the linker set of CPU modules. The newbus method, although clever,
had many flaws: it didn't really support multiple SoC, many of the
comments about order were just wrong, and it did a few things far too
late to be useful. delay and cpu_reset now work much earlier in the
boot process.
having the CPU device that's a child of atmelarm that does stuff.
o Create a linker_set for the support fucntions for the SoCs.
o Rename soc_data to soc_info.
o Move the delay and reset function pointers to new soc_data struct
o Create elements for all known SoCs
o Add lookup of the SoC we found, and print a warning if it isn't one
we know about.
aren't very pretty yet, but this takes DELAY and cpu_reset and makes
them pointers.
# I worry that these are set too late in the boot, especially cpu_reset.
SoC variants. Fold the AT91SAM9XE chips into the AT91SAM9260
handling, where appropriate. The following SoCs/SoC families are recognized:
at91cap9, at91rm9200, at91sam9260, at91sam9261, at91sam9263,
at91sam9g10, at91sam9g20, at91sam9g45, at91sam9n12, at91sam9rl,
at91sam9x5
and the following variations are also recognized:
at91rm9200_bga, at91rm9200_pqfp, at91sam9xe, at91sam9g45, at91sam9m10,
at91sam9g46, at91sam9m11, at91sam9g15, at91sam9g25, at91sam9g35,
at91sam9x25, at91sam9x35
This is only the identification routine: no additional Atmel devices
are supported at this time.
# With these changes, I'm able to boot to the point of identification
# on a few different Atmel SoCs that we don't yet support using the
# KB920X config file -- someday tht will be an ATMEL config file...
compiled into the kernel. This allows us to boot the same kernel on
machines with different master clock frequencies, so long as we can
determine the main clock frequency accurately. Cleanup the pmc clock
init function so it can be called in early boot so we can use the
serial port just after we call cninit.
# We have two calls to at91_pmc_clock_init for reasons unknown, that will
# be fixed later -- it is harmless for now.
* Support for sam9 "EMAC" controller.
* Support for rmii interface to phy.
at91.c & at91sam9.c:
* Eliminate separate at91sam9.c file.
* Add new devices to at91sam9_devs table.
at91_machdep.c & at at91sam9_machdep.c:
* Automatic chip type determination.
* Remove compile time chip dependencies.
* Eliminate separate at91sam9_machdep.c file.
at91_pmc.c:
* Corrected support for all of the sam926? and sam9g20 chips.
* Remove compile time chip dependencies.
My apologies to Greg for taking so long to take care of it.
time constant. This allows us to potentially change it at runtime or
autodetect it early in the boot (the latter being much more likely to
have a good outcome).
o Copy kb920x_machdep.c to at91_machdep.c
o Move board_init to new board_kb920x.c
o rename ramsize to at91_ramsize and make it accessible to board_* files.
o Delete files.kb920x. We can do this selection with the new boards.
o Add a stub for the tsc4370 board init, which will be added in
a future commit.
o Add new 'devices' at91_board_kb920x and at91_board_tsc4370. More are
needed and will be added in future commits.
Reviewed by: stass, cognet
is a ARM920T based CPU with a bunch of built-in peripherals. The
inital import supports the SPI bus, the TWI bus (although iicbus
integration is not complete), the uarts, the system timer and the
onboard ethernet. Support for the Kwikbyte KB9202
(http://www.kwikbyte.com) board is also included, although there's no
reason why the 9200 and the 9201 wouldn't also work. Primitive
support for running under the skyeye emulator is also provided
(although skyeye's support for the AT91RM9200 is a little weak).
The code has been structured so that other members of Atmel's arm family can
be supported in the future. The AT91SAM9260 is not presently supported
due to lack of hardware. The arm7tdmi families are also not supported
becasue they lack an MMU.
Many thanks to cognet@ for his help and assistance in bringing up this
board. He did much of the vm work and wrote parts of the uart and
system timer code as well as the bus space implementation.
The system boots to single user w/o problem, although the serial
console is a little slow and the ethernet driver is still in flux.
This work was sponsored by Timing Solutions, Corporation. I am
grateful to their support of the FreeBSD project in this manner.