Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Juli Mallett
1f51baaa92 Use Simple Executive LED display routines, which correctly use the LED base
address passed from the bootloader, rather than using a hard-coded value.

Make FreeBSD announce itself on the LED display similar to other kernels.

Remove uses of the previous LED routines, which were under-used and only used
in drivers for what seem like debugging purposes, despite those drivers being
widely-tested.

Remove several inlines for accessing memory that duplicate other functions
which are now used instead, as they are now entirely unused.
2012-10-29 00:51:53 +00:00
Juli Mallett
dc4ee6ca91 Merge the Cavium Octeon SDK 2.3.0 Simple Executive code and update FreeBSD to
make use of it where possible.

This primarily brings in support for newer hardware, and FreeBSD is not yet
able to support the abundance of IRQs on new hardware and many features in the
Ethernet driver.

Because of the changes to IRQs in the Simple Executive, we have to maintain our
own list of Octeon IRQs now, which probably can be pared-down and be specific
to the CIU interrupt unit soon, and when other interrupt mechanisms are added
they can maintain their own definitions.

Remove unmasking of interrupts from within the UART device now that the
function used is no longer present in the Simple Executive.  The unmasking
seems to have been gratuitous as this is more properly handled by the buses
above the UART device, and seems to work on that basis.
2012-03-11 06:17:49 +00:00
Juli Mallett
41341ca726 Rather than shifting offsets by three, set register offset to 3. All our
bus interface does that's special here now is to use a 64-bit register size.
In theory, uart(4) ought to support a regsz as well as regshft and support
64-bit registers directly.

Also use the UART class's range rather than a hand-coded 1024 for the address
range.
2010-10-02 05:38:45 +00:00
Juli Mallett
cea2b8b915 Update the port of FreeBSD to Cavium Octeon to use the Cavium Simple Executive
library:
o) Increase inline unit / large function growth limits for MIPS to accommodate
   the needs of the Simple Executive, which uses a shocking amount of inlining.
o) Remove TARGET_OCTEON and use CPU_CNMIPS to do things required by cnMIPS and
   the Octeon SoC.
o) Add OCTEON_VENDOR_LANNER to use Lanner's allocation of vendor-specific
   board numbers, specifically to support the MR320.
o) Add OCTEON_BOARD_CAPK_0100ND to hard-wire configuration for the CAPK-0100nd,
   which improperly uses an evaluation board's board number and breaks board
   detection at runtime.  This board is sold by Portwell as the CAM-0100.
o) Add support for the RTC available on some Octeon boards.
o) Add support for the Octeon PCI bus.  Note that rman_[sg]et_virtual for IO
   ports can not work unless building for n64.
o) Clean up the CompactFlash driver to use Simple Executive macros and
   structures where possible (it would be advisable to use the Simple Executive
   API to set the PIO mode, too, but that is not done presently.)  Also use
   structures from FreeBSD's ATA layer rather than structures copied from
   Linux.
o) Print available Octeon SoC features on boot.
o) Add support for the Octeon timecounter.
o) Use the Simple Executive's routines rather than local copies for doing reads
   and writes to 64-bit addresses and use its macros for various device
   addresses rather than using local copies.
o) Rename octeon_board_real to octeon_is_simulation to reduce differences with
   Cavium-provided code originally written for Linux.  Also make it use the
   same simplified test that the Simple Executive and Linux both use rather
   than our complex one.
o) Add support for the Octeon CIU, which is the main interrupt unit, as a bus
   to use normal interrupt allocation and setup routines.
o) Use the Simple Executive's bootmem facility to allocate physical memory for
   the kernel, rather than assuming we know which addresses we can steal.
   NB: This may reduce the amount of RAM the kernel reports you as having if
       you are leaving large temporary allocations made by U-Boot allocated
       when starting FreeBSD.
o) Add a port of the Cavium-provided Ethernet driver for Linux.  This changes
   Ethernet interface naming from rgmxN to octeN.  The new driver has vast
   improvements over the old one, both in performance and functionality, but
   does still have some features which have not been ported entirely and there
   may be unimplemented code that can be hit in everyday use.  I will make
   every effort to correct those as they are reported.
o) Support loading the kernel on non-contiguous cores.
o) Add very conservative support for harvesting randomness from the Octeon
   random number device.
o) Turn SMP on by default.
o) Clean up the style of the Octeon kernel configurations a little and make
   them compile with -march=octeon.
o) Add support for the Lanner MR320 and the CAPK-0100nd to the Simple
   Executive.
o) Modify the Simple Executive to build on FreeBSD and to build without
   executive-config.h or cvmx-config.h.  In the future we may want to
   revert part of these changes and supply executive-config.h and
   cvmx-config.h and access to the options contained in those files via
   kernel configuration files.
o) Modify the Simple Executive USB routines to support getting and setting
   of the USB PID.
2010-07-20 19:25:11 +00:00
Marius Strobl
f6ffc3c26b Remove redundant checking of sc_leaving (uart_intr() already handles this).
Approved by:	marcel
2010-05-02 19:07:19 +00:00
Warner Losh
a6ec986223 Cope with the move and if_timer going way. 2010-01-11 04:29:26 +00:00
Warner Losh
6b06709221 Merge from projects/mips to head by hand:
Copy the support files for the Octeon 1 CPU from sys/mips/octeon1 on
the projects/mips side to sys/mips/cavium on the head side to conform
to the other vendor code.  This code was contributed by Cavium to the
project and forward ported by Warner Losh, with some additional code
from Randal Stewart.

# I'll fix the building problems the move creates in a future commit.
2010-01-09 18:59:03 +00:00