) // DT_NODELABEL(adc1) DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), bandgap) // DT_NODELABEL(adc2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with an io-channels property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of an io-channels element as defined by the node’s io-channel-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the node referenced at the named element
-
DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with an io-channels property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the node referenced at index 0 in the node’s “io-channels” property
-
DT_INST_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get the node identifier from a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s io-channels property at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into io-channels property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the node referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get the node identifier from a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s io-channels property by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of an io-channels element as defined by the node’s io-channel-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the node referenced at the named element
-
DT_INST_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
the node identifier for the node referenced at index 0 in the node’s “io-channels” property
-
DT_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get an io-channels specifier input cell at an index.
This macro only works for io-channels specifiers with cells named “input”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,adc compatible:adc1: adc@... { compatible = "vnd,adc"; #io-channel-cells = <1>; }; adc2: adc@... { compatible = "vnd,adc"; #io-channel-cells = <1>; }; n: node { io-channels = <&adc1 10>, <&adc2 20>; };
io-channel-cells:
input
Example usage:
DT_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0) // 10 DT_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1) // 20
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with an io-channels property
idx – logical index into io-channels property
- Returns:
the input cell in the specifier at index “idx”
-
DT_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get an io-channels specifier input cell by name.
This macro only works for io-channels specifiers with cells named “input”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,adc compatible:adc1: adc@... { compatible = "vnd,adc"; #io-channel-cells = <1>; }; adc2: adc@... { compatible = "vnd,adc"; #io-channel-cells = <1>; }; n: node { io-channels = <&adc1 10>, <&adc2 20>; io-channel-names = "SENSOR", "BANDGAP"; };
io-channel-cells:
input
Example usage:
DT_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), sensor) // 10 DT_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), bandgap) // 20
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with an io-channels property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of an io-channels element as defined by the node’s io-channel-names property
- Returns:
the input cell in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with an io-channels property
- Returns:
the input cell in the specifier at index 0
-
DT_INST_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get an input cell from the “DT_DRV_INST(inst)” io-channels property at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into io-channels property
- Returns:
the input cell in the specifier at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get an input cell from the “DT_DRV_INST(inst)” io-channels property by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of an io-channels element as defined by the instance’s io-channel-names property
- Returns:
the input cell in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_INST_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_IO_CHANNELS_INPUT_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
the input cell in the specifier at index 0
-
DT_IO_CHANNELS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
MBOX
These conveniences may be used for nodes which describe MBOX controllers/users, and properties related to them.
- group devicetree-mbox
Defines
-
DT_MBOX_CTLR_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get the node identifier for the MBOX controller from a mboxes property by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:mbox1: mbox-controller@... { ... }; n: node { mboxes = <&mbox1 8>, <&mbox1 9>; mbox-names = "tx", "rx"; };
DT_MBOX_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), tx) // DT_NODELABEL(mbox1) DT_MBOX_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), rx) // DT_NODELABEL(mbox1)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a mboxes property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a mboxes element as defined by the node’s mbox-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the MBOX controller in the named element
-
DT_MBOX_CHANNEL_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get a MBOX channel value by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the mbox compatible:mbox1: mbox@... { #mbox-cells = <1>; }; n: node { mboxes = <&mbox1 1>, <&mbox1 6>; mbox-names = "tx", "rx"; };
Example usage:mbox-cells: - channel
DT_MBOX_CHANNEL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), tx) // 1 DT_MBOX_CHANNEL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), rx) // 6
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a mboxes property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a mboxes element as defined by the node’s mbox-names property
- Returns:
the channel value in the specifier at the named element or 0 if no channels are supported
-
DT_MBOX_CTLR_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Pinctrl (pin control)
These are used to access pin control properties by name or index.
Devicetree nodes may have properties which specify pin control (sometimes known
as pin mux) settings. These are expressed using pinctrl-<index>
properties
within the node, where the <index>
values are contiguous integers starting
from 0. These may also be named using the pinctrl-names
property.
Here is an example:
node {
...
pinctrl-0 = <&foo &bar ...>;
pinctrl-1 = <&baz ...>;
pinctrl-names = "default", "sleep";
};
Above, pinctrl-0
has name "default"
, and pinctrl-1
has name
"sleep"
. The pinctrl-<index>
property values contain phandles. The
&foo
, &bar
, etc. phandles within the properties point to nodes whose
contents vary by platform, and which describe a pin configuration for the node.
- group devicetree-pinctrl
Defines
-
DT_PINCTRL_BY_IDX(node_id, pc_idx, idx)
Get a node identifier for a phandle in a pinctrl property by index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n: node { pinctrl-0 = <&foo &bar>; pinctrl-1 = <&baz &blub>; }
DT_PINCTRL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0, 1) // DT_NODELABEL(bar) DT_PINCTRL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1, 0) // DT_NODELABEL(baz)
- Parameters:
node_id – node with a pinctrl-‘pc_idx’ property
pc_idx – index of the pinctrl property itself
idx – index into the value of the pinctrl property
- Returns:
node identifier for the phandle at index ‘idx’ in ‘pinctrl-‘pc_idx’’
-
DT_PINCTRL_0(node_id, idx)
Get a node identifier from a pinctrl-0 property.
This is equivalent to:
It is provided for convenience since pinctrl-0 is commonly used.DT_PINCTRL_BY_IDX(node_id, 0, idx)
- Parameters:
node_id – node with a pinctrl-0 property
idx – index into the pinctrl-0 property
- Returns:
node identifier for the phandle at index idx in the pinctrl-0 property of that node
-
DT_PINCTRL_BY_NAME(node_id, name, idx)
Get a node identifier for a phandle inside a pinctrl node by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n: node { pinctrl-0 = <&foo &bar>; pinctrl-1 = <&baz &blub>; pinctrl-names = "default", "sleep"; };
DT_PINCTRL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), default, 1) // DT_NODELABEL(bar) DT_PINCTRL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), sleep, 0) // DT_NODELABEL(baz)
- Parameters:
node_id – node with a named pinctrl property
name – lowercase-and-underscores pinctrl property name
idx – index into the value of the named pinctrl property
- Returns:
node identifier for the phandle at that index in the pinctrl property
-
DT_PINCTRL_NAME_TO_IDX(node_id, name)
Convert a pinctrl name to its corresponding index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n: node { pinctrl-0 = <&foo &bar>; pinctrl-1 = <&baz &blub>; pinctrl-names = "default", "sleep"; };
DT_PINCTRL_NAME_TO_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), default) // 0 DT_PINCTRL_NAME_TO_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), sleep) // 1
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier with a named pinctrl property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name name of the pinctrl whose index to get
- Returns:
integer literal for the index of the pinctrl property with that name
-
DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(node_id, pc_idx)
Convert a pinctrl property index to its name as a token.
This allows you to get a pinctrl property’s name, and “remove the
quotes” from it.
DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN() can only be used if the node has a pinctrl-‘pc_idx’ property and a pinctrl-names property element for that index. It is an error to use it in other circumstances.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n: node { pinctrl-0 = <...>; pinctrl-1 = <...>; pinctrl-names = "default", "f.o.o2"; };
The same caveats and restrictions that apply to DT_STRING_TOKEN()’s return value also apply here.DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0) // default DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1) // f_o_o2
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
pc_idx – index of a pinctrl property in that node
- Returns:
name of the pinctrl property, as a token, without any quotes and with non-alphanumeric characters converted to underscores
-
DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_UPPER_TOKEN(node_id, pc_idx)
Like DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(), but with an uppercased result.
This does the a similar conversion as DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(node_id, pc_idx). The only difference is that alphabetical characters in the result are uppercased.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n: node { pinctrl-0 = <...>; pinctrl-1 = <...>; pinctrl-names = "default", "f.o.o2"; };
The same caveats and restrictions that apply to DT_STRING_UPPER_TOKEN()’s return value also apply here.DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0) // DEFAULT DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1) // F_O_O2
-
DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_IDX(node_id, pc_idx)
Get the number of phandles in a pinctrl property.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n1: node-1 { pinctrl-0 = <&foo &bar>; }; n2: node-2 { pinctrl-0 = <&baz>; };
DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 0) // 2 DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), 0) // 1
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier with a pinctrl property
pc_idx – index of the pinctrl property itself
- Returns:
number of phandles in the property with that index
-
DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Like DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_IDX(), but by name instead.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n: node { pinctrl-0 = <&foo &bar>; pinctrl-1 = <&baz> pinctrl-names = "default", "sleep"; };
DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), default) // 2 DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), sleep) // 1
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier with a pinctrl property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name name of the pinctrl property
- Returns:
number of phandles in the property with that name
-
DT_NUM_PINCTRL_STATES(node_id)
Get the number of pinctrl properties in a node.
This expands to 0 if there are no pinctrl-i properties. Otherwise, it expands to the number of such properties.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n1: node-1 { pinctrl-0 = <...>; pinctrl-1 = <...>; }; n2: node-2 { };
DT_NUM_PINCTRL_STATES(DT_NODELABEL(n1)) // 2 DT_NUM_PINCTRL_STATES(DT_NODELABEL(n2)) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier; may or may not have any pinctrl properties
- Returns:
number of pinctrl properties in the node
-
DT_PINCTRL_HAS_IDX(node_id, pc_idx)
Test if a node has a pinctrl property with an index.
This expands to 1 if the pinctrl-‘idx’ property exists. Otherwise, it expands to 0.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n1: node-1 { pinctrl-0 = <...>; pinctrl-1 = <...>; }; n2: node-2 { };
DT_PINCTRL_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 0) // 1 DT_PINCTRL_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 1) // 1 DT_PINCTRL_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n1), 2) // 0 DT_PINCTRL_HAS_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n2), 0) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier; may or may not have any pinctrl properties
pc_idx – index of a pinctrl property whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the property exists, 0 otherwise
-
DT_PINCTRL_HAS_NAME(node_id, name)
Test if a node has a pinctrl property with a name.
This expands to 1 if the named pinctrl property exists. Otherwise, it expands to 0.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:n1: node-1 { pinctrl-0 = <...>; pinctrl-names = "default"; }; n2: node-2 { };
DT_PINCTRL_HAS_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n1), default) // 1 DT_PINCTRL_HAS_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n1), sleep) // 0 DT_PINCTRL_HAS_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n2), default) // 0
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier; may or may not have any pinctrl properties
name – lowercase-and-underscores pinctrl property name to check
- Returns:
1 if the property exists, 0 otherwise
-
DT_INST_PINCTRL_BY_IDX(inst, pc_idx, idx)
Get a node identifier for a phandle in a pinctrl property by index for a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance.
This is equivalent to DT_PINCTRL_BY_IDX(DT_DRV_INST(inst), pc_idx, idx).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pc_idx – index of the pinctrl property itself
idx – index into the value of the pinctrl property
- Returns:
node identifier for the phandle at index ‘idx’ in ‘pinctrl-‘pc_idx’’
-
DT_INST_PINCTRL_0(inst, idx)
Get a node identifier from a pinctrl-0 property for a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance.
This is equivalent to:
It is provided for convenience since pinctrl-0 is commonly used.DT_PINCTRL_BY_IDX(DT_DRV_INST(inst), 0, idx)
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – index into the pinctrl-0 property
- Returns:
node identifier for the phandle at index idx in the pinctrl-0 property of that instance
-
DT_INST_PINCTRL_BY_NAME(inst, name, idx)
Get a node identifier for a phandle inside a pinctrl node for a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance.
This is equivalent to DT_PINCTRL_BY_NAME(DT_DRV_INST(inst), name, idx).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores pinctrl property name
idx – index into the value of the named pinctrl property
- Returns:
node identifier for the phandle at that index in the pinctrl property
-
DT_INST_PINCTRL_NAME_TO_IDX(inst, name)
Convert a pinctrl name to its corresponding index for a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance.
This is equivalent to DT_PINCTRL_NAME_TO_IDX(DT_DRV_INST(inst),name).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of the pinctrl whose index to get
- Returns:
integer literal for the index of the pinctrl property with that name
-
DT_INST_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(inst, pc_idx)
Convert a pinctrl index to its name as an uppercased token.
This is equivalent to DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_TOKEN(DT_DRV_INST(inst), pc_idx).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pc_idx – index of the pinctrl property itself
- Returns:
name of the pin control property as a token
-
DT_INST_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_UPPER_TOKEN(inst, pc_idx)
Convert a pinctrl index to its name as an uppercased token.
This is equivalent to DT_PINCTRL_IDX_TO_NAME_UPPER_TOKEN(DT_DRV_INST(inst), idx).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pc_idx – index of the pinctrl property itself
- Returns:
name of the pin control property as an uppercase token
-
DT_INST_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_IDX(inst, pc_idx)
Get the number of phandles in a pinctrl property for a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance.
This is equivalent to DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_IDX(DT_DRV_INST(inst),pc_idx).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pc_idx – index of the pinctrl property itself
- Returns:
number of phandles in the property with that index
-
DT_INST_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Like DT_INST_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_IDX(), but by name instead.
This is equivalent to DT_NUM_PINCTRLS_BY_NAME(DT_DRV_INST(inst),name).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of the pinctrl property
- Returns:
number of phandles in the property with that name
-
DT_INST_NUM_PINCTRL_STATES(inst)
Get the number of pinctrl properties in a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance.
This is equivalent to DT_NUM_PINCTRL_STATES(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
number of pinctrl properties in the instance
-
DT_INST_PINCTRL_HAS_IDX(inst, pc_idx)
Test if a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance has a pinctrl property with an index.
This is equivalent to DT_PINCTRL_HAS_IDX(DT_DRV_INST(inst), pc_idx).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
pc_idx – index of a pinctrl property whose existence to check
- Returns:
1 if the property exists, 0 otherwise
-
DT_INST_PINCTRL_HAS_NAME(inst, name)
Test if a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance has a pinctrl property with a name.
This is equivalent to DT_PINCTRL_HAS_NAME(DT_DRV_INST(inst), name).
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores pinctrl property name to check
- Returns:
1 if the property exists, 0 otherwise
-
DT_PINCTRL_BY_IDX(node_id, pc_idx, idx)
PWM
These conveniences may be used for nodes which describe PWM controllers and properties related to them.
- group devicetree-pwms
Defines
-
DT_PWMS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the node identifier for the PWM controller from a pwms property at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:pwm1: pwm-controller@... { ... }; pwm2: pwm-controller@... { ... }; n: node { pwms = <&pwm1 1 PWM_POLARITY_NORMAL>, <&pwm2 3 PWM_POLARITY_INVERTED>; };
DT_PWMS_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0) // DT_NODELABEL(pwm1) DT_PWMS_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1) // DT_NODELABEL(pwm2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
idx – logical index into pwms property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the PWM controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_PWMS_CTLR_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get the node identifier for the PWM controller from a pwms property by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
pwm2: pwm-controller… { … };pwm1: pwm-controller@... { ... };
n: node { pwms = <&pwm1 1 PWM_POLARITY_NORMAL>, <&pwm2 3 PWM_POLARITY_INVERTED>; pwm-names = “alpha”, “beta”; };
Example usage:
DT_PWMS_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), alpha) // DT_NODELABEL(pwm1) DT_PWMS_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), beta) // DT_NODELABEL(pwm2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the PWM controller in the named element
-
DT_PWMS_CTLR(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_PWMS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the PWM controller at index 0 in the node’s “pwms” property
-
DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, cell)
Get PWM specifier’s cell value at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the “vnd,pwm” compatible:pwm1: pwm-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,pwm"; #pwm-cells = <2>; }; pwm2: pwm-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,pwm"; #pwm-cells = <2>; }; n: node { pwms = <&pwm1 1 200000 PWM_POLARITY_NORMAL>, <&pwm2 3 100000 PWM_POLARITY_INVERTED>; };
Example usage:pwm-cells: - channel - period - flags
DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0, channel) // 1 DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1, channel) // 3 DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0, period) // 200000 DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1, period) // 100000 DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0, flags) // PWM_POLARITY_NORMAL DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1, flags) // PWM_POLARITY_INVERTED
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
idx – logical index into pwms property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(node_id, name, cell)
Get a PWM specifier’s cell value by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the “vnd,pwm” compatible:pwm1: pwm-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,pwm"; #pwm-cells = <2>; }; pwm2: pwm-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,pwm"; #pwm-cells = <2>; }; n: node { pwms = <&pwm1 1 200000 PWM_POLARITY_NORMAL>, <&pwm2 3 100000 PWM_POLARITY_INVERTED>; pwm-names = "alpha", "beta"; };
Example usage:pwm-cells: - channel - period - flags
DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), alpha, channel) // 1 DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), beta, channel) // 3 DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), alpha, period) // 200000 DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), beta, period) // 100000 DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), alpha, flags) // PWM_POLARITY_NORMAL DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), beta, flags) // PWM_POLARITY_INVERTED
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_PWMS_CELL(node_id, cell)
Equivalent to DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, 0, cell)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index 0
-
DT_PWMS_CHANNEL_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get a PWM specifier’s channel cell value at an index.
This macro only works for PWM specifiers with cells named “channel”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
This is equivalent to DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, channel).
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
idx – logical index into pwms property
- Returns:
the channel cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_PWMS_CHANNEL_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get a PWM specifier’s channel cell value by name.
This macro only works for PWM specifiers with cells named “channel”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
This is equivalent to DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(node_id, name, channel).
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
- Returns:
the channel cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_PWMS_CHANNEL(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_PWMS_CHANNEL_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
- Returns:
the channel cell value at index 0
-
DT_PWMS_PERIOD_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get PWM specifier’s period cell value at an index.
This macro only works for PWM specifiers with cells named “period”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
This is equivalent to DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, period).
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
idx – logical index into pwms property
- Returns:
the period cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_PWMS_PERIOD_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get a PWM specifier’s period cell value by name.
This macro only works for PWM specifiers with cells named “period”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
This is equivalent to DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(node_id, name, period).
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
- Returns:
the period cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_PWMS_PERIOD(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_PWMS_PERIOD_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
- Returns:
the period cell value at index 0
-
DT_PWMS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get a PWM specifier’s flags cell value at an index.
This macro expects PWM specifiers with cells named “flags”. If there is no “flags” cell in the PWM specifier, zero is returned. Refer to the node’s binding to check specifier cell names if necessary.
This is equivalent to DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, flags).
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
idx – logical index into pwms property
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index “idx”, or zero if there is none
-
DT_PWMS_FLAGS_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get a PWM specifier’s flags cell value by name.
This macro expects PWM specifiers with cells named “flags”. If there is no “flags” cell in the PWM specifier, zero is returned. Refer to the node’s binding to check specifier cell names if necessary.
This is equivalent to DT_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(node_id, name, flags) if there is a flags cell, but expands to zero if there is none.
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
- Returns:
the flags cell value in the specifier at the named element, or zero if there is none
-
DT_PWMS_FLAGS(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_PWMS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a pwms property
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index 0, or zero if there is none
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get the node identifier for the PWM controller from a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s pwms property at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into pwms property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the PWM controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CTLR_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get the node identifier for the PWM controller from a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s pwms property by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the PWM controller in the named element
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CTLR(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
the node identifier for the PWM controller at index 0 in the instance’s “pwms” property
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, idx, cell)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s PWM specifier’s cell value at an index.
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into pwms property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(inst, name, cell)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s PWM specifier’s cell value by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CELL(inst, cell)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, 0, cell)
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index 0
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CHANNEL_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, idx, channel)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into pwms property
- Returns:
the channel cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CHANNEL_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(inst, name, channel)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
- Returns:
the channel cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_INST_PWMS_CHANNEL(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CHANNEL_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
the channel cell value at index 0
-
DT_INST_PWMS_PERIOD_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, idx, period)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into pwms property
- Returns:
the period cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_PWMS_PERIOD_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(inst, name, period)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
- Returns:
the period cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_INST_PWMS_PERIOD(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_PERIOD_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
the period cell value at index 0
-
DT_INST_PWMS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, idx, flags)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into pwms property
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index “idx”, or zero if there is none
-
DT_INST_PWMS_FLAGS_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_CELL_BY_NAME(inst, name, flags)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a pwms element as defined by the node’s pwm-names property
- Returns:
the flags cell value in the specifier at the named element, or zero if there is none
-
DT_INST_PWMS_FLAGS(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_PWMS_FLAGS_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
the flags cell value at index 0, or zero if there is none
-
DT_PWMS_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Reset Controller
These conveniences may be used for nodes which describe reset controllers and properties related to them.
- group devicetree-reset-controller
Defines
-
DT_RESET_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a “resets” phandle-array property at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:reset1: reset-controller@... { ... }; reset2: reset-controller@... { ... }; n: node { resets = <&reset1 10>, <&reset2 20>; };
DT_RESET_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0)) // DT_NODELABEL(reset1) DT_RESET_CTLR_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 1)) // DT_NODELABEL(reset2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into “resets”
- Returns:
the node identifier for the reset controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_RESET_CTLR(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_RESET_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
a node identifier for the reset controller at index 0 in “resets”
-
DT_RESET_CTLR_BY_NAME(node_id, name)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a resets phandle-array property by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:reset1: reset-controller@... { ... }; reset2: reset-controller@... { ... }; n: node { resets = <&reset1 10>, <&reset2 20>; reset-names = "alpha", "beta"; };
DT_RESET_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), alpha) // DT_NODELABEL(reset1) DT_RESET_CTLR_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), beta) // DT_NODELABEL(reset2)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a resets element as defined by the node’s reset-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the reset controller referenced by name
-
DT_RESET_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, idx, cell)
Get a reset specifier’s cell value at an index.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,reset compatible:reset: reset-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,reset"; #reset-cells = <1>; }; n: node { resets = <&reset 10>; };
Example usage:reset-cells: - id
DT_RESET_CELL_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0, id) // 10
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a resets property
idx – logical index into resets property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_RESET_CELL_BY_NAME(node_id, name, cell)
Get a reset specifier’s cell value by name.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,reset compatible:reset: reset-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,reset"; #reset-cells = <1>; }; n: node { resets = <&reset 10>; reset-names = "alpha"; };
Example usage:reset-cells: - id
DT_RESET_CELL_BY_NAME(DT_NODELABEL(n), alpha, id) // 10
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a resets property
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a resets element as defined by the node’s reset-names property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_RESET_CELL(node_id, cell)
Equivalent to DT_RESET_CELL_BY_IDX(node_id, 0, cell)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier for a node with a resets property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index 0
-
DT_INST_RESET_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a “resets” phandle-array property at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
idx – logical index into “resets”
- Returns:
the node identifier for the reset controller referenced at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_RESET_CTLR(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_RESET_CTLR_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
- Returns:
a node identifier for the reset controller at index 0 in “resets”
-
DT_INST_RESET_CTLR_BY_NAME(inst, name)
Get the node identifier for the controller phandle from a resets phandle-array property by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a resets element as defined by the node’s reset-names property
- Returns:
the node identifier for the reset controller referenced by the named element
-
DT_INST_RESET_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, idx, cell)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s reset specifier’s cell value at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into resets property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_RESET_CELL_BY_NAME(inst, name, cell)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s reset specifier’s cell value by name.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
name – lowercase-and-underscores name of a resets element as defined by the node’s reset-names property
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the cell value in the specifier at the named element
-
DT_INST_RESET_CELL(inst, cell)
Equivalent to DT_INST_RESET_CELL_BY_IDX(inst, 0, cell)
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
cell – lowercase-and-underscores cell name
- Returns:
the value of the cell inside the specifier at index 0
-
DT_RESET_ID_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
Get a Reset Controller specifier’s id cell at an index.
This macro only works for Reset Controller specifiers with cells named “id”. Refer to the node’s binding to check if necessary.
Example devicetree fragment:
Bindings fragment for the vnd,reset compatible:reset: reset-controller@... { compatible = "vnd,reset"; #reset-cells = <1>; }; n: node { resets = <&reset 10>; };
Example usage:reset-cells: - id
DT_RESET_ID_BY_IDX(DT_NODELABEL(n), 0) // 10
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
idx – logical index into “resets”
- Returns:
the id cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_RESET_ID(node_id)
Equivalent to DT_RESET_ID_BY_IDX(node_id, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
node_id – node identifier
- Returns:
the id cell value at index 0
-
DT_INST_RESET_ID_BY_IDX(inst, idx)
Get a DT_DRV_COMPAT instance’s Reset Controller specifier’s id cell value at an index.
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
idx – logical index into “resets”
- Returns:
the id cell value at index “idx”
-
DT_INST_RESET_ID(inst)
Equivalent to DT_INST_RESET_ID_BY_IDX(inst, 0)
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
the id cell value at index 0
-
DT_RESET_CTLR_BY_IDX(node_id, idx)
SPI
These conveniences may be used for nodes which describe either SPI controllers or devices, depending on the case.
- group devicetree-spi
Defines
-
DT_SPI_HAS_CS_GPIOS(spi)
Does a SPI controller node have chip select GPIOs configured?
SPI bus controllers use the “cs-gpios” property for configuring chip select GPIOs. Its value is a phandle-array which specifies the chip select lines.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:spi1: spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; cs-gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>, <&gpio2 20 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; }; spi2: spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; };
DT_SPI_HAS_CS_GPIOS(DT_NODELABEL(spi1)) // 1 DT_SPI_HAS_CS_GPIOS(DT_NODELABEL(spi2)) // 0
- Parameters:
spi – a SPI bus controller node identifier
- Returns:
1 if “spi” has a cs-gpios property, 0 otherwise
-
DT_SPI_NUM_CS_GPIOS(spi)
Number of chip select GPIOs in a SPI controller’s cs-gpios property.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:spi1: spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; cs-gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>, <&gpio2 20 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; }; spi2: spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; };
DT_SPI_NUM_CS_GPIOS(DT_NODELABEL(spi1)) // 2 DT_SPI_NUM_CS_GPIOS(DT_NODELABEL(spi2)) // 0
- Parameters:
spi – a SPI bus controller node identifier
- Returns:
Logical length of spi’s cs-gpios property, or 0 if “spi” doesn’t have a cs-gpios property
-
DT_SPI_DEV_HAS_CS_GPIOS(spi_dev)
Does a SPI device have a chip select line configured? Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:spi1: spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; cs-gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>, <&gpio2 20 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; a: spi-dev-a@0 { reg = <0>; }; b: spi-dev-b@1 { reg = <1>; }; }; spi2: spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; c: spi-dev-c@0 { reg = <0>; }; };
DT_SPI_DEV_HAS_CS_GPIOS(DT_NODELABEL(a)) // 1 DT_SPI_DEV_HAS_CS_GPIOS(DT_NODELABEL(b)) // 1 DT_SPI_DEV_HAS_CS_GPIOS(DT_NODELABEL(c)) // 0
- Parameters:
spi_dev – a SPI device node identifier
- Returns:
1 if spi_dev’s bus node DT_BUS(spi_dev) has a chip select pin at index DT_REG_ADDR(spi_dev), 0 otherwise
-
DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_CTLR(spi_dev)
Get a SPI device’s chip select GPIO controller’s node identifier.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:gpio1: gpio@... { ... }; gpio2: gpio@... { ... }; spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; cs-gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>, <&gpio2 20 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; a: spi-dev-a@0 { reg = <0>; }; b: spi-dev-b@1 { reg = <1>; }; };
DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_CTLR(DT_NODELABEL(a)) // DT_NODELABEL(gpio1) DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_CTLR(DT_NODELABEL(b)) // DT_NODELABEL(gpio2)
- Parameters:
spi_dev – a SPI device node identifier
- Returns:
node identifier for spi_dev’s chip select GPIO controller
-
DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_PIN(spi_dev)
Get a SPI device’s chip select GPIO pin number.
It’s an error if the GPIO specifier for spi_dev’s entry in its bus node’s cs-gpios property has no pin cell.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:spi1: spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; cs-gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>, <&gpio2 20 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; a: spi-dev-a@0 { reg = <0>; }; b: spi-dev-b@1 { reg = <1>; }; };
DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_PIN(DT_NODELABEL(a)) // 10 DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_PIN(DT_NODELABEL(b)) // 20
- Parameters:
spi_dev – a SPI device node identifier
- Returns:
pin number of spi_dev’s chip select GPIO
-
DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_FLAGS(spi_dev)
Get a SPI device’s chip select GPIO flags.
Example devicetree fragment:
Example usage:spi1: spi@... { compatible = "vnd,spi"; cs-gpios = <&gpio1 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; a: spi-dev-a@0 { reg = <0>; }; };
If the GPIO specifier for spi_dev’s entry in its bus node’s cs-gpios property has no flags cell, this expands to zero.DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_FLAGS(DT_NODELABEL(a)) // GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW
- Parameters:
spi_dev – a SPI device node identifier
- Returns:
flags value of spi_dev’s chip select GPIO specifier, or zero if there is none
-
DT_INST_SPI_DEV_HAS_CS_GPIOS(inst)
Equivalent to DT_SPI_DEV_HAS_CS_GPIOS(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
1 if the instance’s bus has a CS pin at index DT_INST_REG_ADDR(inst), 0 otherwise
-
DT_INST_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_CTLR(inst)
Get GPIO controller node identifier for a SPI device instance This is equivalent to DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_CTLR(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
node identifier for instance’s chip select GPIO controller
-
DT_INST_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_PIN(inst)
Equivalent to DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_PIN(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
pin number of the instance’s chip select GPIO
-
DT_INST_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_FLAGS(inst)
DT_SPI_DEV_CS_GPIOS_FLAGS(DT_DRV_INST(inst)).
See also
- Parameters:
inst – DT_DRV_COMPAT instance number
- Returns:
flags value of the instance’s chip select GPIO specifier, or zero if there is none
-
DT_SPI_HAS_CS_GPIOS(spi)
Chosen nodes
The special /chosen
node contains properties whose values describe
system-wide settings. The DT_CHOSEN()
macro can be used to get a node
identifier for a chosen node.
- group devicetree-generic-chosen
Defines
-
DT_CHOSEN(prop)
Get a node identifier for a
/chosen
node property.This is only valid to call if
DT_HAS_CHOSEN(prop)
is 1.- Parameters:
prop – lowercase-and-underscores property name for the /chosen node
- Returns:
a node identifier for the chosen node property
-
DT_HAS_CHOSEN(prop)
Test if the devicetree has a
/chosen
node.- Parameters:
prop – lowercase-and-underscores devicetree property
- Returns:
1 if the chosen property exists and refers to a node, 0 otherwise
-
DT_CHOSEN(prop)
Zephyr-specific chosen nodes
The following table documents some commonly used Zephyr-specific chosen nodes.
Sometimes, a chosen node’s label property will be used to set the default value of a Kconfig option which in turn configures a hardware-specific device. This is usually for backwards compatibility in cases when the Kconfig option predates devicetree support in Zephyr. In other cases, there is no Kconfig option, and the devicetree node is used directly in the source code to select a device.
Property |
Purpose |
---|---|
zephyr,bt-c2h-uart |
Selects the UART used for host communication in the Bluetooth: HCI UART |
zephyr,bt-mon-uart |
Sets UART device used for the Bluetooth monitor logging |
zephyr,bt-hci |
Selects the HCI device used by the Bluetooth host stack |
zephyr,canbus |
Sets the default CAN controller |
zephyr,ccm |
Core-Coupled Memory node on some STM32 SoCs |
zephyr,code-partition |
Flash partition that the Zephyr image’s text section should be linked into |
zephyr,console |
Sets UART device used by console driver |
zephyr,display |
Sets the default display controller |
zephyr,keyboard-scan |
Sets the default keyboard scan controller |
zephyr,dtcm |
Data Tightly Coupled Memory node on some Arm SoCs |
zephyr,entropy |
A device which can be used as a system-wide entropy source |
zephyr,flash |
A node whose |
zephyr,flash-controller |
The node corresponding to the flash controller device for
the |
zephyr,gdbstub-uart |
Sets UART device used by the GDB stub subsystem |
zephyr,ieee802154 |
Used by the networking subsystem to set the IEEE 802.15.4 device |
zephyr,ipc |
Used by the OpenAMP subsystem to specify the inter-process communication (IPC) device |
zephyr,ipc_shm |
A node whose |
zephyr,itcm |
Instruction Tightly Coupled Memory node on some Arm SoCs |
zephyr,log-uart |
Sets the UART device(s) used by the logging subsystem’s UART backend. If defined, the UART log backend would output to the devices listed in this node. |
zephyr,ocm |
On-chip memory node on Xilinx Zynq-7000 and ZynqMP SoCs |
zephyr,osdp-uart |
Sets UART device used by OSDP subsystem |
zephyr,ot-uart |
Used by the OpenThread to specify UART device for Spinel protocol |
zephyr,pcie-controller |
The node corresponding to the PCIe Controller |
zephyr,ppp-uart |
Sets UART device used by PPP |
zephyr,settings-partition |
Fixed partition node. If defined this selects the partition used by the NVS and FCB settings backends. |
zephyr,shell-uart |
Sets UART device used by serial shell backend |
zephyr,sram |
A node whose |
zephyr,tracing-uart |
Sets UART device used by tracing subsystem |
zephyr,uart-mcumgr |
UART used for Device Management |
zephyr,uart-pipe |
Sets UART device used by serial pipe driver |
zephyr,usb-device |
USB device node. If defined and has a |