and start teaching subsystems about it.
The Atheros MIPS platforms don't guarantee any kind of FIFO consistency
with interrupts in hardware. So software needs to do a flush when it
receives an interrupt and before it calls the interrupt handler.
There are new ones for the QCA934x and QCA955x, so do a few things:
* Get rid of the individual ones (for ethernet and IP2);
* Create a mux and enum listing all the variations on DDR flushes;
* replace the uses of IP2 with the relevant one (which will typically
be "PCI" here);
* call the USB DDR flush before calling the real USB interrupt handlers;
* call the ethernet one upon receiving an interrupt that's for us,
rather than never calling it during operation.
Tested:
* QCA9558 (TP-Link archer c7 v2)
* AR9331 (Carambola 2)
TODO:
* PCI, USB, ethernet, etc need to do a double-check to see if the
interrupt was truely for them before doing the DDR. For now I
prefer "correct" over "fast".
This adds the initial frequency poking and configures up enough
for it to boot and spit out data over the console.
There's still a whole bunch of work to do in the reset path
and devices to support this thing, but hey, it's alive!
ath> go 0x80050100
## Starting application at 0x80050100 ...
CPU platform: Atheros AR9558 rev 0
CPU Frequency=720 MHz
CPU DDR Frequency=600 MHz
CPU AHB Frequency=200 MHz
platform frequency: 720 MHz
CPU reference clock: 0 MHz
CPU MDIO clock: 40 MHz
Done at: hackathon
Obtained from: Linux OpenWRT, Qualcomm Atheros