by having uboot_autoload() do the fdt setup (which may load a file) rather
than waiting until we're actually in the process of launching the kernel.
As part of making this happen...
- Define LOADER_FDT_SUPPORT on the uboot/lib compile command line when
MK_FDT is set.
- Make fdt_setup_fdtb() public.
- Declare public fdt_whatever() functions in a header instead of using
scattered extern decls in .c files.
(1) Invoke cpp to bring in files via #include (although the old
/include/ stuff is supported still).
(2) bring in files from either vendor tree or freebsd-custom files
when building.
(3) move all dts* files from sys/boot/fdt/dts to
sys/boot/fdt/dts/${MACHINE} as appropriate.
(4) encode all the magic to do the build in sys/tools/fdt/make_dtb.sh
so that the different places in the tree use the exact same logic.
(5) switch back to gpl dtc by default. the bsdl one in the tree has
significant issues not easily addressed by those unfamiliar with
the code.
Quartz is a tiny module utilized Freescale VF6xx
system-on-chip and development kit produced by
Device Solutions.
Quartz is available in a form of LGA (38x38x2mm)
or as a module with high-density connectors.
Sponsored by: Device Solutions
The first I2C controller is only used to manage the on-board devices (PMIC
and HDMI framer) and its bus is not exposed on the expasion headers.
With this change the following pins on the P9 expansion headers are now
reserved as I2C pins:
Pin 17 - I2C1 SCL
Pin 18 - I2C1 SDA
Pin 19 - I2C2 SCL
Pin 20 - I2C2 SDA
The I2C2 is the bus that should be used to read the contents of cape
eeproms.
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
The name is taken from the u-boot env vars fdtfile or fdt_file. If the
name isn't fully-qualified a search is done in module_path locations.
The search order for a usable dtb in fdt_setup_fdtp() is now
- A dtb loaded with an explicit "load -t dtb" command.
- A dtb already loaded into memory somehow[*] and pointed to by fdt_to_load.
- A dtb in the memory pointed to by the u-boot env vars fdtaddr or fdt_addr.
- A file named by the u-boot env vars fdtfile or fdt_file.
- A static dtb compiled into the kernel.
* Presumably by some arch-specific command or code.
The old code basically said it was going to use some particular blob
without knowing whether it could successfully do so, then it would invoke
the function to do that and return its status. If it failed, you were
done, even if other blobs might be available. Now the code attempts to use
some particular blob and if that succeeds it says so and returns success,
otherwise it moves on to try another potential blob.
One specific problem this solves is when u-boot sets an fdtaddr variable
to point to some memory address, then doesn't actually load a blob at
that address. Now the header check will fail, and the code will move
on to the fallback dtb compiled into the kernel (if any).
source shows that board vendors seem to be about evenly split on this.
This commit is a trivial change to note that while the previous change
was supposed to be whitespace only, this functional change also crept in.
The added lines were:
/* Board vendors use both fdtaddr and fdt_addr names. Grrrr. */
if (s == NULL)
s = ub_env_get("fdt_addr");
The temperature monitor device is enabled to sample the die temperature at
16hz. The temperature is published via sysctl. A callout routine at 10hz
monitors the temperature and throttles back the cpu if the temperature
goes over a user-settable throttle point (by default 10C less than the
critical high-point temperature for the chip). The hardware is supposed
to be able to deliver an interrupt when the temperature exceeds a settable
limit, but the interrupt never arrives so for now a callout does the job.
At attach time we read the maximum cpu frequency the chip is allowed to run
at and the cpu is set to run at that speed. It's reported at attach time.
A sysctl variable reports the current speed when queried.
New sysctl values:
dev.imx6_anatop.0.cpu_mhz: 984
dev.imx6_anatop.0.temperature: 37.9C
dev.imx6_anatop.0.throttle_temperature: 95.0C
Steven Lawrance did the initial heavy lifting on this, but I changed
enough stuff that I'm the one to blame if anything breaks.
Submitted by: Steven Lawrance <stl@koffein.net>
While here, don't overwrite the error message on interactive use and add
the missing '\n' at end of error message for the non interactive use.
Tested by: ian, myself
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
Add gpioled(4) to BEAGLEBONE kernel and add the description of the four
on-board leds of beaglebone-black to its DTS file.
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
in the dts source, and adding the right devices to the kernel config. Also
generally bring the kernel config into line with what we have for other
Marvell/Kirkwood systems (add lots of useful devices and options).
One particularly notable addition amongst the kernel config changes is
USB_HOST_ALIGN=32, which may help eliminate data corruption on USB drives.
PR: kern/181975 arm/162159
the LED specification was just misplaced). The rather odd memory mappings
that were in place used an undocumented attribute value (0x0f) that caused
problems with the system.
Submitted by: Markus Pfeiffer <markus.pfeiffer@morphism.de>
sys/boot/fdt/dts/bindings-gpio.txt. Make the led pin an output, add the
missing flag field. No functional change (gpioled(4) isn’t supported on
FDT systems yet).
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Use the published compatible strings (our own invention, "ti,mmchs" is
still accepted as well, for now).
Don't blindly turn on 8-bit bus mode, because even though the conroller
supports it, the board has to be wired appropriately as well. Use the
published property (bus-width=<n>) and honor all the valid values (1,4,8).
The eMMC device on a Beaglebone Black is wired for 8-bit, update the dts.
The mmchs controller can inherently do both 1.8v and 3.0v on the first
device and 1.8v only on other devices, unless an external transceiver is
used. Set the voltage automatically for the first device and honor
the published fdt property (ti,dualvolt) for other devices.
Thanks go to Ilya Bakulin for figuring out the voltage compatibility stuff.
The imx6.dtsi is incomplete, but has enough to support devices that work
right now. Eventually it will need to be split into several files that
account for the differences between SoCs in the imx6 family.
The board config for Wandboard Dual is untested. Solo and Quad work, but
one one core is turned on for the quad right now (baby steps).
than one unit with four busses attached to it. This allows us to use
existing fdt data which describes separate devices with separate resources.
It also allows any combination of the units to be en/disabled in the
board dts files.
Adjust our dts code to match what's used by linux and u-boot now that
we're structured to do so.
Document lots of interesting stuff learned whiling doing this with a big
comment block in the driver, so I don't have to re-learn it for the next
round of changes.
All Armada XP chips should be affected. It is necessary to handle
busy interrupt/indication by enabling busy-detect property in DTS.
Tested by: kevlo
Approved by: cognet (mentor)
Switch the majority of device configuration to FDT from hints.
Add BERI_*_BASE configs to reduce duplication in the MDROOT and SDROOT
kernels.
Add NFS and GSSAPI support by default.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA/AFRL
The TI uart hardware is ns16550-compatible, except that before it can
be used the clocks and power have to be enabled and a non-standard
mode control register has to be set to put the device in uart mode
(as opposed to irDa or other serial protocols). This adds the extra
code in an extension to the standard ns8250 probe routine, and the
rest of the driver is just the standard ns8250 code.