From: Oscar A Perez linux@neuralgames.com
[ Upstream commit 89b97c429e2e77d695b5133572ca12ec256a4ea4 ]
According to the AST2500/AST2520 specs, these SoCs support up to 228 GPIO pins. However, 'gpio-ranges' value in 'aspeed-g5.dtsi' file is currently setting the upper limit to 220 which isn't allowing access to all their GPIOs. The correct upper limit value is 232 (actual number is 228 plus a 4-GPIO hole in GPIOAB). Without this patch, GPIOs AC5 and AC6 do not work correctly on a AST2500 BMC running Linux Kernel v4.19
Fixes: 2039f90d136c ("ARM: dts: aspeed-g5: Add gpio controller to devicetree") Signed-off-by: Oscar A Perez linux@neuralgames.com Reviewed-by: Andrew Jeffery andrew@aj.id.au Signed-off-by: Joel Stanley joel@jms.id.au Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org --- arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed-g5.dtsi | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed-g5.dtsi b/arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed-g5.dtsi index d107459fc0f89..f2e1015d75ab4 100644 --- a/arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed-g5.dtsi +++ b/arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed-g5.dtsi @@ -247,7 +247,7 @@ compatible = "aspeed,ast2500-gpio"; reg = <0x1e780000 0x1000>; interrupts = <20>; - gpio-ranges = <&pinctrl 0 0 220>; + gpio-ranges = <&pinctrl 0 0 232>; clocks = <&syscon ASPEED_CLK_APB>; interrupt-controller; };