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The subarchitecture field in the fpsid register is 7 bits wide on ARM CPUs using the CPUID identification scheme, spanning bits 22 to 16. The topmost bit is used to designate that the subarchitecture designer is not ARM when it is set to 1. On non-CPUID scheme CPUs the subarchitecture field is only 4 bits wide and the higher bits are used to indicate no double precision support (bit 20) and the FTSMX/FLDMX format (bits 21-22). The VFP support code only looks at bits 19-16 to determine the VFP version. On Qualcomm's processors (Krait and Scorpion) we should see that we have HWCAP_VFPv3 but we don't because bit 22 is set to 1 to indicate that the subarchitecture is not implemented by ARM and the rest of the bits are left as 0 because this is the first subarchitecture that Qualcomm has designed. Unfortunately we can't just widen the FPSID subarchitecture bitmask to consider all the bits on a CPUID scheme because there may be CPUs without the CPUID scheme that have VFP without double precision support and then the version would be a very wrong and large number. Instead, update the version detection logic to consider if the CPU is using the CPUID scheme. If the CPU is using CPUID scheme, use the MVFR registers to determine what version of VFP is supported. We already do this for VFPv4, so do something similar for VFPv3 and look for single or double precision support in MVFR0. Otherwise fall back to using FPSID to detect VFP support on non-CPUID scheme CPUs. We know that VFPv3 is only present in CPUs that have support for the CPUID scheme so this should be equivalent. Tested-by: Rob Clark <robdclark@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org> Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk> |
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entry.S | ||
Makefile | ||
vfp.h | ||
vfpdouble.c | ||
vfphw.S | ||
vfpinstr.h | ||
vfpmodule.c | ||
vfpsingle.c |