i.MX31 powers on with most clocks running, so, after a power on this explicit
clock start up is not required. However, as Linux boots it disables most clocks
to save power. This includes the I2C clock. If we then soft reboot from Linux
the I2C clock stays off. This breaks the phycore, which has its environment in
I2C EEPROM. Fix the problem by explicitly starting the clock in I2C driver
initialisation routine.

Signed-off-by: Guennadi Liakhovetski <[email protected]>
---

Changes since v1: Clock is initialised in the I2C driver now, not in board 
code. Thanks to Jean-Christophe for suggesting.

 drivers/i2c/mxc_i2c.c |    6 ++++++
 1 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/i2c/mxc_i2c.c b/drivers/i2c/mxc_i2c.c
index eedad06..8e10fbb 100644
--- a/drivers/i2c/mxc_i2c.c
+++ b/drivers/i2c/mxc_i2c.c
@@ -49,10 +49,13 @@
 
 #ifdef CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MX31_PORT1
 #define I2C_BASE       0x43f80000
+#define I2C_CLK_OFFSET 26
 #elif defined (CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MX31_PORT2)
 #define I2C_BASE       0x43f98000
+#define I2C_CLK_OFFSET 28
 #elif defined (CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MX31_PORT3)
 #define I2C_BASE       0x43f84000
+#define I2C_CLK_OFFSET 30
 #else
 #error "define CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MX31_PORTx to use the mx31 I2C driver"
 #endif
@@ -72,6 +75,9 @@ void i2c_init(int speed, int unused)
        int freq = mx31_get_ipg_clk();
        int i;
 
+       /* start the required I2C clock */
+       __REG(CCM_CGR0) = __REG(CCM_CGR0) | (3 << I2C_CLK_OFFSET);
+
        for (i = 0; i < 0x1f; i++)
                if (freq / div[i] <= speed)
                        break;
-- 
1.5.4

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