162306a36Sopenharmony_ci// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
262306a36Sopenharmony_ci
362306a36Sopenharmony_ci#include "ste-dbx5x0.dtsi"
462306a36Sopenharmony_ci
562306a36Sopenharmony_ci/ {
662306a36Sopenharmony_ci	cpus {
762306a36Sopenharmony_ci		cpu@300 {
862306a36Sopenharmony_ci			operating-points = <998400 0
962306a36Sopenharmony_ci					    798720 0
1062306a36Sopenharmony_ci					    399360 0
1162306a36Sopenharmony_ci					    199680 0>;
1262306a36Sopenharmony_ci		};
1362306a36Sopenharmony_ci	};
1462306a36Sopenharmony_ci
1562306a36Sopenharmony_ci	reserved-memory {
1662306a36Sopenharmony_ci		#address-cells = <1>;
1762306a36Sopenharmony_ci		#size-cells = <1>;
1862306a36Sopenharmony_ci		ranges;
1962306a36Sopenharmony_ci
2062306a36Sopenharmony_ci		/*
2162306a36Sopenharmony_ci		 * Initial Secure Software ISSW memory
2262306a36Sopenharmony_ci		 *
2362306a36Sopenharmony_ci		 * This is probably only used if the kernel tries
2462306a36Sopenharmony_ci		 * to actually call into trustzone to run secure
2562306a36Sopenharmony_ci		 * applications, which the mainline kernel probably
2662306a36Sopenharmony_ci		 * will not do on this old chipset. But you can never
2762306a36Sopenharmony_ci		 * be too careful, so reserve this memory anyway.
2862306a36Sopenharmony_ci		 */
2962306a36Sopenharmony_ci		ram@17f00000 {
3062306a36Sopenharmony_ci			reg = <0x17f00000 0x00100000>;
3162306a36Sopenharmony_ci			no-map;
3262306a36Sopenharmony_ci		};
3362306a36Sopenharmony_ci	};
3462306a36Sopenharmony_ci};
35