Hi Laurent,

Den 04.08.2017 16.54, skrev Laurent Pinchart:
Hi David,

Thank you for the patch.

On Thursday 03 Aug 2017 17:33:47 David Lechner wrote:
This adds a new binding for Sitronix ST7586 display panels.

Using lego as the vendor prefix in the compatible string because the display
panel I am working with is an integral part of the LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3.

Signed-off-by: David Lechner <da...@lechnology.com>
---
  .../bindings/display/sitronix,st7586.txt           | 26 +++++++++++++++++++
  1 file changed, 26 insertions(+)
  create mode 100644
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/display/sitronix,st7586.txt

diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/display/sitronix,st7586.txt
b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/display/sitronix,st7586.txt new file
mode 100644
index 0000000..dfb0b7b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/display/sitronix,st7586.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
+Sitronix ST7586 display panel
+
+Required properties:
+- compatible:  "lego,ev3-lcd".
+
+The node for this driver must be a child node of a SPI controller, hence
+all mandatory properties described in ../spi/spi-bus.txt must be specified.
+
+Optional properties:
+- dc-gpios:    D/C pin. The presence/absence of this GPIO determines
+               the panel interface operation mode (IF[3:1] pins):
+               - present: IF=011 4-wire 8-bit data serial interface
+               - absent:  IF=010 3-wire 9-bit data serial interface
How does this work ? Do you have a single GPIO on your system connected to
IF[1], with IF[3:2] hardwired to 01 ?

+- reset-gpios: Reset pin
+- power-supply:        A regulator node for the supply voltage.
+- backlight:   phandle of the backlight device attached to the panel
+- rotation:    panel rotation in degrees counter clockwise (0,90,180,270)
Please use the OF graph DT bindings (a.k.a. ports) to describe the connection
between the panel and its source.

This display has a controller with onboard memory that is scanned out
to the panel. The controller is connected, in this instance, through SPI.
Both initialization and pixel data is transferred over SPI. It resembles
the MIPI DCS/DBI standard except that it misses some of the commands and
has non standard formats: 2-bit greyscale and monochrome. MIPI DBI only
supports rgb formats (3, 8, 12, 16 and 18-bits). So it isn't a drm panel
in the sense as one connected through MIPI DSI or MIPI DPI.

MIPI DBI has 3 interface types:
- 8/9/16/18 bit parallel bus + Data/Command signal (8080 or motorola bus)
- 8/16 bit SPI + D/C signal
- 9 bit SPI (D/C as first bit)

Noralf.

+Example:
+       display@0{
+               compatible = "lego,ev3-lcd";
+               reg = <0>;
+               spi-max-frequency = <10000000>;
+               dc-gpios = <&gpio 43 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>;
+               reset-gpios = <&gpio 80 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>;
+       };

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