All devices that can use the system LED peripheral to control an actual LED currently use this as a GPIO-controlled LED. A GPIO LED provides more fine-grained control of blink rates, at the cost of some CPU cycles. Users may anyhow prefer to use the sys-led peripheral, so add the sys-led node as "disabled".
Signed-off-by: Sander Vanheule <[email protected]> --- target/linux/realtek/dts-5.10/rtl839x.dtsi | 5 +++++ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+) diff --git a/target/linux/realtek/dts-5.10/rtl839x.dtsi b/target/linux/realtek/dts-5.10/rtl839x.dtsi index 07017c587191..8d040b9c6e3e 100644 --- a/target/linux/realtek/dts-5.10/rtl839x.dtsi +++ b/target/linux/realtek/dts-5.10/rtl839x.dtsi @@ -246,6 +246,11 @@ compatible = "realtek,cypress-switchcore", "syscon"; reg = <0x1b000000 0x10000>; + hw_sys_led: sys-led { + compatible = "realtek,cypress-sys-led"; + status = "disabled"; + }; + pinctrl: pinctrl { compatible = "realtek,cypress-pinctrl"; -- 2.37.3 _______________________________________________ openwrt-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openwrt.org/mailman/listinfo/openwrt-devel
