* Command line partition support in 2.6
@ 2006-11-09 1:26 Robin Gilks
2006-11-10 0:27 ` Robin Gilks
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Robin Gilks @ 2006-11-09 1:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MTD mail list
Greetings
I'm just moving from a 2.4 to 2.6 kernel and am trying to make sense of
the command line partition support. In 2.4 I added a definition in
maps/physmap.c
struct map_info physmap_map = {
.name = "asif",
.size = CONFIG_MTD_PHYSMAP_LEN,
.buswidth = CONFIG_MTD_PHYSMAP_BUSWIDTH,
.phys = CONFIG_MTD_PHYSMAP_START,
};
and used a kernel command line of the form:
mtdparts=asif:64K(param),3008K(jffs),256K(u-boot),-(kernel)
to partition the flash.
What is the equivalent procedure now? All the documentation seems to
skim over NOR straight into NAND and all the example maps I've looked at
use a fixed partition map rather than a command line one.
I'm sure its really simple but it beats me at the moment!!
Cheers
--
Robin
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread* Re: Command line partition support in 2.6
2006-11-09 1:26 Command line partition support in 2.6 Robin Gilks
@ 2006-11-10 0:27 ` Robin Gilks
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Robin Gilks @ 2006-11-10 0:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MTD mail list
Robin Gilks wrote:
> Greetings
>
> I'm just moving from a 2.4 to 2.6 kernel and am trying to make sense of
> the command line partition support. In 2.4 I added a definition in
> maps/physmap.c
>
>
> struct map_info physmap_map = {
> .name = "asif",
> .size = CONFIG_MTD_PHYSMAP_LEN,
> .buswidth = CONFIG_MTD_PHYSMAP_BUSWIDTH,
> .phys = CONFIG_MTD_PHYSMAP_START,
> };
>
> and used a kernel command line of the form:
> mtdparts=asif:64K(param),3008K(jffs),256K(u-boot),-(kernel)
>
> to partition the flash.
>
> What is the equivalent procedure now? All the documentation seems to
> skim over NOR straight into NAND and all the example maps I've looked at
> use a fixed partition map rather than a command line one.
>
> I'm sure its really simple but it beats me at the moment!!
>
> Cheers
>
Took me a day but at last I found the '.0' that was being stuck on the
end of the physmap-flash string as the mtd-id. Duh.
Is there a way of creating an id without the '.<num>' extention so I can
keep some bootloader compatability twixt 2.4 & 2.6 kernels?
--
Robin
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the subject of legal or other privilege, none of which is waived or
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If the receiver is not the intended addressee, please accept our
apologies, notify us by return, delete all copies and perform no
other act on the email.
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=======================================================================
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