Skip to content
Sven Peter edited this page Apr 3, 2021 · 1 revision

There are (at least) two different kinds of clocks defined in the ADT:

  • clock-gates or power-gates which index into the devices array of the pmgr ADT node
  • clock-ids which represent clocks with a frequency and index into the clock-frequencies array of the arm-io node

clock-gates / power-gates

Gated clocks are used to remove the clock signal to certain peripherals when they are not used. The ids for a specific ADT node usually need to be turned on before the MMIO region of that device can be accessed.

There is probably also some topology involved in these clocks since e.g. SIO, UART_P and UART0 seem to be required to access the UART MMIO region even though the UART node only requests UART0.

clock-ids

These clocks are likely preconfigured by iBoot and never touched by XNU itself. Their frequencies are passed as nodes in the ADT. Low indexes (<0x100, but probably only 6 or so) are clocks given in the cpu0 node (e.g. bus-frequency) and for now all seem to be set to 24 MHz. Indexes above 0x100 map to the clock-frequencies array of the arm-io node. These are usually used as reference clocks for e.g. the UART or the I2C bus.

There is also the clock-frequencies-regs property but it's unknown how exactly the registers in there map to the above mentioned clocks. That property also seems to be completely unused by XNU.

Clone this wiki locally