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As always, a large number of DT updates. Too many to enumerate them all, but at a glance: New SoCs introduced in this release: - Amlogic: + Meson 8M2 SoC, a.k.a. S812. A quad Cortex-A9 SoC used in some set top boxes and other products. - Mediatek: + MT7623A, which is a flavor of the MT7623 family with other on-chip ethernet options. - Qualcomm: + SDM845, a.k.a Snapdragon 845, an 4+4-core Kryo 385/845 (Cortex-A75/A55 derivative) SoC that's one of the current high-end mobile SoCs. It's great to see mainline support for it. So far, you can't do much with it, since a lot of peripherals are not yet in the DTs but driver support for USB, GPU and other pieces are starting to trickle in. This might end up being a well-supported SoC upstream if the momentum keeps up. - Renesas: + R8A77990, a.k.a R-Car E3, a new automotive entertainment-targeted SoC. Currently only one Cortex-A53 CPU is enabled, we are eagerly awaiting more. So far, basic drivers such as serial, gpios, PMU and ethernet are enabled. + R8A77470, a.k.a. RZ/G1C, a new dual Cortex-A7 SoC with PowerVR GPU. Same here, basic set of drivers such as serial, gpios and ethernet enabled, and SMP support is also forthcoming. - STMicroelectronics: + STM32F469, very similar tih STM32F429 but with display support Enhancements to SoCs/platforms (DTS contents, some driver portions might not be in yet): - Allwinner sun8i (h3/a33/a83t) SMP, DVFS tweaks, misc - Amlogic Meson: I2C, UFS, TDM, GPIO external interrupts, MMC resets - Hisilicon hi3660: Thermal cooling, CPU frequency scaling, mailbox interfaces - Marvell Berlin2CD: SMP support, thermal sensors - Mediatek MT7623: Highspeed DMA, audio support - Qualcomm IPQ8074 PCIe support, MSM8996 UFS support - Renesas: Watchdog and PMU support across many platforms - Rockchip RK3399: USB3 OTG support - Samsung Exynos: Audio-over-HDMI on Odroid X/X2/U3 - STMicro STM32: Lots of peripherals added to STM32MP175C - Uniphier: Ethernet support New boards: - Allwinner A20: Olimex A20-SOM-EVB-eMMC variant - Allwinner H2+: Libre Computer ALL-H3-CC (h2+ version) - Allwinner A33: Nintendo NES/SuperNES Classic Edition - Aspeed: S2600WF, Inventec Lanyang BMC, Portwell Neptune - Berlin2CD: Valve Steam Link - Broadcom BCM5301X: Luxul XAP-1610 and XWR-3150 V1 - Broadcom: Raspberry Pi 3 B+ - Mediatek MT7623N and MT7623A: reference boards - Meson 8M2: Tronsmart MXIII Plus - NXP i.MX: Engicam i.CoreM6, DHCOM iMX6 SOM, BTicino i.MX6DL Mamoj - Qualcomm MSM8974: Sony Xperia Z1 Compact support - Qualcomm SDM845: MTP development board - Renesas: Ebisu R8A77990 board - Renesas RZ/G1C: iwg23s: iWave G235-SDB - TI am335x: Pocketbeagle support -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQJDBAABCAAtFiEElf+HevZ4QCAJmMQ+jBrnPN6EHHcFAlsfBtUPHG9sb2ZAbGl4 b20ubmV0AAoJEIwa5zzehBx3wfYQAI1hlPhRx7H1zbc59zdlW6daY7y1+dXuqoCs K5Hxsurlsbnx9fjeGcBp/razL5YtdZmBYII8IBhKzhLKp/A0gqmX7W9pTNQj9/Sp SOIl8dci/yr0HUpgwc4IdVhJBdpplv48GK3q8opSocI/J9dnD873NHLlvTpCB+Jy GCD9tB56JnOfTO+n0Yg+tyuig1jIQCc52Iwnmxv2vYPbsHUaEmqz1Z+wBe0BaDk+ eVsohNQI/2xxRzv8PE13H/ojcZ532rF45aw6ypRwCvg1MzCYXSdKLJlIWx8Ci581 YmRPlCOWai+AxSATgJhIR9n9dxn6hqxEgVyu7AOxPVa0O4DKB3oy8PPo5wlOCKcU J1n5zJwnULWw4eVa1ag/cEMbz95QMC1F9MmyiLUfz3esHwyD/Gl3ks9v1gwn9XYp xsI+oGnMy/Uz4oZ1/XM5CO5UUDXyixVD3pYEF8wLaYX2JY8zETI5qfvNL0bwZX3P lLFCI7Xdwsk3+HCp7aHs4KkWHLVGq65SxrXKTIpU+vEq+0RYiV/cWP9Swa/RNrMH gB00oZ2TBRuIr/KxsCKyCkKApocW4J4WtZ2sMY7QDXzW68lq8oIbefY+6Abgk4/7 6J7D5n0gmTB38wrzZCY5UF0eQrLjPwnxuLywEll5oLFbNTr/7Aruk2kFYEMGjM9E QmXGoHXU =jLvk -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'armsoc-dt' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/arm/arm-soc Pull ARM SoC device tree updates from Olof Johansson: "As always, a large number of DT updates. Too many to enumerate them all, but at a glance: New SoCs introduced in this release: - Amlogic: + Meson 8M2 SoC, a.k.a. S812. A quad Cortex-A9 SoC used in some set top boxes and other products. - Mediatek: + MT7623A, which is a flavor of the MT7623 family with other on-chip ethernet options. - Qualcomm: + SDM845, a.k.a Snapdragon 845, an 4+4-core Kryo 385/845 (Cortex-A75/A55 derivative) SoC that's one of the current high-end mobile SoCs. It's great to see mainline support for it. So far, you can't do much with it, since a lot of peripherals are not yet in the DTs but driver support for USB, GPU and other pieces are starting to trickle in. This might end up being a well-supported SoC upstream if the momentum keeps up. - Renesas: + R8A77990, a.k.a R-Car E3, a new automotive entertainment-targeted SoC. Currently only one Cortex-A53 CPU is enabled, we are eagerly awaiting more. So far, basic drivers such as serial, gpios, PMU and ethernet are enabled. + R8A77470, a.k.a. RZ/G1C, a new dual Cortex-A7 SoC with PowerVR GPU. Same here, basic set of drivers such as serial, gpios and ethernet enabled, and SMP support is also forthcoming. - STMicroelectronics: + STM32F469, very similar tih STM32F429 but with display support Enhancements to SoCs/platforms (DTS contents, some driver portions might not be in yet): - Allwinner sun8i (h3/a33/a83t) SMP, DVFS tweaks, misc - Amlogic Meson: I2C, UFS, TDM, GPIO external interrupts, MMC resets - Hisilicon hi3660: Thermal cooling, CPU frequency scaling, mailbox interfaces - Marvell Berlin2CD: SMP support, thermal sensors - Mediatek MT7623: Highspeed DMA, audio support - Qualcomm IPQ8074 PCIe support, MSM8996 UFS support - Renesas: Watchdog and PMU support across many platforms - Rockchip RK3399: USB3 OTG support - Samsung Exynos: Audio-over-HDMI on Odroid X/X2/U3 - STMicro STM32: Lots of peripherals added to STM32MP175C - Uniphier: Ethernet support New boards: - Allwinner A20: Olimex A20-SOM-EVB-eMMC variant - Allwinner H2+: Libre Computer ALL-H3-CC (h2+ version) - Allwinner A33: Nintendo NES/SuperNES Classic Edition - Aspeed: S2600WF, Inventec Lanyang BMC, Portwell Neptune - Berlin2CD: Valve Steam Link - Broadcom BCM5301X: Luxul XAP-1610 and XWR-3150 V1 - Broadcom: Raspberry Pi 3 B+ - Mediatek MT7623N and MT7623A: reference boards - Meson 8M2: Tronsmart MXIII Plus - NXP i.MX: Engicam i.CoreM6, DHCOM iMX6 SOM, BTicino i.MX6DL Mamoj - Qualcomm MSM8974: Sony Xperia Z1 Compact support - Qualcomm SDM845: MTP development board - Renesas: Ebisu R8A77990 board - Renesas RZ/G1C: iwg23s: iWave G235-SDB - TI am335x: Pocketbeagle support" * tag 'armsoc-dt' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/arm/arm-soc: (448 commits) ARM: dts: aspeed: Fix hwrng register address arm64: dts: sprd: whale2: Add the rtc enable clock for watchdog arm64: dts: sprd: Add GPIO and GPIO keys device nodes arm64: dts: sprd: fix typo in 'remote-endpoint' arm64: dts: apq8096-db820c: Removed bt-en-1-8v regulator arm64: dts: fix regulator property name for wlan pcie endpoint arm64: dts: qcom: msm8996: Use UFS_GDSC for UFS ARM: dts: pxa3xx: fix MMC clocks ARM: pxa: dts: add pin definitions for extended GPIOs ARM: pxa: dts: add gpio-ranges to gpio controller ARM: dts: ipq8074: Enable few peripherals for hk01 board ARM: dts: ipq8074: Add pcie nodes ARM: dts: ipq8074: Add peripheral nodes ARM: dts: ipq4019: Add qcom-ipq4019-ap.dk07.1-c2 board file ARM: dts: ipq4019: Add qcom-ipq4019-ap.dk07.1-c1 board file ARM: dts: ipq4019: Add ipq4019-ap.dk07.1 common data ARM: dts: ipq4019: Add qcom-ipq4019-ap.dk04.1-c3 board file ARM: dts: ipq4019: Add ipq4019-ap.dk04.1-c1 board file ARM: dts: ipq4019: Add ipq4019-ap.dk04.dtsi ARM: dts: ipq4019: Change the max opp frequency ... |
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.. | ||
keystone | ||
Marvell | ||
Microchip | ||
nwfpe | ||
OMAP | ||
pxa | ||
SA1100 | ||
Samsung | ||
Samsung-S3C24XX | ||
SH-Mobile | ||
SPEAr | ||
sti | ||
stm32 | ||
sunxi | ||
VFP | ||
00-INDEX | ||
Booting | ||
cluster-pm-race-avoidance.txt | ||
firmware.txt | ||
Interrupts | ||
IXP4xx | ||
kernel_mode_neon.txt | ||
kernel_user_helpers.txt | ||
mem_alignment | ||
memory.txt | ||
Netwinder | ||
Porting | ||
README | ||
Setup | ||
swp_emulation | ||
tcm.txt | ||
uefi.txt | ||
vlocks.txt |
ARM Linux 2.6 ============= Please check <ftp://ftp.arm.linux.org.uk/pub/armlinux> for updates. Compilation of kernel --------------------- In order to compile ARM Linux, you will need a compiler capable of generating ARM ELF code with GNU extensions. GCC 3.3 is known to be a good compiler. Fortunately, you needn't guess. The kernel will report an error if your compiler is a recognized offender. To build ARM Linux natively, you shouldn't have to alter the ARCH = line in the top level Makefile. However, if you don't have the ARM Linux ELF tools installed as default, then you should change the CROSS_COMPILE line as detailed below. If you wish to cross-compile, then alter the following lines in the top level make file: ARCH = <whatever> with ARCH = arm and CROSS_COMPILE= to CROSS_COMPILE=<your-path-to-your-compiler-without-gcc> eg. CROSS_COMPILE=arm-linux- Do a 'make config', followed by 'make Image' to build the kernel (arch/arm/boot/Image). A compressed image can be built by doing a 'make zImage' instead of 'make Image'. Bug reports etc --------------- Please send patches to the patch system. For more information, see http://www.arm.linux.org.uk/developer/patches/info.php Always include some explanation as to what the patch does and why it is needed. Bug reports should be sent to linux-arm-kernel@lists.arm.linux.org.uk, or submitted through the web form at http://www.arm.linux.org.uk/developer/ When sending bug reports, please ensure that they contain all relevant information, eg. the kernel messages that were printed before/during the problem, what you were doing, etc. Include files ------------- Several new include directories have been created under include/asm-arm, which are there to reduce the clutter in the top-level directory. These directories, and their purpose is listed below: arch-* machine/platform specific header files hardware driver-internal ARM specific data structures/definitions mach descriptions of generic ARM to specific machine interfaces proc-* processor dependent header files (currently only two categories) Machine/Platform support ------------------------ The ARM tree contains support for a lot of different machine types. To continue supporting these differences, it has become necessary to split machine-specific parts by directory. For this, the machine category is used to select which directories and files get included (we will use $(MACHINE) to refer to the category) To this end, we now have arch/arm/mach-$(MACHINE) directories which are designed to house the non-driver files for a particular machine (eg, PCI, memory management, architecture definitions etc). For all future machines, there should be a corresponding arch/arm/mach-$(MACHINE)/include/mach directory. Modules ------- Although modularisation is supported (and required for the FP emulator), each module on an ARM2/ARM250/ARM3 machine when is loaded will take memory up to the next 32k boundary due to the size of the pages. Therefore, is modularisation on these machines really worth it? However, ARM6 and up machines allow modules to take multiples of 4k, and as such Acorn RiscPCs and other architectures using these processors can make good use of modularisation. ADFS Image files ---------------- You can access image files on your ADFS partitions by mounting the ADFS partition, and then using the loopback device driver. You must have losetup installed. Please note that the PCEmulator DOS partitions have a partition table at the start, and as such, you will have to give '-o offset' to losetup. Request to developers --------------------- When writing device drivers which include a separate assembler file, please include it in with the C file, and not the arch/arm/lib directory. This allows the driver to be compiled as a loadable module without requiring half the code to be compiled into the kernel image. In general, try to avoid using assembler unless it is really necessary. It makes drivers far less easy to port to other hardware. ST506 hard drives ----------------- The ST506 hard drive controllers seem to be working fine (if a little slowly). At the moment they will only work off the controllers on an A4x0's motherboard, but for it to work off a Podule just requires someone with a podule to add the addresses for the IRQ mask and the HDC base to the source. As of 31/3/96 it works with two drives (you should get the ADFS *configure harddrive set to 2). I've got an internal 20MB and a great big external 5.25" FH 64MB drive (who could ever want more :-) ). I've just got 240K/s off it (a dd with bs=128k); thats about half of what RiscOS gets; but it's a heck of a lot better than the 50K/s I was getting last week :-) Known bug: Drive data errors can cause a hang; including cases where the controller has fixed the error using ECC. (Possibly ONLY in that case...hmm). 1772 Floppy ----------- This also seems to work OK, but hasn't been stressed much lately. It hasn't got any code for disc change detection in there at the moment which could be a bit of a problem! Suggestions on the correct way to do this are welcome. CONFIG_MACH_ and CONFIG_ARCH_ ----------------------------- A change was made in 2003 to the macro names for new machines. Historically, CONFIG_ARCH_ was used for the bonafide architecture, e.g. SA1100, as well as implementations of the architecture, e.g. Assabet. It was decided to change the implementation macros to read CONFIG_MACH_ for clarity. Moreover, a retroactive fixup has not been made because it would complicate patching. Previous registrations may be found online. <http://www.arm.linux.org.uk/developer/machines/> Kernel entry (head.S) -------------------------- The initial entry into the kernel is via head.S, which uses machine independent code. The machine is selected by the value of 'r1' on entry, which must be kept unique. Due to the large number of machines which the ARM port of Linux provides for, we have a method to manage this which ensures that we don't end up duplicating large amounts of code. We group machine (or platform) support code into machine classes. A class typically based around one or more system on a chip devices, and acts as a natural container around the actual implementations. These classes are given directories - arch/arm/mach-<class> and arch/arm/mach-<class> - which contain the source files to/include/mach support the machine class. This directories also contain any machine specific supporting code. For example, the SA1100 class is based upon the SA1100 and SA1110 SoC devices, and contains the code to support the way the on-board and off- board devices are used, or the device is setup, and provides that machine specific "personality." For platforms that support device tree (DT), the machine selection is controlled at runtime by passing the device tree blob to the kernel. At compile-time, support for the machine type must be selected. This allows for a single multiplatform kernel build to be used for several machine types. For platforms that do not use device tree, this machine selection is controlled by the machine type ID, which acts both as a run-time and a compile-time code selection method. You can register a new machine via the web site at: <http://www.arm.linux.org.uk/developer/machines/> Note: Please do not register a machine type for DT-only platforms. If your platform is DT-only, you do not need a registered machine type. --- Russell King (15/03/2004)