mapped at, and LOADERRAMADDR, the address at which the loader maps the ram at
at the time the kernel is booted.
They are used to detect if the kernel is booted from the onboard flash.
Define those for the IQ31244
whole the physical memory, cached, using 1MB section mappings. This reduces
the address space available for user processes a bit, but given the amount of
memory a typical arm machine has, it is not (yet) a big issue.
It then provides a uma_small_alloc() that works as it does for architectures
which have a direct mapping.
Add a new option, SKYEYE_WORKAROUNDS, which as the name suggests adds
workarounds for things skyeye doesn't simulate. Specifically :
- Use USART0 instead of DBGU as the console, make it not use DMA, and manually provoke an interrupt when we're done in the transmit function.
- Skyeye maintains an internal counter for clock, but apparently there's
no way to access it, so hack the timecounter code to return a value which
is increased at every clock interrupts. This is gross, but I didn't find a
better way to implement timecounters without hacking Skyeye to get the
counter value.
- Force the write-back of PTEs once we're done writing them, even if they
are supposed to be write-through. I don't know why I have to do that.
PHYSADDR : Address of the physical memory
KERNPHYSADDR : Physical address where the kernel starts
KERNVIRTADDR : Virtual address of the kernel
STARTUP_PAGETABLE_ADDR : Where to put the page table at bootstrap
+ Xscale specific options