* [patch 12/14] Bamboo DTS
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linuxppc-dev
In-Reply-To: <20070717181547.310201000@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
AMCC Bamboo board DTS
Signed-off-by: Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
---
arch/powerpc/boot/dts/bamboo.dts | 248 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 248 insertions(+)
--- /dev/null
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/boot/dts/bamboo.dts
@@ -0,0 +1,248 @@
+/*
+ * Device Tree Source for AMCC Bamboo
+ *
+ * Copyright (c) 2006, 2007 IBM Corp.
+ * Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
+ *
+ * FIXME: Draft only!
+ *
+ * This file is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public
+ * License version 2. This program is licensed "as is" without
+ * any warranty of any kind, whether express or implied.
+ *
+ * To build:
+ * dtc -I dts -O asm -o bamboo.S -b 0 bamboo.dts
+ * dtc -I dts -O dtb -o bamboo.dtb -b 0 bamboo.dts
+ */
+
+/ {
+ #address-cells = <2>;
+ #size-cells = <1>;
+ model = "amcc,bamboo";
+ compatible = "amcc,bamboo";
+ dcr-parent = <&/cpus/PowerPC,440EP@0>;
+
+ cpus {
+ #address-cells = <1>;
+ #size-cells = <0>;
+
+ PowerPC,440EP@0 {
+ device_type = "cpu";
+ reg = <0>;
+ clock-frequency = <0>; /* Filled in by zImage */
+ timebase-frequency = <0>; /* Filled in by zImage */
+ i-cache-line-size = <20>;
+ d-cache-line-size = <20>;
+ i-cache-size = <8000>;
+ d-cache-size = <8000>;
+ dcr-controller;
+ dcr-access-method = "native";
+ };
+ };
+
+ memory {
+ device_type = "memory";
+ reg = <0 0 0>; /* Filled in by zImage */
+ };
+
+ UIC0: interrupt-controller0 {
+ compatible = "ibm,uic-440gp","ibm,uic";
+ interrupt-controller;
+ cell-index = <0>;
+ dcr-reg = <0c0 009>;
+ #address-cells = <0>;
+ #size-cells = <0>;
+ #interrupt-cells = <2>;
+ };
+
+ UIC1: interrupt-controller1 {
+ compatible = "ibm,uic-440gp","ibm,uic";
+ interrupt-controller;
+ cell-index = <1>;
+ dcr-reg = <0d0 009>;
+ #address-cells = <0>;
+ #size-cells = <0>;
+ #interrupt-cells = <2>;
+ interrupts = <1e 4 1f 4>; /* cascade */
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC0>;
+ };
+
+ SDR0: sdr {
+ compatible = "ibm,sdr-440ep";
+ dcr-reg = <00e 002>;
+ };
+
+ CPR0: cpr {
+ compatible = "ibm,cpr-440ep";
+ dcr-reg = <00c 002>;
+ };
+
+ plb {
+ compatible = "ibm,plb-440gp", "ibm,plb4";
+ #address-cells = <2>;
+ #size-cells = <1>;
+ ranges;
+ clock-frequency = <0>; /* Filled in by zImage */
+
+ SDRAM0: sdram {
+ compatible = "ibm,sdram-405gp";
+ dcr-reg = <010 2>;
+ };
+
+ DMA0: dma {
+ compatible = "ibm,dma-440gp";
+ dcr-reg = <100 027>;
+ };
+
+ MAL0: mcmal {
+ compatible = "ibm,mcmal-440gp", "ibm,mcmal";
+ dcr-reg = <180 62>;
+ num-tx-chans = <4>;
+ num-rx-chans = <4>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&MAL0>;
+ interrupts = <0 1 2 3 4>;
+ #interrupt-cells = <1>;
+ interrupt-map = </*TXEOB*/ 0 &UIC0 a 4
+ /*RXEOB*/ 1 &UIC0 b 4
+ /*SERR*/ 2 &UIC1 0 4
+ /*TXDE*/ 3 &UIC1 1 4
+ /*RXDE*/ 4 &UIC1 3 4>;
+ };
+
+ POB0: opb {
+ compatible = "ibm,opb-440gp", "ibm,opb";
+ #address-cells = <1>;
+ #size-cells = <1>;
+ /* Bamboo is oddball in the 44x world and doesn't use the ERPN
+ * bits.
+ */
+ ranges = <00000000 0 00000000 80000000
+ 80000000 0 80000000 80000000>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC1>;
+ interrupts = <7 4>;
+ clock-frequency = <0>; /* Filled in by zImage */
+
+ EBC0: ebc {
+ compatible = "ibm,ebc-440gp", "ibm,ebc";
+ dcr-reg = <012 2>;
+ #address-cells = <2>;
+ #size-cells = <1>;
+ clock-frequency = <0>; /* Filled in by zImage */
+ ranges;
+ interrupts = <5 1>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC1>;
+ };
+
+ UART0: serial@ef600300 {
+ device_type = "serial";
+ compatible = "ns16550";
+ reg = <ef600300 8>;
+ virtual-reg = <ef600300>;
+ clock-frequency = <0>; /* Filled in by zImage */
+ current-speed = <1c200>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC0>;
+ interrupts = <0 4>;
+ };
+
+ UART1: serial@ef600400 {
+ device_type = "serial";
+ compatible = "ns16550";
+ reg = <ef600400 8>;
+ virtual-reg = <ef600400>;
+ clock-frequency = <0>;
+ current-speed = <0>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC0>;
+ interrupts = <1 4>;
+ };
+
+ UART2: serial@ef600500 {
+ device_type = "serial";
+ compatible = "ns16550";
+ reg = <ef600500 8>;
+ virtual-reg = <ef600500>;
+ clock-frequency = <0>;
+ current-speed = <0>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC0>;
+ interrupts = <3 4>;
+ };
+
+ UART3: serial@ef600600 {
+ device_type = "serial";
+ compatible = "ns16550";
+ reg = <ef600600 8>;
+ virtual-reg = <ef600600>;
+ clock-frequency = <0>;
+ current-speed = <0>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC0>;
+ interrupts = <4 4>;
+ };
+
+ IIC0: i2c@ef600700 {
+ device_type = "i2c";
+ compatible = "ibm,iic-440gp", "ibm,iic";
+ reg = <ef600700 14>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC0>;
+ interrupts = <2 4>;
+ };
+
+ IIC1: i2c@ef600800 {
+ device_type = "i2c";
+ compatible = "ibm,iic-44gp", "ibm,iic";
+ reg = <ef600800 14>;
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC0>;
+ interrupts = <7 4>;
+ };
+
+ ZMII0: emac-zmii@ef600d00 {
+ device_type = "zmii-interface";
+ compatible = "ibm,zmii-440gp", "ibm,zmii";
+ reg = <ef600d00 c>;
+ };
+
+ EMAC0: ethernet@ef600e00 {
+ device_type = "network";
+ compatible = "ibm,emac-440gp", "ibm,emac";
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC1>;
+ interrupts = <1c 4 1d 4>;
+ reg = <ef600e00 70>;
+ local-mac-address = [000000000000];
+ mal-device = <&MAL0>;
+ mal-tx-channel = <0 1>;
+ mal-rx-channel = <0>;
+ cell-index = <0>;
+ max-frame-size = <5dc>;
+ rx-fifo-size = <1000>;
+ tx-fifo-size = <800>;
+ phy-mode = "rmii";
+ phy-map = <00000001>;
+ zmii-device = <&ZMII0>;
+ zmii-channel = <0>;
+ };
+
+ EMAC1: ethernet@ef600f00 {
+ device_type = "network";
+ compatible = "ibm,emac-440gp", "ibm,emac";
+ interrupt-parent = <&UIC1>;
+ interrupts = <1e 4 1f 4>;
+ reg = <ef600f00 70>;
+ local-mac-address = [000000000000];
+ mal-device = <&MAL0>;
+ mal-tx-channel = <2 3>;
+ mal-rx-channel = <1>;
+ cell-index = <1>;
+ max-frame-size = <5dc>;
+ rx-fifo-size = <1000>;
+ tx-fifo-size = <800>;
+ phy-mode = "rmii";
+ phy-map = <00000001>;
+ zmii-device = <&ZMII0>;
+ zmii-channel = <1>;
+ };
+ };
+ };
+
+ chosen {
+ linux,stdout-path = "/plb/opb/serial@ef600300";
+ bootargs = "console=ttyS0,115200";
+ };
+};
--
^ permalink raw reply
* [patch 03/14] 4xx Kconfig cleanup
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linuxppc-dev
In-Reply-To: <20070717181547.310201000@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Remove some leftover cruft in the 40x Kconfig file. Also make sure we
select WANT_DEVICE_TREE for 40x.
Signed-off-by: Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
---
arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig | 77 ---------------------------------
arch/powerpc/platforms/Kconfig.cputype | 1
2 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 77 deletions(-)
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig
@@ -1,16 +1,3 @@
-config 4xx
- bool
- depends on 40x || 44x
- default y
-
-config BOOKE
- bool
- depends on 44x
- default y
-
-menu "AMCC 40x options"
- depends on 40x
-
#config BUBINGA
# bool "Bubinga"
# depends on 40x
@@ -82,8 +69,6 @@ menu "AMCC 40x options"
# help
# This option enables support for the Xilinx ML300 evaluation board.
-endmenu
-
# 40x specific CPU modules, selected based on the board above.
config NP405H
bool
@@ -126,68 +111,6 @@ config IBM405_ERR77
config IBM405_ERR51
bool
-menu "AMCC 44x options"
- depends on 44x
-
-#config BAMBOO
-# bool "Bamboo"
-# depends on 44x
-# default n
-# select 440EP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440EP evaluation board.
-
-config EBONY
- bool "Ebony"
- depends on 44x
- default y
- select 440GP
- help
- This option enables support for the IBM PPC440GP evaluation board.
-
-#config LUAN
-# bool "Luan"
-# depends on 44x
-# default n
-# select 440SP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440SP evaluation board.
-
-#config OCOTEA
-# bool "Ocotea"
-# depends on 44x
-# default n
-# select 440GX
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440GX evaluation board.
-
-endmenu
-
-# 44x specific CPU modules, selected based on the board above.
-config 440EP
- bool
- select PPC_FPU
- select IBM440EP_ERR42
-
-config 440GP
- bool
- select IBM_NEW_EMAC_ZMII
-
-config 440GX
- bool
-
-config 440SP
- bool
-
-config 440A
- bool
- depends on 440GX
- default y
-
-# 44x errata/workaround config symbols, selected by the CPU models above
-config IBM440EP_ERR42
- bool
-
#config XILINX_OCP
# bool
# depends on XILINX_ML300
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/platforms/Kconfig.cputype
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/Kconfig.cputype
@@ -40,6 +40,7 @@ config PPC_8xx
config 40x
bool "AMCC 40x"
select PPC_DCR_NATIVE
+ select WANT_DEVICE_TREE
config 44x
bool "AMCC 44x"
--
^ permalink raw reply
* [patch 10/14] Walnut board support
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linuxppc-dev
In-Reply-To: <20070717181547.310201000@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Board support for the PPC405 Walnut evaluation board
Signed-off-by: Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
---
arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig | 14 +++----
arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Makefile | 2 -
arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/walnut.c | 68 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
arch/powerpc/platforms/Kconfig | 2 -
arch/powerpc/platforms/Makefile | 2 -
5 files changed, 78 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Makefile
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Makefile
@@ -1 +1 @@
-# empty makefile so make clean works
\ No newline at end of file
+obj-$(CONFIG_WALNUT) += walnut.o
--- /dev/null
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/walnut.c
@@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
+/*
+ * Architecture- / platform-specific boot-time initialization code for
+ * IBM PowerPC 4xx based boards. Adapted from original
+ * code by Gary Thomas, Cort Dougan <cort@fsmlabs.com>, and Dan Malek
+ * <dan@net4x.com>.
+ *
+ * Copyright(c) 1999-2000 Grant Erickson <grant@lcse.umn.edu>
+ *
+ * Rewritten and ported to the merged powerpc tree:
+ * Copyright 2007 IBM Corporation
+ * Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
+ *
+ * 2002 (c) MontaVista, Software, Inc. This file is licensed under
+ * the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2. This program
+ * is licensed "as is" without any warranty of any kind, whether express
+ * or implied.
+ */
+
+#include <linux/init.h>
+#include <asm/machdep.h>
+#include <asm/prom.h>
+#include <asm/udbg.h>
+#include <asm/time.h>
+#include <asm/uic.h>
+#include <asm/of_platform.h>
+
+static struct of_device_id walnut_of_bus[] = {
+ { .compatible = "ibm,plb", },
+ { .compatible = "ibm,opb", },
+ { .compatible = "ibm,ebc", },
+ {},
+};
+
+static int __init walnut_device_probe(void)
+{
+ if (!machine_is(walnut))
+ return 0;
+
+ /* FIXME: do bus probe here */
+ of_platform_bus_probe(NULL, walnut_of_bus, NULL);
+
+ return 0;
+}
+device_initcall(walnut_device_probe);
+
+static int __init walnut_probe(void)
+{
+ unsigned long root = of_get_flat_dt_root();
+
+ if (!of_flat_dt_is_compatible(root, "ibm,walnut"))
+ return 0;
+
+ return 1;
+}
+
+static void __init walnut_setup_arch(void)
+{
+}
+
+define_machine(walnut) {
+ .name = "Walnut",
+ .probe = walnut_probe,
+ .setup_arch = walnut_setup_arch,
+ .progress = udbg_progress,
+ .init_IRQ = uic_init_tree,
+ .get_irq = uic_get_irq,
+ .calibrate_decr = generic_calibrate_decr,
+};
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig
@@ -53,13 +53,13 @@
# help
# This option enables support for the IBM PPC405GPr evaluation board.
-#config WALNUT
-# bool "Walnut"
-# depends on 40x
-# default y
-# select 405GP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC405GP evaluation board.
+config WALNUT
+ bool "Walnut"
+ depends on 40x
+ default y
+ select 405GP
+ help
+ This option enables support for the IBM PPC405GP evaluation board.
#config XILINX_ML300
# bool "Xilinx-ML300"
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/platforms/Kconfig
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/Kconfig
@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ source "arch/powerpc/platforms/85xx/Kcon
source "arch/powerpc/platforms/86xx/Kconfig"
source "arch/powerpc/platforms/embedded6xx/Kconfig"
source "arch/powerpc/platforms/44x/Kconfig"
-#source "arch/powerpc/platforms/4xx/Kconfig
+source "arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig"
config PPC_NATIVE
bool
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/platforms/Makefile
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/Makefile
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_PPC_PMAC) += powermac/
endif
endif
obj-$(CONFIG_PPC_CHRP) += chrp/
-#obj-$(CONFIG_4xx) += 4xx/
+obj-$(CONFIG_40x) += 40x/
obj-$(CONFIG_44x) += 44x/
obj-$(CONFIG_PPC_MPC52xx) += 52xx/
obj-$(CONFIG_PPC_8xx) += 8xx/
--
^ permalink raw reply
* [patch 06/14] 40x decrementer fixes
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linuxppc-dev
In-Reply-To: <20070717181547.310201000@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Allow generic_calibrate_decr to work for 40x platforms. Given that the hardware
behavior is identical, this also changes the set_dec function to reload the PIT
on 40x to match the behavior 44x currently has.
Signed-off-by: Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
---
arch/powerpc/kernel/time.c | 2 +-
include/asm-powerpc/time.h | 2 +-
2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/kernel/time.c
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/kernel/time.c
@@ -866,7 +866,7 @@ void __init generic_calibrate_decr(void)
"(not found)\n");
}
-#ifdef CONFIG_BOOKE
+#if defined(CONFIG_BOOKE) || defined(CONFIG_40x)
/* Set the time base to zero */
mtspr(SPRN_TBWL, 0);
mtspr(SPRN_TBWU, 0);
--- linux-2.6.orig/include/asm-powerpc/time.h
+++ linux-2.6/include/asm-powerpc/time.h
@@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ static inline unsigned int get_dec(void)
static inline void set_dec(int val)
{
#if defined(CONFIG_40x)
- return; /* Have to let it auto-reload */
+ mtspr(SPRN_PIT, val);
#elif defined(CONFIG_8xx_CPU6)
set_dec_cpu6(val);
#else
--
^ permalink raw reply
* [patch 01/14] Use resource_size_t for serial port IO addresses
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linuxppc-dev; +Cc: David Gibson
In-Reply-To: <20070717181547.310201000@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
At present, various parts of the serial code use unsigned long to
define resource addresses. This is a problem, because some 32-bit
platforms have physical addresses larger than 32-bits, and have mmio
serial uarts located above the 4GB point.
This patch changes the type of mapbase in both struct uart_port and
struct plat_serial8250_port to resource_size_t, which can be
configured to be 64 bits on such platforms. The mapbase in
serial_struct can't safely be changed, because that structure is user
visible.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <dwg@au1.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
---
drivers/serial/8250.c | 5 +++--
drivers/serial/8250_early.c | 16 +++++++++-------
drivers/serial/serial_core.c | 9 +++++----
include/linux/serial_8250.h | 2 +-
include/linux/serial_core.h | 2 +-
5 files changed, 19 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)
--- linux-2.6.orig/include/linux/serial_core.h
+++ linux-2.6/include/linux/serial_core.h
@@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ struct uart_port {
const struct uart_ops *ops;
unsigned int custom_divisor;
unsigned int line; /* port index */
- unsigned long mapbase; /* for ioremap */
+ resource_size_t mapbase; /* for ioremap */
struct device *dev; /* parent device */
unsigned char hub6; /* this should be in the 8250 driver */
unsigned char unused[3];
--- linux-2.6.orig/drivers/serial/serial_core.c
+++ linux-2.6/drivers/serial/serial_core.c
@@ -626,7 +626,7 @@ static int uart_get_info(struct uart_sta
tmp.hub6 = port->hub6;
tmp.io_type = port->iotype;
tmp.iomem_reg_shift = port->regshift;
- tmp.iomem_base = (void *)port->mapbase;
+ tmp.iomem_base = (void *)(unsigned long)port->mapbase;
if (copy_to_user(retinfo, &tmp, sizeof(*retinfo)))
return -EFAULT;
@@ -1666,10 +1666,11 @@ static int uart_line_info(char *buf, str
return 0;
mmio = port->iotype >= UPIO_MEM;
- ret = sprintf(buf, "%d: uart:%s %s%08lX irq:%d",
+ ret = sprintf(buf, "%d: uart:%s %s%08llX irq:%d",
port->line, uart_type(port),
mmio ? "mmio:0x" : "port:",
- mmio ? port->mapbase : (unsigned long) port->iobase,
+ mmio ? (unsigned long long)port->mapbase
+ : (unsigned long long) port->iobase,
port->irq);
if (port->type == PORT_UNKNOWN) {
@@ -2063,7 +2064,7 @@ uart_report_port(struct uart_driver *drv
case UPIO_TSI:
case UPIO_DWAPB:
snprintf(address, sizeof(address),
- "MMIO 0x%lx", port->mapbase);
+ "MMIO 0x%llx", (unsigned long long)port->mapbase);
break;
default:
strlcpy(address, "*unknown*", sizeof(address));
--- linux-2.6.orig/drivers/serial/8250_early.c
+++ linux-2.6/drivers/serial/8250_early.c
@@ -145,8 +145,9 @@ static int __init parse_options(struct e
port->mapbase = simple_strtoul(options + 5, &options, 0);
port->membase = ioremap(port->mapbase, mapsize);
if (!port->membase) {
- printk(KERN_ERR "%s: Couldn't ioremap 0x%lx\n",
- __FUNCTION__, port->mapbase);
+ printk(KERN_ERR "%s: Couldn't ioremap 0x%llx\n",
+ __FUNCTION__,
+ (unsigned long long)port->mapbase);
return -ENOMEM;
}
mmio = 1;
@@ -168,9 +169,10 @@ static int __init parse_options(struct e
device->baud);
}
- printk(KERN_INFO "Early serial console at %s 0x%lx (options '%s')\n",
+ printk(KERN_INFO "Early serial console at %s 0x%llx (options '%s')\n",
mmio ? "MMIO" : "I/O port",
- mmio ? port->mapbase : (unsigned long) port->iobase,
+ mmio ? (unsigned long long) port->mapbase
+ : (unsigned long long) port->iobase,
device->options);
return 0;
}
@@ -236,10 +238,10 @@ static int __init early_uart_console_swi
mmio = (port->iotype == UPIO_MEM);
line = serial8250_start_console(port, device->options);
if (line < 0)
- printk("No ttyS device at %s 0x%lx for console\n",
+ printk("No ttyS device at %s 0x%llx for console\n",
mmio ? "MMIO" : "I/O port",
- mmio ? port->mapbase :
- (unsigned long) port->iobase);
+ mmio ? (unsigned long long) port->mapbase
+ : (unsigned long long) port->iobase);
unregister_console(&early_uart_console);
if (mmio)
--- linux-2.6.orig/include/linux/serial_8250.h
+++ linux-2.6/include/linux/serial_8250.h
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
struct plat_serial8250_port {
unsigned long iobase; /* io base address */
void __iomem *membase; /* ioremap cookie or NULL */
- unsigned long mapbase; /* resource base */
+ resource_size_t mapbase; /* resource base */
unsigned int irq; /* interrupt number */
unsigned int uartclk; /* UART clock rate */
unsigned char regshift; /* register shift */
--- linux-2.6.orig/drivers/serial/8250.c
+++ linux-2.6/drivers/serial/8250.c
@@ -2664,8 +2664,9 @@ static int __devinit serial8250_probe(st
ret = serial8250_register_port(&port);
if (ret < 0) {
dev_err(&dev->dev, "unable to register port at index %d "
- "(IO%lx MEM%lx IRQ%d): %d\n", i,
- p->iobase, p->mapbase, p->irq, ret);
+ "(IO%lx MEM%llx IRQ%d): %d\n", i,
+ p->iobase, (unsigned long long)p->mapbase,
+ p->irq, ret);
}
}
return 0;
--
^ permalink raw reply
* [patch 05/14] 40x MMU
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linuxppc-dev
In-Reply-To: <20070717181547.310201000@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Add MMU definitions for 40x platforms. Also fixes two warnings in 40x_mmu.c.
Signed-off-by: Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
---
arch/powerpc/mm/40x_mmu.c | 4 +-
include/asm-powerpc/mmu-40x.h | 65 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
include/asm-powerpc/mmu.h | 3 +
3 files changed, 70 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
--- /dev/null
+++ linux-2.6/include/asm-powerpc/mmu-40x.h
@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
+#ifndef _ASM_POWERPC_MMU_40X_H_
+#define _ASM_POWERPC_MMU_40X_H_
+
+/*
+ * PPC40x support
+ */
+
+#define PPC4XX_TLB_SIZE 64
+
+/*
+ * TLB entries are defined by a "high" tag portion and a "low" data
+ * portion. On all architectures, the data portion is 32-bits.
+ *
+ * TLB entries are managed entirely under software control by reading,
+ * writing, and searchoing using the 4xx-specific tlbre, tlbwr, and tlbsx
+ * instructions.
+ */
+
+#define TLB_LO 1
+#define TLB_HI 0
+
+#define TLB_DATA TLB_LO
+#define TLB_TAG TLB_HI
+
+/* Tag portion */
+
+#define TLB_EPN_MASK 0xFFFFFC00 /* Effective Page Number */
+#define TLB_PAGESZ_MASK 0x00000380
+#define TLB_PAGESZ(x) (((x) & 0x7) << 7)
+#define PAGESZ_1K 0
+#define PAGESZ_4K 1
+#define PAGESZ_16K 2
+#define PAGESZ_64K 3
+#define PAGESZ_256K 4
+#define PAGESZ_1M 5
+#define PAGESZ_4M 6
+#define PAGESZ_16M 7
+#define TLB_VALID 0x00000040 /* Entry is valid */
+
+/* Data portion */
+
+#define TLB_RPN_MASK 0xFFFFFC00 /* Real Page Number */
+#define TLB_PERM_MASK 0x00000300
+#define TLB_EX 0x00000200 /* Instruction execution allowed */
+#define TLB_WR 0x00000100 /* Writes permitted */
+#define TLB_ZSEL_MASK 0x000000F0
+#define TLB_ZSEL(x) (((x) & 0xF) << 4)
+#define TLB_ATTR_MASK 0x0000000F
+#define TLB_W 0x00000008 /* Caching is write-through */
+#define TLB_I 0x00000004 /* Caching is inhibited */
+#define TLB_M 0x00000002 /* Memory is coherent */
+#define TLB_G 0x00000001 /* Memory is guarded from prefetch */
+
+#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
+
+typedef unsigned long phys_addr_t;
+
+typedef struct {
+ unsigned long id;
+ unsigned long vdso_base;
+} mm_context_t;
+
+#endif /* !__ASSEMBLY__ */
+
+#endif /* _ASM_POWERPC_MMU_40X_H_ */
--- linux-2.6.orig/include/asm-powerpc/mmu.h
+++ linux-2.6/include/asm-powerpc/mmu.h
@@ -8,6 +8,9 @@
#elif defined(CONFIG_PPC_STD_MMU)
/* 32-bit classic hash table MMU */
# include <asm/mmu-hash32.h>
+#elif defined(CONFIG_40x)
+/* 40x-style software loaded TLB */
+# include <asm/mmu-40x.h>
#elif defined(CONFIG_44x)
/* 44x-style software loaded TLB */
# include <asm/mmu-44x.h>
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/mm/40x_mmu.c
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/mm/40x_mmu.c
@@ -108,7 +108,7 @@ unsigned long __init mmu_mapin_ram(void)
pmd_t *pmdp;
unsigned long val = p | _PMD_SIZE_16M | _PAGE_HWEXEC | _PAGE_HWWRITE;
- pmdp = pmd_offset(pgd_offset_k(v), v);
+ pmdp = pmd_offset(pud_offset(pgd_offset_k(v), v), v);
pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
@@ -123,7 +123,7 @@ unsigned long __init mmu_mapin_ram(void)
pmd_t *pmdp;
unsigned long val = p | _PMD_SIZE_4M | _PAGE_HWEXEC | _PAGE_HWWRITE;
- pmdp = pmd_offset(pgd_offset_k(v), v);
+ pmdp = pmd_offset(pud_offset(pgd_offset_k(v), v), v);
pmd_val(*pmdp) = val;
v += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M;
--
^ permalink raw reply
* [patch 02/14] Rename 4xx paths to 40x
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linuxppc-dev
In-Reply-To: <20070717181547.310201000@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
4xx is a bit of a misnomer for certain things, as they really apply to PowerPC
40x only. Rename some of the files to clean this up.
Signed-off-by: Josh Boyer <jwboyer@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
---
arch/powerpc/Makefile | 2
arch/powerpc/kernel/Makefile | 2
arch/powerpc/kernel/head_40x.S | 1021 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
arch/powerpc/kernel/head_4xx.S | 1021 ------------------------------------
arch/powerpc/mm/40x_mmu.c | 135 ++++
arch/powerpc/mm/4xx_mmu.c | 135 ----
arch/powerpc/mm/Makefile | 2
arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig | 208 +++++++
arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Makefile | 1
arch/powerpc/platforms/4xx/Kconfig | 208 -------
arch/powerpc/platforms/4xx/Makefile | 1
11 files changed, 1368 insertions(+), 1368 deletions(-)
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/Makefile
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/Makefile
@@ -123,7 +123,7 @@ CFLAGS += $(cpu-as-y)
head-y := arch/powerpc/kernel/head_32.o
head-$(CONFIG_PPC64) := arch/powerpc/kernel/head_64.o
head-$(CONFIG_8xx) := arch/powerpc/kernel/head_8xx.o
-head-$(CONFIG_4xx) := arch/powerpc/kernel/head_4xx.o
+head-$(CONFIG_40x) := arch/powerpc/kernel/head_40x.o
head-$(CONFIG_44x) := arch/powerpc/kernel/head_44x.o
head-$(CONFIG_FSL_BOOKE) := arch/powerpc/kernel/head_fsl_booke.o
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/kernel/Makefile
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/kernel/Makefile
@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ ifeq ($(CONFIG_PPC_MERGE),y)
extra-$(CONFIG_PPC_STD_MMU) := head_32.o
extra-$(CONFIG_PPC64) := head_64.o
-extra-$(CONFIG_40x) := head_4xx.o
+extra-$(CONFIG_40x) := head_40x.o
extra-$(CONFIG_44x) := head_44x.o
extra-$(CONFIG_FSL_BOOKE) := head_fsl_booke.o
extra-$(CONFIG_8xx) := head_8xx.o
--- /dev/null
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/kernel/head_40x.S
@@ -0,0 +1,1021 @@
+/*
+ * Copyright (c) 1995-1996 Gary Thomas <gdt@linuxppc.org>
+ * Initial PowerPC version.
+ * Copyright (c) 1996 Cort Dougan <cort@cs.nmt.edu>
+ * Rewritten for PReP
+ * Copyright (c) 1996 Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
+ * Low-level exception handers, MMU support, and rewrite.
+ * Copyright (c) 1997 Dan Malek <dmalek@jlc.net>
+ * PowerPC 8xx modifications.
+ * Copyright (c) 1998-1999 TiVo, Inc.
+ * PowerPC 403GCX modifications.
+ * Copyright (c) 1999 Grant Erickson <grant@lcse.umn.edu>
+ * PowerPC 403GCX/405GP modifications.
+ * Copyright 2000 MontaVista Software Inc.
+ * PPC405 modifications
+ * PowerPC 403GCX/405GP modifications.
+ * Author: MontaVista Software, Inc.
+ * frank_rowand@mvista.com or source@mvista.com
+ * debbie_chu@mvista.com
+ *
+ *
+ * Module name: head_4xx.S
+ *
+ * Description:
+ * Kernel execution entry point code.
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
+ * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
+ * 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
+ *
+ */
+
+#include <asm/processor.h>
+#include <asm/page.h>
+#include <asm/mmu.h>
+#include <asm/pgtable.h>
+#include <asm/ibm4xx.h>
+#include <asm/cputable.h>
+#include <asm/thread_info.h>
+#include <asm/ppc_asm.h>
+#include <asm/asm-offsets.h>
+
+/* As with the other PowerPC ports, it is expected that when code
+ * execution begins here, the following registers contain valid, yet
+ * optional, information:
+ *
+ * r3 - Board info structure pointer (DRAM, frequency, MAC address, etc.)
+ * r4 - Starting address of the init RAM disk
+ * r5 - Ending address of the init RAM disk
+ * r6 - Start of kernel command line string (e.g. "mem=96m")
+ * r7 - End of kernel command line string
+ *
+ * This is all going to change RSN when we add bi_recs....... -- Dan
+ */
+ .text
+_GLOBAL(_stext)
+_GLOBAL(_start)
+
+ /* Save parameters we are passed.
+ */
+ mr r31,r3
+ mr r30,r4
+ mr r29,r5
+ mr r28,r6
+ mr r27,r7
+
+ /* We have to turn on the MMU right away so we get cache modes
+ * set correctly.
+ */
+ bl initial_mmu
+
+/* We now have the lower 16 Meg mapped into TLB entries, and the caches
+ * ready to work.
+ */
+turn_on_mmu:
+ lis r0,MSR_KERNEL@h
+ ori r0,r0,MSR_KERNEL@l
+ mtspr SPRN_SRR1,r0
+ lis r0,start_here@h
+ ori r0,r0,start_here@l
+ mtspr SPRN_SRR0,r0
+ SYNC
+ rfi /* enables MMU */
+ b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
+
+/*
+ * This area is used for temporarily saving registers during the
+ * critical exception prolog.
+ */
+ . = 0xc0
+crit_save:
+_GLOBAL(crit_r10)
+ .space 4
+_GLOBAL(crit_r11)
+ .space 4
+
+/*
+ * Exception vector entry code. This code runs with address translation
+ * turned off (i.e. using physical addresses). We assume SPRG3 has the
+ * physical address of the current task thread_struct.
+ * Note that we have to have decremented r1 before we write to any fields
+ * of the exception frame, since a critical interrupt could occur at any
+ * time, and it will write to the area immediately below the current r1.
+ */
+#define NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG \
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG0,r10; /* save two registers to work with */\
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG1,r11; \
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG2,r1; \
+ mfcr r10; /* save CR in r10 for now */\
+ mfspr r11,SPRN_SRR1; /* check whether user or kernel */\
+ andi. r11,r11,MSR_PR; \
+ beq 1f; \
+ mfspr r1,SPRN_SPRG3; /* if from user, start at top of */\
+ lwz r1,THREAD_INFO-THREAD(r1); /* this thread's kernel stack */\
+ addi r1,r1,THREAD_SIZE; \
+1: subi r1,r1,INT_FRAME_SIZE; /* Allocate an exception frame */\
+ tophys(r11,r1); \
+ stw r10,_CCR(r11); /* save various registers */\
+ stw r12,GPR12(r11); \
+ stw r9,GPR9(r11); \
+ mfspr r10,SPRN_SPRG0; \
+ stw r10,GPR10(r11); \
+ mfspr r12,SPRN_SPRG1; \
+ stw r12,GPR11(r11); \
+ mflr r10; \
+ stw r10,_LINK(r11); \
+ mfspr r10,SPRN_SPRG2; \
+ mfspr r12,SPRN_SRR0; \
+ stw r10,GPR1(r11); \
+ mfspr r9,SPRN_SRR1; \
+ stw r10,0(r11); \
+ rlwinm r9,r9,0,14,12; /* clear MSR_WE (necessary?) */\
+ stw r0,GPR0(r11); \
+ SAVE_4GPRS(3, r11); \
+ SAVE_2GPRS(7, r11)
+
+/*
+ * Exception prolog for critical exceptions. This is a little different
+ * from the normal exception prolog above since a critical exception
+ * can potentially occur at any point during normal exception processing.
+ * Thus we cannot use the same SPRG registers as the normal prolog above.
+ * Instead we use a couple of words of memory at low physical addresses.
+ * This is OK since we don't support SMP on these processors.
+ */
+#define CRITICAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG \
+ stw r10,crit_r10@l(0); /* save two registers to work with */\
+ stw r11,crit_r11@l(0); \
+ mfcr r10; /* save CR in r10 for now */\
+ mfspr r11,SPRN_SRR3; /* check whether user or kernel */\
+ andi. r11,r11,MSR_PR; \
+ lis r11,critical_stack_top@h; \
+ ori r11,r11,critical_stack_top@l; \
+ beq 1f; \
+ /* COMING FROM USER MODE */ \
+ mfspr r11,SPRN_SPRG3; /* if from user, start at top of */\
+ lwz r11,THREAD_INFO-THREAD(r11); /* this thread's kernel stack */\
+ addi r11,r11,THREAD_SIZE; \
+1: subi r11,r11,INT_FRAME_SIZE; /* Allocate an exception frame */\
+ tophys(r11,r11); \
+ stw r10,_CCR(r11); /* save various registers */\
+ stw r12,GPR12(r11); \
+ stw r9,GPR9(r11); \
+ mflr r10; \
+ stw r10,_LINK(r11); \
+ mfspr r12,SPRN_DEAR; /* save DEAR and ESR in the frame */\
+ stw r12,_DEAR(r11); /* since they may have had stuff */\
+ mfspr r9,SPRN_ESR; /* in them at the point where the */\
+ stw r9,_ESR(r11); /* exception was taken */\
+ mfspr r12,SPRN_SRR2; \
+ stw r1,GPR1(r11); \
+ mfspr r9,SPRN_SRR3; \
+ stw r1,0(r11); \
+ tovirt(r1,r11); \
+ rlwinm r9,r9,0,14,12; /* clear MSR_WE (necessary?) */\
+ stw r0,GPR0(r11); \
+ SAVE_4GPRS(3, r11); \
+ SAVE_2GPRS(7, r11)
+
+ /*
+ * State at this point:
+ * r9 saved in stack frame, now saved SRR3 & ~MSR_WE
+ * r10 saved in crit_r10 and in stack frame, trashed
+ * r11 saved in crit_r11 and in stack frame,
+ * now phys stack/exception frame pointer
+ * r12 saved in stack frame, now saved SRR2
+ * CR saved in stack frame, CR0.EQ = !SRR3.PR
+ * LR, DEAR, ESR in stack frame
+ * r1 saved in stack frame, now virt stack/excframe pointer
+ * r0, r3-r8 saved in stack frame
+ */
+
+/*
+ * Exception vectors.
+ */
+#define START_EXCEPTION(n, label) \
+ . = n; \
+label:
+
+#define EXCEPTION(n, label, hdlr, xfer) \
+ START_EXCEPTION(n, label); \
+ NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG; \
+ addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD; \
+ xfer(n, hdlr)
+
+#define CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(n, label, hdlr) \
+ START_EXCEPTION(n, label); \
+ CRITICAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG; \
+ addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD; \
+ EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n+2, (MSR_KERNEL & ~(MSR_ME|MSR_DE|MSR_CE)), \
+ NOCOPY, crit_transfer_to_handler, \
+ ret_from_crit_exc)
+
+#define EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, trap, msr, copyee, tfer, ret) \
+ li r10,trap; \
+ stw r10,_TRAP(r11); \
+ lis r10,msr@h; \
+ ori r10,r10,msr@l; \
+ copyee(r10, r9); \
+ bl tfer; \
+ .long hdlr; \
+ .long ret
+
+#define COPY_EE(d, s) rlwimi d,s,0,16,16
+#define NOCOPY(d, s)
+
+#define EXC_XFER_STD(n, hdlr) \
+ EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n, MSR_KERNEL, NOCOPY, transfer_to_handler_full, \
+ ret_from_except_full)
+
+#define EXC_XFER_LITE(n, hdlr) \
+ EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n+1, MSR_KERNEL, NOCOPY, transfer_to_handler, \
+ ret_from_except)
+
+#define EXC_XFER_EE(n, hdlr) \
+ EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n, MSR_KERNEL, COPY_EE, transfer_to_handler_full, \
+ ret_from_except_full)
+
+#define EXC_XFER_EE_LITE(n, hdlr) \
+ EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n+1, MSR_KERNEL, COPY_EE, transfer_to_handler, \
+ ret_from_except)
+
+
+/*
+ * 0x0100 - Critical Interrupt Exception
+ */
+ CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(0x0100, CriticalInterrupt, unknown_exception)
+
+/*
+ * 0x0200 - Machine Check Exception
+ */
+ CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(0x0200, MachineCheck, machine_check_exception)
+
+/*
+ * 0x0300 - Data Storage Exception
+ * This happens for just a few reasons. U0 set (but we don't do that),
+ * or zone protection fault (user violation, write to protected page).
+ * If this is just an update of modified status, we do that quickly
+ * and exit. Otherwise, we call heavywight functions to do the work.
+ */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x0300, DataStorage)
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG0, r10 /* Save some working registers */
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG1, r11
+#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
+ stw r12, 0(r0)
+ stw r9, 4(r0)
+ mfcr r11
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
+ stw r11, 8(r0)
+ stw r12, 12(r0)
+#else
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG4, r12
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG5, r9
+ mfcr r11
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG7, r11
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG6, r12
+#endif
+
+ /* First, check if it was a zone fault (which means a user
+ * tried to access a kernel or read-protected page - always
+ * a SEGV). All other faults here must be stores, so no
+ * need to check ESR_DST as well. */
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_ESR
+ andis. r10, r10, ESR_DIZ@h
+ bne 2f
+
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_DEAR /* Get faulting address */
+
+ /* If we are faulting a kernel address, we have to use the
+ * kernel page tables.
+ */
+ lis r11, TASK_SIZE@h
+ cmplw r10, r11
+ blt+ 3f
+ lis r11, swapper_pg_dir@h
+ ori r11, r11, swapper_pg_dir@l
+ li r9, 0
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r9 /* TLB will have 0 TID */
+ b 4f
+
+ /* Get the PGD for the current thread.
+ */
+3:
+ mfspr r11,SPRN_SPRG3
+ lwz r11,PGDIR(r11)
+4:
+ tophys(r11, r11)
+ rlwimi r11, r10, 12, 20, 29 /* Create L1 (pgdir/pmd) address */
+ lwz r11, 0(r11) /* Get L1 entry */
+ rlwinm. r12, r11, 0, 0, 19 /* Extract L2 (pte) base address */
+ beq 2f /* Bail if no table */
+
+ rlwimi r12, r10, 22, 20, 29 /* Compute PTE address */
+ lwz r11, 0(r12) /* Get Linux PTE */
+
+ andi. r9, r11, _PAGE_RW /* Is it writeable? */
+ beq 2f /* Bail if not */
+
+ /* Update 'changed'.
+ */
+ ori r11, r11, _PAGE_DIRTY|_PAGE_ACCESSED|_PAGE_HWWRITE
+ stw r11, 0(r12) /* Update Linux page table */
+
+ /* Most of the Linux PTE is ready to load into the TLB LO.
+ * We set ZSEL, where only the LS-bit determines user access.
+ * We set execute, because we don't have the granularity to
+ * properly set this at the page level (Linux problem).
+ * If shared is set, we cause a zero PID->TID load.
+ * Many of these bits are software only. Bits we don't set
+ * here we (properly should) assume have the appropriate value.
+ */
+ li r12, 0x0ce2
+ andc r11, r11, r12 /* Make sure 20, 21 are zero */
+
+ /* find the TLB index that caused the fault. It has to be here.
+ */
+ tlbsx r9, 0, r10
+
+ tlbwe r11, r9, TLB_DATA /* Load TLB LO */
+
+ /* Done...restore registers and get out of here.
+ */
+#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
+ lwz r12, 12(r0)
+ lwz r11, 8(r0)
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ lwz r9, 4(r0)
+ lwz r12, 0(r0)
+#else
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
+#endif
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
+ PPC405_ERR77_SYNC
+ rfi /* Should sync shadow TLBs */
+ b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
+
+2:
+ /* The bailout. Restore registers to pre-exception conditions
+ * and call the heavyweights to help us out.
+ */
+#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
+ lwz r12, 12(r0)
+ lwz r11, 8(r0)
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ lwz r9, 4(r0)
+ lwz r12, 0(r0)
+#else
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
+#endif
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
+ b DataAccess
+
+/*
+ * 0x0400 - Instruction Storage Exception
+ * This is caused by a fetch from non-execute or guarded pages.
+ */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x0400, InstructionAccess)
+ NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
+ mr r4,r12 /* Pass SRR0 as arg2 */
+ li r5,0 /* Pass zero as arg3 */
+ EXC_XFER_EE_LITE(0x400, handle_page_fault)
+
+/* 0x0500 - External Interrupt Exception */
+ EXCEPTION(0x0500, HardwareInterrupt, do_IRQ, EXC_XFER_LITE)
+
+/* 0x0600 - Alignment Exception */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x0600, Alignment)
+ NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
+ mfspr r4,SPRN_DEAR /* Grab the DEAR and save it */
+ stw r4,_DEAR(r11)
+ addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD
+ EXC_XFER_EE(0x600, alignment_exception)
+
+/* 0x0700 - Program Exception */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x0700, ProgramCheck)
+ NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
+ mfspr r4,SPRN_ESR /* Grab the ESR and save it */
+ stw r4,_ESR(r11)
+ addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD
+ EXC_XFER_STD(0x700, program_check_exception)
+
+ EXCEPTION(0x0800, Trap_08, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x0900, Trap_09, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x0A00, Trap_0A, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x0B00, Trap_0B, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+
+/* 0x0C00 - System Call Exception */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x0C00, SystemCall)
+ NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
+ EXC_XFER_EE_LITE(0xc00, DoSyscall)
+
+ EXCEPTION(0x0D00, Trap_0D, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x0E00, Trap_0E, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x0F00, Trap_0F, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+
+/* 0x1000 - Programmable Interval Timer (PIT) Exception */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x1000, Decrementer)
+ NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
+ lis r0,TSR_PIS@h
+ mtspr SPRN_TSR,r0 /* Clear the PIT exception */
+ addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD
+ EXC_XFER_LITE(0x1000, timer_interrupt)
+
+#if 0
+/* NOTE:
+ * FIT and WDT handlers are not implemented yet.
+ */
+
+/* 0x1010 - Fixed Interval Timer (FIT) Exception
+*/
+ STND_EXCEPTION(0x1010, FITException, unknown_exception)
+
+/* 0x1020 - Watchdog Timer (WDT) Exception
+*/
+#ifdef CONFIG_BOOKE_WDT
+ CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(0x1020, WDTException, WatchdogException)
+#else
+ CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(0x1020, WDTException, unknown_exception)
+#endif
+#endif
+
+/* 0x1100 - Data TLB Miss Exception
+ * As the name implies, translation is not in the MMU, so search the
+ * page tables and fix it. The only purpose of this function is to
+ * load TLB entries from the page table if they exist.
+ */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x1100, DTLBMiss)
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG0, r10 /* Save some working registers */
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG1, r11
+#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
+ stw r12, 0(r0)
+ stw r9, 4(r0)
+ mfcr r11
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
+ stw r11, 8(r0)
+ stw r12, 12(r0)
+#else
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG4, r12
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG5, r9
+ mfcr r11
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG7, r11
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG6, r12
+#endif
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_DEAR /* Get faulting address */
+
+ /* If we are faulting a kernel address, we have to use the
+ * kernel page tables.
+ */
+ lis r11, TASK_SIZE@h
+ cmplw r10, r11
+ blt+ 3f
+ lis r11, swapper_pg_dir@h
+ ori r11, r11, swapper_pg_dir@l
+ li r9, 0
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r9 /* TLB will have 0 TID */
+ b 4f
+
+ /* Get the PGD for the current thread.
+ */
+3:
+ mfspr r11,SPRN_SPRG3
+ lwz r11,PGDIR(r11)
+4:
+ tophys(r11, r11)
+ rlwimi r11, r10, 12, 20, 29 /* Create L1 (pgdir/pmd) address */
+ lwz r12, 0(r11) /* Get L1 entry */
+ andi. r9, r12, _PMD_PRESENT /* Check if it points to a PTE page */
+ beq 2f /* Bail if no table */
+
+ rlwimi r12, r10, 22, 20, 29 /* Compute PTE address */
+ lwz r11, 0(r12) /* Get Linux PTE */
+ andi. r9, r11, _PAGE_PRESENT
+ beq 5f
+
+ ori r11, r11, _PAGE_ACCESSED
+ stw r11, 0(r12)
+
+ /* Create TLB tag. This is the faulting address plus a static
+ * set of bits. These are size, valid, E, U0.
+ */
+ li r12, 0x00c0
+ rlwimi r10, r12, 0, 20, 31
+
+ b finish_tlb_load
+
+2: /* Check for possible large-page pmd entry */
+ rlwinm. r9, r12, 2, 22, 24
+ beq 5f
+
+ /* Create TLB tag. This is the faulting address, plus a static
+ * set of bits (valid, E, U0) plus the size from the PMD.
+ */
+ ori r9, r9, 0x40
+ rlwimi r10, r9, 0, 20, 31
+ mr r11, r12
+
+ b finish_tlb_load
+
+5:
+ /* The bailout. Restore registers to pre-exception conditions
+ * and call the heavyweights to help us out.
+ */
+#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
+ lwz r12, 12(r0)
+ lwz r11, 8(r0)
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ lwz r9, 4(r0)
+ lwz r12, 0(r0)
+#else
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
+#endif
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
+ b DataAccess
+
+/* 0x1200 - Instruction TLB Miss Exception
+ * Nearly the same as above, except we get our information from different
+ * registers and bailout to a different point.
+ */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x1200, ITLBMiss)
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG0, r10 /* Save some working registers */
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG1, r11
+#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
+ stw r12, 0(r0)
+ stw r9, 4(r0)
+ mfcr r11
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
+ stw r11, 8(r0)
+ stw r12, 12(r0)
+#else
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG4, r12
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG5, r9
+ mfcr r11
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG7, r11
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG6, r12
+#endif
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_SRR0 /* Get faulting address */
+
+ /* If we are faulting a kernel address, we have to use the
+ * kernel page tables.
+ */
+ lis r11, TASK_SIZE@h
+ cmplw r10, r11
+ blt+ 3f
+ lis r11, swapper_pg_dir@h
+ ori r11, r11, swapper_pg_dir@l
+ li r9, 0
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r9 /* TLB will have 0 TID */
+ b 4f
+
+ /* Get the PGD for the current thread.
+ */
+3:
+ mfspr r11,SPRN_SPRG3
+ lwz r11,PGDIR(r11)
+4:
+ tophys(r11, r11)
+ rlwimi r11, r10, 12, 20, 29 /* Create L1 (pgdir/pmd) address */
+ lwz r12, 0(r11) /* Get L1 entry */
+ andi. r9, r12, _PMD_PRESENT /* Check if it points to a PTE page */
+ beq 2f /* Bail if no table */
+
+ rlwimi r12, r10, 22, 20, 29 /* Compute PTE address */
+ lwz r11, 0(r12) /* Get Linux PTE */
+ andi. r9, r11, _PAGE_PRESENT
+ beq 5f
+
+ ori r11, r11, _PAGE_ACCESSED
+ stw r11, 0(r12)
+
+ /* Create TLB tag. This is the faulting address plus a static
+ * set of bits. These are size, valid, E, U0.
+ */
+ li r12, 0x00c0
+ rlwimi r10, r12, 0, 20, 31
+
+ b finish_tlb_load
+
+2: /* Check for possible large-page pmd entry */
+ rlwinm. r9, r12, 2, 22, 24
+ beq 5f
+
+ /* Create TLB tag. This is the faulting address, plus a static
+ * set of bits (valid, E, U0) plus the size from the PMD.
+ */
+ ori r9, r9, 0x40
+ rlwimi r10, r9, 0, 20, 31
+ mr r11, r12
+
+ b finish_tlb_load
+
+5:
+ /* The bailout. Restore registers to pre-exception conditions
+ * and call the heavyweights to help us out.
+ */
+#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
+ lwz r12, 12(r0)
+ lwz r11, 8(r0)
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ lwz r9, 4(r0)
+ lwz r12, 0(r0)
+#else
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
+#endif
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
+ b InstructionAccess
+
+ EXCEPTION(0x1300, Trap_13, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1400, Trap_14, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1500, Trap_15, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1600, Trap_16, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+#ifdef CONFIG_IBM405_ERR51
+ /* 405GP errata 51 */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x1700, Trap_17)
+ b DTLBMiss
+#else
+ EXCEPTION(0x1700, Trap_17, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+#endif
+ EXCEPTION(0x1800, Trap_18, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1900, Trap_19, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1A00, Trap_1A, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1B00, Trap_1B, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1C00, Trap_1C, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1D00, Trap_1D, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1E00, Trap_1E, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+ EXCEPTION(0x1F00, Trap_1F, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
+
+/* Check for a single step debug exception while in an exception
+ * handler before state has been saved. This is to catch the case
+ * where an instruction that we are trying to single step causes
+ * an exception (eg ITLB/DTLB miss) and thus the first instruction of
+ * the exception handler generates a single step debug exception.
+ *
+ * If we get a debug trap on the first instruction of an exception handler,
+ * we reset the MSR_DE in the _exception handler's_ MSR (the debug trap is
+ * a critical exception, so we are using SPRN_CSRR1 to manipulate the MSR).
+ * The exception handler was handling a non-critical interrupt, so it will
+ * save (and later restore) the MSR via SPRN_SRR1, which will still have
+ * the MSR_DE bit set.
+ */
+ /* 0x2000 - Debug Exception */
+ START_EXCEPTION(0x2000, DebugTrap)
+ CRITICAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
+
+ /*
+ * If this is a single step or branch-taken exception in an
+ * exception entry sequence, it was probably meant to apply to
+ * the code where the exception occurred (since exception entry
+ * doesn't turn off DE automatically). We simulate the effect
+ * of turning off DE on entry to an exception handler by turning
+ * off DE in the SRR3 value and clearing the debug status.
+ */
+ mfspr r10,SPRN_DBSR /* check single-step/branch taken */
+ andis. r10,r10,DBSR_IC@h
+ beq+ 2f
+
+ andi. r10,r9,MSR_IR|MSR_PR /* check supervisor + MMU off */
+ beq 1f /* branch and fix it up */
+
+ mfspr r10,SPRN_SRR2 /* Faulting instruction address */
+ cmplwi r10,0x2100
+ bgt+ 2f /* address above exception vectors */
+
+ /* here it looks like we got an inappropriate debug exception. */
+1: rlwinm r9,r9,0,~MSR_DE /* clear DE in the SRR3 value */
+ lis r10,DBSR_IC@h /* clear the IC event */
+ mtspr SPRN_DBSR,r10
+ /* restore state and get out */
+ lwz r10,_CCR(r11)
+ lwz r0,GPR0(r11)
+ lwz r1,GPR1(r11)
+ mtcrf 0x80,r10
+ mtspr SPRN_SRR2,r12
+ mtspr SPRN_SRR3,r9
+ lwz r9,GPR9(r11)
+ lwz r12,GPR12(r11)
+ lwz r10,crit_r10@l(0)
+ lwz r11,crit_r11@l(0)
+ PPC405_ERR77_SYNC
+ rfci
+ b .
+
+ /* continue normal handling for a critical exception... */
+2: mfspr r4,SPRN_DBSR
+ addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD
+ EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(DebugException, 0x2002, \
+ (MSR_KERNEL & ~(MSR_ME|MSR_DE|MSR_CE)), \
+ NOCOPY, crit_transfer_to_handler, ret_from_crit_exc)
+
+/*
+ * The other Data TLB exceptions bail out to this point
+ * if they can't resolve the lightweight TLB fault.
+ */
+DataAccess:
+ NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
+ mfspr r5,SPRN_ESR /* Grab the ESR, save it, pass arg3 */
+ stw r5,_ESR(r11)
+ mfspr r4,SPRN_DEAR /* Grab the DEAR, save it, pass arg2 */
+ EXC_XFER_EE_LITE(0x300, handle_page_fault)
+
+/* Other PowerPC processors, namely those derived from the 6xx-series
+ * have vectors from 0x2100 through 0x2F00 defined, but marked as reserved.
+ * However, for the 4xx-series processors these are neither defined nor
+ * reserved.
+ */
+
+ /* Damn, I came up one instruction too many to fit into the
+ * exception space :-). Both the instruction and data TLB
+ * miss get to this point to load the TLB.
+ * r10 - TLB_TAG value
+ * r11 - Linux PTE
+ * r12, r9 - avilable to use
+ * PID - loaded with proper value when we get here
+ * Upon exit, we reload everything and RFI.
+ * Actually, it will fit now, but oh well.....a common place
+ * to load the TLB.
+ */
+tlb_4xx_index:
+ .long 0
+finish_tlb_load:
+ /* load the next available TLB index.
+ */
+ lwz r9, tlb_4xx_index@l(0)
+ addi r9, r9, 1
+ andi. r9, r9, (PPC4XX_TLB_SIZE-1)
+ stw r9, tlb_4xx_index@l(0)
+
+6:
+ /*
+ * Clear out the software-only bits in the PTE to generate the
+ * TLB_DATA value. These are the bottom 2 bits of the RPM, the
+ * top 3 bits of the zone field, and M.
+ */
+ li r12, 0x0ce2
+ andc r11, r11, r12
+
+ tlbwe r11, r9, TLB_DATA /* Load TLB LO */
+ tlbwe r10, r9, TLB_TAG /* Load TLB HI */
+
+ /* Done...restore registers and get out of here.
+ */
+#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
+ lwz r12, 12(r0)
+ lwz r11, 8(r0)
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ lwz r9, 4(r0)
+ lwz r12, 0(r0)
+#else
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
+ mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
+ mtcr r11
+ mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
+ mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
+#endif
+ mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
+ mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
+ PPC405_ERR77_SYNC
+ rfi /* Should sync shadow TLBs */
+ b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
+
+/* extern void giveup_fpu(struct task_struct *prev)
+ *
+ * The PowerPC 4xx family of processors do not have an FPU, so this just
+ * returns.
+ */
+_GLOBAL(giveup_fpu)
+ blr
+
+/* This is where the main kernel code starts.
+ */
+start_here:
+
+ /* ptr to current */
+ lis r2,init_task@h
+ ori r2,r2,init_task@l
+
+ /* ptr to phys current thread */
+ tophys(r4,r2)
+ addi r4,r4,THREAD /* init task's THREAD */
+ mtspr SPRN_SPRG3,r4
+
+ /* stack */
+ lis r1,init_thread_union@ha
+ addi r1,r1,init_thread_union@l
+ li r0,0
+ stwu r0,THREAD_SIZE-STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD(r1)
+
+ bl early_init /* We have to do this with MMU on */
+
+/*
+ * Decide what sort of machine this is and initialize the MMU.
+ */
+ mr r3,r31
+ mr r4,r30
+ mr r5,r29
+ mr r6,r28
+ mr r7,r27
+ bl machine_init
+ bl MMU_init
+
+/* Go back to running unmapped so we can load up new values
+ * and change to using our exception vectors.
+ * On the 4xx, all we have to do is invalidate the TLB to clear
+ * the old 16M byte TLB mappings.
+ */
+ lis r4,2f@h
+ ori r4,r4,2f@l
+ tophys(r4,r4)
+ lis r3,(MSR_KERNEL & ~(MSR_IR|MSR_DR))@h
+ ori r3,r3,(MSR_KERNEL & ~(MSR_IR|MSR_DR))@l
+ mtspr SPRN_SRR0,r4
+ mtspr SPRN_SRR1,r3
+ rfi
+ b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
+
+/* Load up the kernel context */
+2:
+ sync /* Flush to memory before changing TLB */
+ tlbia
+ isync /* Flush shadow TLBs */
+
+ /* set up the PTE pointers for the Abatron bdiGDB.
+ */
+ lis r6, swapper_pg_dir@h
+ ori r6, r6, swapper_pg_dir@l
+ lis r5, abatron_pteptrs@h
+ ori r5, r5, abatron_pteptrs@l
+ stw r5, 0xf0(r0) /* Must match your Abatron config file */
+ tophys(r5,r5)
+ stw r6, 0(r5)
+
+/* Now turn on the MMU for real! */
+ lis r4,MSR_KERNEL@h
+ ori r4,r4,MSR_KERNEL@l
+ lis r3,start_kernel@h
+ ori r3,r3,start_kernel@l
+ mtspr SPRN_SRR0,r3
+ mtspr SPRN_SRR1,r4
+ rfi /* enable MMU and jump to start_kernel */
+ b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
+
+/* Set up the initial MMU state so we can do the first level of
+ * kernel initialization. This maps the first 16 MBytes of memory 1:1
+ * virtual to physical and more importantly sets the cache mode.
+ */
+initial_mmu:
+ tlbia /* Invalidate all TLB entries */
+ isync
+
+ /* We should still be executing code at physical address 0x0000xxxx
+ * at this point. However, start_here is at virtual address
+ * 0xC000xxxx. So, set up a TLB mapping to cover this once
+ * translation is enabled.
+ */
+
+ lis r3,KERNELBASE@h /* Load the kernel virtual address */
+ ori r3,r3,KERNELBASE@l
+ tophys(r4,r3) /* Load the kernel physical address */
+
+ iccci r0,r3 /* Invalidate the i-cache before use */
+
+ /* Load the kernel PID.
+ */
+ li r0,0
+ mtspr SPRN_PID,r0
+ sync
+
+ /* Configure and load two entries into TLB slots 62 and 63.
+ * In case we are pinning TLBs, these are reserved in by the
+ * other TLB functions. If not reserving, then it doesn't
+ * matter where they are loaded.
+ */
+ clrrwi r4,r4,10 /* Mask off the real page number */
+ ori r4,r4,(TLB_WR | TLB_EX) /* Set the write and execute bits */
+
+ clrrwi r3,r3,10 /* Mask off the effective page number */
+ ori r3,r3,(TLB_VALID | TLB_PAGESZ(PAGESZ_16M))
+
+ li r0,63 /* TLB slot 63 */
+
+ tlbwe r4,r0,TLB_DATA /* Load the data portion of the entry */
+ tlbwe r3,r0,TLB_TAG /* Load the tag portion of the entry */
+
+#if defined(CONFIG_SERIAL_TEXT_DEBUG) && defined(SERIAL_DEBUG_IO_BASE)
+
+ /* Load a TLB entry for the UART, so that ppc4xx_progress() can use
+ * the UARTs nice and early. We use a 4k real==virtual mapping. */
+
+ lis r3,SERIAL_DEBUG_IO_BASE@h
+ ori r3,r3,SERIAL_DEBUG_IO_BASE@l
+ mr r4,r3
+ clrrwi r4,r4,12
+ ori r4,r4,(TLB_WR|TLB_I|TLB_M|TLB_G)
+
+ clrrwi r3,r3,12
+ ori r3,r3,(TLB_VALID | TLB_PAGESZ(PAGESZ_4K))
+
+ li r0,0 /* TLB slot 0 */
+ tlbwe r4,r0,TLB_DATA
+ tlbwe r3,r0,TLB_TAG
+#endif /* CONFIG_SERIAL_DEBUG_TEXT && SERIAL_DEBUG_IO_BASE */
+
+ isync
+
+ /* Establish the exception vector base
+ */
+ lis r4,KERNELBASE@h /* EVPR only uses the high 16-bits */
+ tophys(r0,r4) /* Use the physical address */
+ mtspr SPRN_EVPR,r0
+
+ blr
+
+_GLOBAL(abort)
+ mfspr r13,SPRN_DBCR0
+ oris r13,r13,DBCR0_RST_SYSTEM@h
+ mtspr SPRN_DBCR0,r13
+
+_GLOBAL(set_context)
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_BDI_SWITCH
+ /* Context switch the PTE pointer for the Abatron BDI2000.
+ * The PGDIR is the second parameter.
+ */
+ lis r5, KERNELBASE@h
+ lwz r5, 0xf0(r5)
+ stw r4, 0x4(r5)
+#endif
+ sync
+ mtspr SPRN_PID,r3
+ isync /* Need an isync to flush shadow */
+ /* TLBs after changing PID */
+ blr
+
+/* We put a few things here that have to be page-aligned. This stuff
+ * goes at the beginning of the data segment, which is page-aligned.
+ */
+ .data
+ .align 12
+ .globl sdata
+sdata:
+ .globl empty_zero_page
+empty_zero_page:
+ .space 4096
+ .globl swapper_pg_dir
+swapper_pg_dir:
+ .space 4096
+
+
+/* Stack for handling critical exceptions from kernel mode */
+ .section .bss
+ .align 12
+exception_stack_bottom:
+ .space 4096
+critical_stack_top:
+ .globl exception_stack_top
+exception_stack_top:
+
+/* This space gets a copy of optional info passed to us by the bootstrap
+ * which is used to pass parameters into the kernel like root=/dev/sda1, etc.
+ */
+ .globl cmd_line
+cmd_line:
+ .space 512
+
+/* Room for two PTE pointers, usually the kernel and current user pointers
+ * to their respective root page table.
+ */
+abatron_pteptrs:
+ .space 8
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/kernel/head_4xx.S
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1021 +0,0 @@
-/*
- * Copyright (c) 1995-1996 Gary Thomas <gdt@linuxppc.org>
- * Initial PowerPC version.
- * Copyright (c) 1996 Cort Dougan <cort@cs.nmt.edu>
- * Rewritten for PReP
- * Copyright (c) 1996 Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au>
- * Low-level exception handers, MMU support, and rewrite.
- * Copyright (c) 1997 Dan Malek <dmalek@jlc.net>
- * PowerPC 8xx modifications.
- * Copyright (c) 1998-1999 TiVo, Inc.
- * PowerPC 403GCX modifications.
- * Copyright (c) 1999 Grant Erickson <grant@lcse.umn.edu>
- * PowerPC 403GCX/405GP modifications.
- * Copyright 2000 MontaVista Software Inc.
- * PPC405 modifications
- * PowerPC 403GCX/405GP modifications.
- * Author: MontaVista Software, Inc.
- * frank_rowand@mvista.com or source@mvista.com
- * debbie_chu@mvista.com
- *
- *
- * Module name: head_4xx.S
- *
- * Description:
- * Kernel execution entry point code.
- *
- * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
- * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
- * 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
- *
- */
-
-#include <asm/processor.h>
-#include <asm/page.h>
-#include <asm/mmu.h>
-#include <asm/pgtable.h>
-#include <asm/ibm4xx.h>
-#include <asm/cputable.h>
-#include <asm/thread_info.h>
-#include <asm/ppc_asm.h>
-#include <asm/asm-offsets.h>
-
-/* As with the other PowerPC ports, it is expected that when code
- * execution begins here, the following registers contain valid, yet
- * optional, information:
- *
- * r3 - Board info structure pointer (DRAM, frequency, MAC address, etc.)
- * r4 - Starting address of the init RAM disk
- * r5 - Ending address of the init RAM disk
- * r6 - Start of kernel command line string (e.g. "mem=96m")
- * r7 - End of kernel command line string
- *
- * This is all going to change RSN when we add bi_recs....... -- Dan
- */
- .text
-_GLOBAL(_stext)
-_GLOBAL(_start)
-
- /* Save parameters we are passed.
- */
- mr r31,r3
- mr r30,r4
- mr r29,r5
- mr r28,r6
- mr r27,r7
-
- /* We have to turn on the MMU right away so we get cache modes
- * set correctly.
- */
- bl initial_mmu
-
-/* We now have the lower 16 Meg mapped into TLB entries, and the caches
- * ready to work.
- */
-turn_on_mmu:
- lis r0,MSR_KERNEL@h
- ori r0,r0,MSR_KERNEL@l
- mtspr SPRN_SRR1,r0
- lis r0,start_here@h
- ori r0,r0,start_here@l
- mtspr SPRN_SRR0,r0
- SYNC
- rfi /* enables MMU */
- b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
-
-/*
- * This area is used for temporarily saving registers during the
- * critical exception prolog.
- */
- . = 0xc0
-crit_save:
-_GLOBAL(crit_r10)
- .space 4
-_GLOBAL(crit_r11)
- .space 4
-
-/*
- * Exception vector entry code. This code runs with address translation
- * turned off (i.e. using physical addresses). We assume SPRG3 has the
- * physical address of the current task thread_struct.
- * Note that we have to have decremented r1 before we write to any fields
- * of the exception frame, since a critical interrupt could occur at any
- * time, and it will write to the area immediately below the current r1.
- */
-#define NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG \
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG0,r10; /* save two registers to work with */\
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG1,r11; \
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG2,r1; \
- mfcr r10; /* save CR in r10 for now */\
- mfspr r11,SPRN_SRR1; /* check whether user or kernel */\
- andi. r11,r11,MSR_PR; \
- beq 1f; \
- mfspr r1,SPRN_SPRG3; /* if from user, start at top of */\
- lwz r1,THREAD_INFO-THREAD(r1); /* this thread's kernel stack */\
- addi r1,r1,THREAD_SIZE; \
-1: subi r1,r1,INT_FRAME_SIZE; /* Allocate an exception frame */\
- tophys(r11,r1); \
- stw r10,_CCR(r11); /* save various registers */\
- stw r12,GPR12(r11); \
- stw r9,GPR9(r11); \
- mfspr r10,SPRN_SPRG0; \
- stw r10,GPR10(r11); \
- mfspr r12,SPRN_SPRG1; \
- stw r12,GPR11(r11); \
- mflr r10; \
- stw r10,_LINK(r11); \
- mfspr r10,SPRN_SPRG2; \
- mfspr r12,SPRN_SRR0; \
- stw r10,GPR1(r11); \
- mfspr r9,SPRN_SRR1; \
- stw r10,0(r11); \
- rlwinm r9,r9,0,14,12; /* clear MSR_WE (necessary?) */\
- stw r0,GPR0(r11); \
- SAVE_4GPRS(3, r11); \
- SAVE_2GPRS(7, r11)
-
-/*
- * Exception prolog for critical exceptions. This is a little different
- * from the normal exception prolog above since a critical exception
- * can potentially occur at any point during normal exception processing.
- * Thus we cannot use the same SPRG registers as the normal prolog above.
- * Instead we use a couple of words of memory at low physical addresses.
- * This is OK since we don't support SMP on these processors.
- */
-#define CRITICAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG \
- stw r10,crit_r10@l(0); /* save two registers to work with */\
- stw r11,crit_r11@l(0); \
- mfcr r10; /* save CR in r10 for now */\
- mfspr r11,SPRN_SRR3; /* check whether user or kernel */\
- andi. r11,r11,MSR_PR; \
- lis r11,critical_stack_top@h; \
- ori r11,r11,critical_stack_top@l; \
- beq 1f; \
- /* COMING FROM USER MODE */ \
- mfspr r11,SPRN_SPRG3; /* if from user, start at top of */\
- lwz r11,THREAD_INFO-THREAD(r11); /* this thread's kernel stack */\
- addi r11,r11,THREAD_SIZE; \
-1: subi r11,r11,INT_FRAME_SIZE; /* Allocate an exception frame */\
- tophys(r11,r11); \
- stw r10,_CCR(r11); /* save various registers */\
- stw r12,GPR12(r11); \
- stw r9,GPR9(r11); \
- mflr r10; \
- stw r10,_LINK(r11); \
- mfspr r12,SPRN_DEAR; /* save DEAR and ESR in the frame */\
- stw r12,_DEAR(r11); /* since they may have had stuff */\
- mfspr r9,SPRN_ESR; /* in them at the point where the */\
- stw r9,_ESR(r11); /* exception was taken */\
- mfspr r12,SPRN_SRR2; \
- stw r1,GPR1(r11); \
- mfspr r9,SPRN_SRR3; \
- stw r1,0(r11); \
- tovirt(r1,r11); \
- rlwinm r9,r9,0,14,12; /* clear MSR_WE (necessary?) */\
- stw r0,GPR0(r11); \
- SAVE_4GPRS(3, r11); \
- SAVE_2GPRS(7, r11)
-
- /*
- * State at this point:
- * r9 saved in stack frame, now saved SRR3 & ~MSR_WE
- * r10 saved in crit_r10 and in stack frame, trashed
- * r11 saved in crit_r11 and in stack frame,
- * now phys stack/exception frame pointer
- * r12 saved in stack frame, now saved SRR2
- * CR saved in stack frame, CR0.EQ = !SRR3.PR
- * LR, DEAR, ESR in stack frame
- * r1 saved in stack frame, now virt stack/excframe pointer
- * r0, r3-r8 saved in stack frame
- */
-
-/*
- * Exception vectors.
- */
-#define START_EXCEPTION(n, label) \
- . = n; \
-label:
-
-#define EXCEPTION(n, label, hdlr, xfer) \
- START_EXCEPTION(n, label); \
- NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG; \
- addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD; \
- xfer(n, hdlr)
-
-#define CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(n, label, hdlr) \
- START_EXCEPTION(n, label); \
- CRITICAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG; \
- addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD; \
- EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n+2, (MSR_KERNEL & ~(MSR_ME|MSR_DE|MSR_CE)), \
- NOCOPY, crit_transfer_to_handler, \
- ret_from_crit_exc)
-
-#define EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, trap, msr, copyee, tfer, ret) \
- li r10,trap; \
- stw r10,_TRAP(r11); \
- lis r10,msr@h; \
- ori r10,r10,msr@l; \
- copyee(r10, r9); \
- bl tfer; \
- .long hdlr; \
- .long ret
-
-#define COPY_EE(d, s) rlwimi d,s,0,16,16
-#define NOCOPY(d, s)
-
-#define EXC_XFER_STD(n, hdlr) \
- EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n, MSR_KERNEL, NOCOPY, transfer_to_handler_full, \
- ret_from_except_full)
-
-#define EXC_XFER_LITE(n, hdlr) \
- EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n+1, MSR_KERNEL, NOCOPY, transfer_to_handler, \
- ret_from_except)
-
-#define EXC_XFER_EE(n, hdlr) \
- EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n, MSR_KERNEL, COPY_EE, transfer_to_handler_full, \
- ret_from_except_full)
-
-#define EXC_XFER_EE_LITE(n, hdlr) \
- EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(hdlr, n+1, MSR_KERNEL, COPY_EE, transfer_to_handler, \
- ret_from_except)
-
-
-/*
- * 0x0100 - Critical Interrupt Exception
- */
- CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(0x0100, CriticalInterrupt, unknown_exception)
-
-/*
- * 0x0200 - Machine Check Exception
- */
- CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(0x0200, MachineCheck, machine_check_exception)
-
-/*
- * 0x0300 - Data Storage Exception
- * This happens for just a few reasons. U0 set (but we don't do that),
- * or zone protection fault (user violation, write to protected page).
- * If this is just an update of modified status, we do that quickly
- * and exit. Otherwise, we call heavywight functions to do the work.
- */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x0300, DataStorage)
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG0, r10 /* Save some working registers */
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG1, r11
-#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
- stw r12, 0(r0)
- stw r9, 4(r0)
- mfcr r11
- mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
- stw r11, 8(r0)
- stw r12, 12(r0)
-#else
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG4, r12
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG5, r9
- mfcr r11
- mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG7, r11
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG6, r12
-#endif
-
- /* First, check if it was a zone fault (which means a user
- * tried to access a kernel or read-protected page - always
- * a SEGV). All other faults here must be stores, so no
- * need to check ESR_DST as well. */
- mfspr r10, SPRN_ESR
- andis. r10, r10, ESR_DIZ@h
- bne 2f
-
- mfspr r10, SPRN_DEAR /* Get faulting address */
-
- /* If we are faulting a kernel address, we have to use the
- * kernel page tables.
- */
- lis r11, TASK_SIZE@h
- cmplw r10, r11
- blt+ 3f
- lis r11, swapper_pg_dir@h
- ori r11, r11, swapper_pg_dir@l
- li r9, 0
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r9 /* TLB will have 0 TID */
- b 4f
-
- /* Get the PGD for the current thread.
- */
-3:
- mfspr r11,SPRN_SPRG3
- lwz r11,PGDIR(r11)
-4:
- tophys(r11, r11)
- rlwimi r11, r10, 12, 20, 29 /* Create L1 (pgdir/pmd) address */
- lwz r11, 0(r11) /* Get L1 entry */
- rlwinm. r12, r11, 0, 0, 19 /* Extract L2 (pte) base address */
- beq 2f /* Bail if no table */
-
- rlwimi r12, r10, 22, 20, 29 /* Compute PTE address */
- lwz r11, 0(r12) /* Get Linux PTE */
-
- andi. r9, r11, _PAGE_RW /* Is it writeable? */
- beq 2f /* Bail if not */
-
- /* Update 'changed'.
- */
- ori r11, r11, _PAGE_DIRTY|_PAGE_ACCESSED|_PAGE_HWWRITE
- stw r11, 0(r12) /* Update Linux page table */
-
- /* Most of the Linux PTE is ready to load into the TLB LO.
- * We set ZSEL, where only the LS-bit determines user access.
- * We set execute, because we don't have the granularity to
- * properly set this at the page level (Linux problem).
- * If shared is set, we cause a zero PID->TID load.
- * Many of these bits are software only. Bits we don't set
- * here we (properly should) assume have the appropriate value.
- */
- li r12, 0x0ce2
- andc r11, r11, r12 /* Make sure 20, 21 are zero */
-
- /* find the TLB index that caused the fault. It has to be here.
- */
- tlbsx r9, 0, r10
-
- tlbwe r11, r9, TLB_DATA /* Load TLB LO */
-
- /* Done...restore registers and get out of here.
- */
-#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
- lwz r12, 12(r0)
- lwz r11, 8(r0)
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- lwz r9, 4(r0)
- lwz r12, 0(r0)
-#else
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
-#endif
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
- mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
- PPC405_ERR77_SYNC
- rfi /* Should sync shadow TLBs */
- b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
-
-2:
- /* The bailout. Restore registers to pre-exception conditions
- * and call the heavyweights to help us out.
- */
-#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
- lwz r12, 12(r0)
- lwz r11, 8(r0)
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- lwz r9, 4(r0)
- lwz r12, 0(r0)
-#else
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
-#endif
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
- mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
- b DataAccess
-
-/*
- * 0x0400 - Instruction Storage Exception
- * This is caused by a fetch from non-execute or guarded pages.
- */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x0400, InstructionAccess)
- NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
- mr r4,r12 /* Pass SRR0 as arg2 */
- li r5,0 /* Pass zero as arg3 */
- EXC_XFER_EE_LITE(0x400, handle_page_fault)
-
-/* 0x0500 - External Interrupt Exception */
- EXCEPTION(0x0500, HardwareInterrupt, do_IRQ, EXC_XFER_LITE)
-
-/* 0x0600 - Alignment Exception */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x0600, Alignment)
- NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
- mfspr r4,SPRN_DEAR /* Grab the DEAR and save it */
- stw r4,_DEAR(r11)
- addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD
- EXC_XFER_EE(0x600, alignment_exception)
-
-/* 0x0700 - Program Exception */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x0700, ProgramCheck)
- NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
- mfspr r4,SPRN_ESR /* Grab the ESR and save it */
- stw r4,_ESR(r11)
- addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD
- EXC_XFER_STD(0x700, program_check_exception)
-
- EXCEPTION(0x0800, Trap_08, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x0900, Trap_09, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x0A00, Trap_0A, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x0B00, Trap_0B, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
-
-/* 0x0C00 - System Call Exception */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x0C00, SystemCall)
- NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
- EXC_XFER_EE_LITE(0xc00, DoSyscall)
-
- EXCEPTION(0x0D00, Trap_0D, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x0E00, Trap_0E, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x0F00, Trap_0F, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
-
-/* 0x1000 - Programmable Interval Timer (PIT) Exception */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x1000, Decrementer)
- NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
- lis r0,TSR_PIS@h
- mtspr SPRN_TSR,r0 /* Clear the PIT exception */
- addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD
- EXC_XFER_LITE(0x1000, timer_interrupt)
-
-#if 0
-/* NOTE:
- * FIT and WDT handlers are not implemented yet.
- */
-
-/* 0x1010 - Fixed Interval Timer (FIT) Exception
-*/
- STND_EXCEPTION(0x1010, FITException, unknown_exception)
-
-/* 0x1020 - Watchdog Timer (WDT) Exception
-*/
-#ifdef CONFIG_BOOKE_WDT
- CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(0x1020, WDTException, WatchdogException)
-#else
- CRITICAL_EXCEPTION(0x1020, WDTException, unknown_exception)
-#endif
-#endif
-
-/* 0x1100 - Data TLB Miss Exception
- * As the name implies, translation is not in the MMU, so search the
- * page tables and fix it. The only purpose of this function is to
- * load TLB entries from the page table if they exist.
- */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x1100, DTLBMiss)
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG0, r10 /* Save some working registers */
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG1, r11
-#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
- stw r12, 0(r0)
- stw r9, 4(r0)
- mfcr r11
- mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
- stw r11, 8(r0)
- stw r12, 12(r0)
-#else
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG4, r12
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG5, r9
- mfcr r11
- mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG7, r11
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG6, r12
-#endif
- mfspr r10, SPRN_DEAR /* Get faulting address */
-
- /* If we are faulting a kernel address, we have to use the
- * kernel page tables.
- */
- lis r11, TASK_SIZE@h
- cmplw r10, r11
- blt+ 3f
- lis r11, swapper_pg_dir@h
- ori r11, r11, swapper_pg_dir@l
- li r9, 0
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r9 /* TLB will have 0 TID */
- b 4f
-
- /* Get the PGD for the current thread.
- */
-3:
- mfspr r11,SPRN_SPRG3
- lwz r11,PGDIR(r11)
-4:
- tophys(r11, r11)
- rlwimi r11, r10, 12, 20, 29 /* Create L1 (pgdir/pmd) address */
- lwz r12, 0(r11) /* Get L1 entry */
- andi. r9, r12, _PMD_PRESENT /* Check if it points to a PTE page */
- beq 2f /* Bail if no table */
-
- rlwimi r12, r10, 22, 20, 29 /* Compute PTE address */
- lwz r11, 0(r12) /* Get Linux PTE */
- andi. r9, r11, _PAGE_PRESENT
- beq 5f
-
- ori r11, r11, _PAGE_ACCESSED
- stw r11, 0(r12)
-
- /* Create TLB tag. This is the faulting address plus a static
- * set of bits. These are size, valid, E, U0.
- */
- li r12, 0x00c0
- rlwimi r10, r12, 0, 20, 31
-
- b finish_tlb_load
-
-2: /* Check for possible large-page pmd entry */
- rlwinm. r9, r12, 2, 22, 24
- beq 5f
-
- /* Create TLB tag. This is the faulting address, plus a static
- * set of bits (valid, E, U0) plus the size from the PMD.
- */
- ori r9, r9, 0x40
- rlwimi r10, r9, 0, 20, 31
- mr r11, r12
-
- b finish_tlb_load
-
-5:
- /* The bailout. Restore registers to pre-exception conditions
- * and call the heavyweights to help us out.
- */
-#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
- lwz r12, 12(r0)
- lwz r11, 8(r0)
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- lwz r9, 4(r0)
- lwz r12, 0(r0)
-#else
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
-#endif
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
- mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
- b DataAccess
-
-/* 0x1200 - Instruction TLB Miss Exception
- * Nearly the same as above, except we get our information from different
- * registers and bailout to a different point.
- */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x1200, ITLBMiss)
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG0, r10 /* Save some working registers */
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG1, r11
-#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
- stw r12, 0(r0)
- stw r9, 4(r0)
- mfcr r11
- mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
- stw r11, 8(r0)
- stw r12, 12(r0)
-#else
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG4, r12
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG5, r9
- mfcr r11
- mfspr r12, SPRN_PID
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG7, r11
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG6, r12
-#endif
- mfspr r10, SPRN_SRR0 /* Get faulting address */
-
- /* If we are faulting a kernel address, we have to use the
- * kernel page tables.
- */
- lis r11, TASK_SIZE@h
- cmplw r10, r11
- blt+ 3f
- lis r11, swapper_pg_dir@h
- ori r11, r11, swapper_pg_dir@l
- li r9, 0
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r9 /* TLB will have 0 TID */
- b 4f
-
- /* Get the PGD for the current thread.
- */
-3:
- mfspr r11,SPRN_SPRG3
- lwz r11,PGDIR(r11)
-4:
- tophys(r11, r11)
- rlwimi r11, r10, 12, 20, 29 /* Create L1 (pgdir/pmd) address */
- lwz r12, 0(r11) /* Get L1 entry */
- andi. r9, r12, _PMD_PRESENT /* Check if it points to a PTE page */
- beq 2f /* Bail if no table */
-
- rlwimi r12, r10, 22, 20, 29 /* Compute PTE address */
- lwz r11, 0(r12) /* Get Linux PTE */
- andi. r9, r11, _PAGE_PRESENT
- beq 5f
-
- ori r11, r11, _PAGE_ACCESSED
- stw r11, 0(r12)
-
- /* Create TLB tag. This is the faulting address plus a static
- * set of bits. These are size, valid, E, U0.
- */
- li r12, 0x00c0
- rlwimi r10, r12, 0, 20, 31
-
- b finish_tlb_load
-
-2: /* Check for possible large-page pmd entry */
- rlwinm. r9, r12, 2, 22, 24
- beq 5f
-
- /* Create TLB tag. This is the faulting address, plus a static
- * set of bits (valid, E, U0) plus the size from the PMD.
- */
- ori r9, r9, 0x40
- rlwimi r10, r9, 0, 20, 31
- mr r11, r12
-
- b finish_tlb_load
-
-5:
- /* The bailout. Restore registers to pre-exception conditions
- * and call the heavyweights to help us out.
- */
-#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
- lwz r12, 12(r0)
- lwz r11, 8(r0)
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- lwz r9, 4(r0)
- lwz r12, 0(r0)
-#else
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
-#endif
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
- mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
- b InstructionAccess
-
- EXCEPTION(0x1300, Trap_13, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1400, Trap_14, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1500, Trap_15, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1600, Trap_16, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
-#ifdef CONFIG_IBM405_ERR51
- /* 405GP errata 51 */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x1700, Trap_17)
- b DTLBMiss
-#else
- EXCEPTION(0x1700, Trap_17, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
-#endif
- EXCEPTION(0x1800, Trap_18, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1900, Trap_19, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1A00, Trap_1A, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1B00, Trap_1B, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1C00, Trap_1C, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1D00, Trap_1D, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1E00, Trap_1E, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
- EXCEPTION(0x1F00, Trap_1F, unknown_exception, EXC_XFER_EE)
-
-/* Check for a single step debug exception while in an exception
- * handler before state has been saved. This is to catch the case
- * where an instruction that we are trying to single step causes
- * an exception (eg ITLB/DTLB miss) and thus the first instruction of
- * the exception handler generates a single step debug exception.
- *
- * If we get a debug trap on the first instruction of an exception handler,
- * we reset the MSR_DE in the _exception handler's_ MSR (the debug trap is
- * a critical exception, so we are using SPRN_CSRR1 to manipulate the MSR).
- * The exception handler was handling a non-critical interrupt, so it will
- * save (and later restore) the MSR via SPRN_SRR1, which will still have
- * the MSR_DE bit set.
- */
- /* 0x2000 - Debug Exception */
- START_EXCEPTION(0x2000, DebugTrap)
- CRITICAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
-
- /*
- * If this is a single step or branch-taken exception in an
- * exception entry sequence, it was probably meant to apply to
- * the code where the exception occurred (since exception entry
- * doesn't turn off DE automatically). We simulate the effect
- * of turning off DE on entry to an exception handler by turning
- * off DE in the SRR3 value and clearing the debug status.
- */
- mfspr r10,SPRN_DBSR /* check single-step/branch taken */
- andis. r10,r10,DBSR_IC@h
- beq+ 2f
-
- andi. r10,r9,MSR_IR|MSR_PR /* check supervisor + MMU off */
- beq 1f /* branch and fix it up */
-
- mfspr r10,SPRN_SRR2 /* Faulting instruction address */
- cmplwi r10,0x2100
- bgt+ 2f /* address above exception vectors */
-
- /* here it looks like we got an inappropriate debug exception. */
-1: rlwinm r9,r9,0,~MSR_DE /* clear DE in the SRR3 value */
- lis r10,DBSR_IC@h /* clear the IC event */
- mtspr SPRN_DBSR,r10
- /* restore state and get out */
- lwz r10,_CCR(r11)
- lwz r0,GPR0(r11)
- lwz r1,GPR1(r11)
- mtcrf 0x80,r10
- mtspr SPRN_SRR2,r12
- mtspr SPRN_SRR3,r9
- lwz r9,GPR9(r11)
- lwz r12,GPR12(r11)
- lwz r10,crit_r10@l(0)
- lwz r11,crit_r11@l(0)
- PPC405_ERR77_SYNC
- rfci
- b .
-
- /* continue normal handling for a critical exception... */
-2: mfspr r4,SPRN_DBSR
- addi r3,r1,STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD
- EXC_XFER_TEMPLATE(DebugException, 0x2002, \
- (MSR_KERNEL & ~(MSR_ME|MSR_DE|MSR_CE)), \
- NOCOPY, crit_transfer_to_handler, ret_from_crit_exc)
-
-/*
- * The other Data TLB exceptions bail out to this point
- * if they can't resolve the lightweight TLB fault.
- */
-DataAccess:
- NORMAL_EXCEPTION_PROLOG
- mfspr r5,SPRN_ESR /* Grab the ESR, save it, pass arg3 */
- stw r5,_ESR(r11)
- mfspr r4,SPRN_DEAR /* Grab the DEAR, save it, pass arg2 */
- EXC_XFER_EE_LITE(0x300, handle_page_fault)
-
-/* Other PowerPC processors, namely those derived from the 6xx-series
- * have vectors from 0x2100 through 0x2F00 defined, but marked as reserved.
- * However, for the 4xx-series processors these are neither defined nor
- * reserved.
- */
-
- /* Damn, I came up one instruction too many to fit into the
- * exception space :-). Both the instruction and data TLB
- * miss get to this point to load the TLB.
- * r10 - TLB_TAG value
- * r11 - Linux PTE
- * r12, r9 - avilable to use
- * PID - loaded with proper value when we get here
- * Upon exit, we reload everything and RFI.
- * Actually, it will fit now, but oh well.....a common place
- * to load the TLB.
- */
-tlb_4xx_index:
- .long 0
-finish_tlb_load:
- /* load the next available TLB index.
- */
- lwz r9, tlb_4xx_index@l(0)
- addi r9, r9, 1
- andi. r9, r9, (PPC4XX_TLB_SIZE-1)
- stw r9, tlb_4xx_index@l(0)
-
-6:
- /*
- * Clear out the software-only bits in the PTE to generate the
- * TLB_DATA value. These are the bottom 2 bits of the RPM, the
- * top 3 bits of the zone field, and M.
- */
- li r12, 0x0ce2
- andc r11, r11, r12
-
- tlbwe r11, r9, TLB_DATA /* Load TLB LO */
- tlbwe r10, r9, TLB_TAG /* Load TLB HI */
-
- /* Done...restore registers and get out of here.
- */
-#ifdef CONFIG_403GCX
- lwz r12, 12(r0)
- lwz r11, 8(r0)
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- lwz r9, 4(r0)
- lwz r12, 0(r0)
-#else
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG6
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG7
- mtspr SPRN_PID, r12
- mtcr r11
- mfspr r9, SPRN_SPRG5
- mfspr r12, SPRN_SPRG4
-#endif
- mfspr r11, SPRN_SPRG1
- mfspr r10, SPRN_SPRG0
- PPC405_ERR77_SYNC
- rfi /* Should sync shadow TLBs */
- b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
-
-/* extern void giveup_fpu(struct task_struct *prev)
- *
- * The PowerPC 4xx family of processors do not have an FPU, so this just
- * returns.
- */
-_GLOBAL(giveup_fpu)
- blr
-
-/* This is where the main kernel code starts.
- */
-start_here:
-
- /* ptr to current */
- lis r2,init_task@h
- ori r2,r2,init_task@l
-
- /* ptr to phys current thread */
- tophys(r4,r2)
- addi r4,r4,THREAD /* init task's THREAD */
- mtspr SPRN_SPRG3,r4
-
- /* stack */
- lis r1,init_thread_union@ha
- addi r1,r1,init_thread_union@l
- li r0,0
- stwu r0,THREAD_SIZE-STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD(r1)
-
- bl early_init /* We have to do this with MMU on */
-
-/*
- * Decide what sort of machine this is and initialize the MMU.
- */
- mr r3,r31
- mr r4,r30
- mr r5,r29
- mr r6,r28
- mr r7,r27
- bl machine_init
- bl MMU_init
-
-/* Go back to running unmapped so we can load up new values
- * and change to using our exception vectors.
- * On the 4xx, all we have to do is invalidate the TLB to clear
- * the old 16M byte TLB mappings.
- */
- lis r4,2f@h
- ori r4,r4,2f@l
- tophys(r4,r4)
- lis r3,(MSR_KERNEL & ~(MSR_IR|MSR_DR))@h
- ori r3,r3,(MSR_KERNEL & ~(MSR_IR|MSR_DR))@l
- mtspr SPRN_SRR0,r4
- mtspr SPRN_SRR1,r3
- rfi
- b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
-
-/* Load up the kernel context */
-2:
- sync /* Flush to memory before changing TLB */
- tlbia
- isync /* Flush shadow TLBs */
-
- /* set up the PTE pointers for the Abatron bdiGDB.
- */
- lis r6, swapper_pg_dir@h
- ori r6, r6, swapper_pg_dir@l
- lis r5, abatron_pteptrs@h
- ori r5, r5, abatron_pteptrs@l
- stw r5, 0xf0(r0) /* Must match your Abatron config file */
- tophys(r5,r5)
- stw r6, 0(r5)
-
-/* Now turn on the MMU for real! */
- lis r4,MSR_KERNEL@h
- ori r4,r4,MSR_KERNEL@l
- lis r3,start_kernel@h
- ori r3,r3,start_kernel@l
- mtspr SPRN_SRR0,r3
- mtspr SPRN_SRR1,r4
- rfi /* enable MMU and jump to start_kernel */
- b . /* prevent prefetch past rfi */
-
-/* Set up the initial MMU state so we can do the first level of
- * kernel initialization. This maps the first 16 MBytes of memory 1:1
- * virtual to physical and more importantly sets the cache mode.
- */
-initial_mmu:
- tlbia /* Invalidate all TLB entries */
- isync
-
- /* We should still be executing code at physical address 0x0000xxxx
- * at this point. However, start_here is at virtual address
- * 0xC000xxxx. So, set up a TLB mapping to cover this once
- * translation is enabled.
- */
-
- lis r3,KERNELBASE@h /* Load the kernel virtual address */
- ori r3,r3,KERNELBASE@l
- tophys(r4,r3) /* Load the kernel physical address */
-
- iccci r0,r3 /* Invalidate the i-cache before use */
-
- /* Load the kernel PID.
- */
- li r0,0
- mtspr SPRN_PID,r0
- sync
-
- /* Configure and load two entries into TLB slots 62 and 63.
- * In case we are pinning TLBs, these are reserved in by the
- * other TLB functions. If not reserving, then it doesn't
- * matter where they are loaded.
- */
- clrrwi r4,r4,10 /* Mask off the real page number */
- ori r4,r4,(TLB_WR | TLB_EX) /* Set the write and execute bits */
-
- clrrwi r3,r3,10 /* Mask off the effective page number */
- ori r3,r3,(TLB_VALID | TLB_PAGESZ(PAGESZ_16M))
-
- li r0,63 /* TLB slot 63 */
-
- tlbwe r4,r0,TLB_DATA /* Load the data portion of the entry */
- tlbwe r3,r0,TLB_TAG /* Load the tag portion of the entry */
-
-#if defined(CONFIG_SERIAL_TEXT_DEBUG) && defined(SERIAL_DEBUG_IO_BASE)
-
- /* Load a TLB entry for the UART, so that ppc4xx_progress() can use
- * the UARTs nice and early. We use a 4k real==virtual mapping. */
-
- lis r3,SERIAL_DEBUG_IO_BASE@h
- ori r3,r3,SERIAL_DEBUG_IO_BASE@l
- mr r4,r3
- clrrwi r4,r4,12
- ori r4,r4,(TLB_WR|TLB_I|TLB_M|TLB_G)
-
- clrrwi r3,r3,12
- ori r3,r3,(TLB_VALID | TLB_PAGESZ(PAGESZ_4K))
-
- li r0,0 /* TLB slot 0 */
- tlbwe r4,r0,TLB_DATA
- tlbwe r3,r0,TLB_TAG
-#endif /* CONFIG_SERIAL_DEBUG_TEXT && SERIAL_DEBUG_IO_BASE */
-
- isync
-
- /* Establish the exception vector base
- */
- lis r4,KERNELBASE@h /* EVPR only uses the high 16-bits */
- tophys(r0,r4) /* Use the physical address */
- mtspr SPRN_EVPR,r0
-
- blr
-
-_GLOBAL(abort)
- mfspr r13,SPRN_DBCR0
- oris r13,r13,DBCR0_RST_SYSTEM@h
- mtspr SPRN_DBCR0,r13
-
-_GLOBAL(set_context)
-
-#ifdef CONFIG_BDI_SWITCH
- /* Context switch the PTE pointer for the Abatron BDI2000.
- * The PGDIR is the second parameter.
- */
- lis r5, KERNELBASE@h
- lwz r5, 0xf0(r5)
- stw r4, 0x4(r5)
-#endif
- sync
- mtspr SPRN_PID,r3
- isync /* Need an isync to flush shadow */
- /* TLBs after changing PID */
- blr
-
-/* We put a few things here that have to be page-aligned. This stuff
- * goes at the beginning of the data segment, which is page-aligned.
- */
- .data
- .align 12
- .globl sdata
-sdata:
- .globl empty_zero_page
-empty_zero_page:
- .space 4096
- .globl swapper_pg_dir
-swapper_pg_dir:
- .space 4096
-
-
-/* Stack for handling critical exceptions from kernel mode */
- .section .bss
- .align 12
-exception_stack_bottom:
- .space 4096
-critical_stack_top:
- .globl exception_stack_top
-exception_stack_top:
-
-/* This space gets a copy of optional info passed to us by the bootstrap
- * which is used to pass parameters into the kernel like root=/dev/sda1, etc.
- */
- .globl cmd_line
-cmd_line:
- .space 512
-
-/* Room for two PTE pointers, usually the kernel and current user pointers
- * to their respective root page table.
- */
-abatron_pteptrs:
- .space 8
--- /dev/null
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/mm/40x_mmu.c
@@ -0,0 +1,135 @@
+/*
+ * This file contains the routines for initializing the MMU
+ * on the 4xx series of chips.
+ * -- paulus
+ *
+ * Derived from arch/ppc/mm/init.c:
+ * Copyright (C) 1995-1996 Gary Thomas (gdt@linuxppc.org)
+ *
+ * Modifications by Paul Mackerras (PowerMac) (paulus@cs.anu.edu.au)
+ * and Cort Dougan (PReP) (cort@cs.nmt.edu)
+ * Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
+ *
+ * Derived from "arch/i386/mm/init.c"
+ * Copyright (C) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Linus Torvalds
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
+ * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
+ * 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
+ *
+ */
+
+#include <linux/signal.h>
+#include <linux/sched.h>
+#include <linux/kernel.h>
+#include <linux/errno.h>
+#include <linux/string.h>
+#include <linux/types.h>
+#include <linux/ptrace.h>
+#include <linux/mman.h>
+#include <linux/mm.h>
+#include <linux/swap.h>
+#include <linux/stddef.h>
+#include <linux/vmalloc.h>
+#include <linux/init.h>
+#include <linux/delay.h>
+#include <linux/highmem.h>
+
+#include <asm/pgalloc.h>
+#include <asm/prom.h>
+#include <asm/io.h>
+#include <asm/mmu_context.h>
+#include <asm/pgtable.h>
+#include <asm/mmu.h>
+#include <asm/uaccess.h>
+#include <asm/smp.h>
+#include <asm/bootx.h>
+#include <asm/machdep.h>
+#include <asm/setup.h>
+#include "mmu_decl.h"
+
+extern int __map_without_ltlbs;
+/*
+ * MMU_init_hw does the chip-specific initialization of the MMU hardware.
+ */
+void __init MMU_init_hw(void)
+{
+ /*
+ * The Zone Protection Register (ZPR) defines how protection will
+ * be applied to every page which is a member of a given zone. At
+ * present, we utilize only two of the 4xx's zones.
+ * The zone index bits (of ZSEL) in the PTE are used for software
+ * indicators, except the LSB. For user access, zone 1 is used,
+ * for kernel access, zone 0 is used. We set all but zone 1
+ * to zero, allowing only kernel access as indicated in the PTE.
+ * For zone 1, we set a 01 binary (a value of 10 will not work)
+ * to allow user access as indicated in the PTE. This also allows
+ * kernel access as indicated in the PTE.
+ */
+
+ mtspr(SPRN_ZPR, 0x10000000);
+
+ flush_instruction_cache();
+
+ /*
+ * Set up the real-mode cache parameters for the exception vector
+ * handlers (which are run in real-mode).
+ */
+
+ mtspr(SPRN_DCWR, 0x00000000); /* All caching is write-back */
+
+ /*
+ * Cache instruction and data space where the exception
+ * vectors and the kernel live in real-mode.
+ */
+
+ mtspr(SPRN_DCCR, 0xF0000000); /* 512 MB of data space at 0x0. */
+ mtspr(SPRN_ICCR, 0xF0000000); /* 512 MB of instr. space at 0x0. */
+}
+
+#define LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M (1<<24)
+#define LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M (1<<22)
+
+unsigned long __init mmu_mapin_ram(void)
+{
+ unsigned long v, s;
+ phys_addr_t p;
+
+ v = KERNELBASE;
+ p = PPC_MEMSTART;
+ s = 0;
+
+ if (__map_without_ltlbs) {
+ return s;
+ }
+
+ while (s <= (total_lowmem - LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M)) {
+ pmd_t *pmdp;
+ unsigned long val = p | _PMD_SIZE_16M | _PAGE_HWEXEC | _PAGE_HWWRITE;
+
+ pmdp = pmd_offset(pgd_offset_k(v), v);
+ pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
+ pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
+ pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
+ pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
+
+ v += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M;
+ p += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M;
+ s += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M;
+ }
+
+ while (s <= (total_lowmem - LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M)) {
+ pmd_t *pmdp;
+ unsigned long val = p | _PMD_SIZE_4M | _PAGE_HWEXEC | _PAGE_HWWRITE;
+
+ pmdp = pmd_offset(pgd_offset_k(v), v);
+ pmd_val(*pmdp) = val;
+
+ v += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M;
+ p += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M;
+ s += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M;
+ }
+
+ return s;
+}
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/mm/4xx_mmu.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,135 +0,0 @@
-/*
- * This file contains the routines for initializing the MMU
- * on the 4xx series of chips.
- * -- paulus
- *
- * Derived from arch/ppc/mm/init.c:
- * Copyright (C) 1995-1996 Gary Thomas (gdt@linuxppc.org)
- *
- * Modifications by Paul Mackerras (PowerMac) (paulus@cs.anu.edu.au)
- * and Cort Dougan (PReP) (cort@cs.nmt.edu)
- * Copyright (C) 1996 Paul Mackerras
- *
- * Derived from "arch/i386/mm/init.c"
- * Copyright (C) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Linus Torvalds
- *
- * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
- * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
- * 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
- *
- */
-
-#include <linux/signal.h>
-#include <linux/sched.h>
-#include <linux/kernel.h>
-#include <linux/errno.h>
-#include <linux/string.h>
-#include <linux/types.h>
-#include <linux/ptrace.h>
-#include <linux/mman.h>
-#include <linux/mm.h>
-#include <linux/swap.h>
-#include <linux/stddef.h>
-#include <linux/vmalloc.h>
-#include <linux/init.h>
-#include <linux/delay.h>
-#include <linux/highmem.h>
-
-#include <asm/pgalloc.h>
-#include <asm/prom.h>
-#include <asm/io.h>
-#include <asm/mmu_context.h>
-#include <asm/pgtable.h>
-#include <asm/mmu.h>
-#include <asm/uaccess.h>
-#include <asm/smp.h>
-#include <asm/bootx.h>
-#include <asm/machdep.h>
-#include <asm/setup.h>
-#include "mmu_decl.h"
-
-extern int __map_without_ltlbs;
-/*
- * MMU_init_hw does the chip-specific initialization of the MMU hardware.
- */
-void __init MMU_init_hw(void)
-{
- /*
- * The Zone Protection Register (ZPR) defines how protection will
- * be applied to every page which is a member of a given zone. At
- * present, we utilize only two of the 4xx's zones.
- * The zone index bits (of ZSEL) in the PTE are used for software
- * indicators, except the LSB. For user access, zone 1 is used,
- * for kernel access, zone 0 is used. We set all but zone 1
- * to zero, allowing only kernel access as indicated in the PTE.
- * For zone 1, we set a 01 binary (a value of 10 will not work)
- * to allow user access as indicated in the PTE. This also allows
- * kernel access as indicated in the PTE.
- */
-
- mtspr(SPRN_ZPR, 0x10000000);
-
- flush_instruction_cache();
-
- /*
- * Set up the real-mode cache parameters for the exception vector
- * handlers (which are run in real-mode).
- */
-
- mtspr(SPRN_DCWR, 0x00000000); /* All caching is write-back */
-
- /*
- * Cache instruction and data space where the exception
- * vectors and the kernel live in real-mode.
- */
-
- mtspr(SPRN_DCCR, 0xF0000000); /* 512 MB of data space at 0x0. */
- mtspr(SPRN_ICCR, 0xF0000000); /* 512 MB of instr. space at 0x0. */
-}
-
-#define LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M (1<<24)
-#define LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M (1<<22)
-
-unsigned long __init mmu_mapin_ram(void)
-{
- unsigned long v, s;
- phys_addr_t p;
-
- v = KERNELBASE;
- p = PPC_MEMSTART;
- s = 0;
-
- if (__map_without_ltlbs) {
- return s;
- }
-
- while (s <= (total_lowmem - LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M)) {
- pmd_t *pmdp;
- unsigned long val = p | _PMD_SIZE_16M | _PAGE_HWEXEC | _PAGE_HWWRITE;
-
- pmdp = pmd_offset(pgd_offset_k(v), v);
- pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
- pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
- pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
- pmd_val(*pmdp++) = val;
-
- v += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M;
- p += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M;
- s += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_16M;
- }
-
- while (s <= (total_lowmem - LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M)) {
- pmd_t *pmdp;
- unsigned long val = p | _PMD_SIZE_4M | _PAGE_HWEXEC | _PAGE_HWWRITE;
-
- pmdp = pmd_offset(pgd_offset_k(v), v);
- pmd_val(*pmdp) = val;
-
- v += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M;
- p += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M;
- s += LARGE_PAGE_SIZE_4M;
- }
-
- return s;
-}
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/mm/Makefile
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/mm/Makefile
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_PPC64) += init_64.o pgtabl
hash_utils_64.o hash_low_64.o tlb_64.o \
slb_low.o slb.o stab.o mmap.o $(hash-y)
obj-$(CONFIG_PPC_STD_MMU_32) += ppc_mmu_32.o hash_low_32.o tlb_32.o
-obj-$(CONFIG_40x) += 4xx_mmu.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_40x) += 40x_mmu.o
obj-$(CONFIG_44x) += 44x_mmu.o
obj-$(CONFIG_FSL_BOOKE) += fsl_booke_mmu.o
obj-$(CONFIG_NEED_MULTIPLE_NODES) += numa.o
--- /dev/null
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig
@@ -0,0 +1,208 @@
+config 4xx
+ bool
+ depends on 40x || 44x
+ default y
+
+config BOOKE
+ bool
+ depends on 44x
+ default y
+
+menu "AMCC 40x options"
+ depends on 40x
+
+#config BUBINGA
+# bool "Bubinga"
+# depends on 40x
+# default n
+# select 405EP
+# help
+# This option enables support for the IBM 405EP evaluation board.
+
+#config CPCI405
+# bool "CPCI405"
+# depends on 40x
+# default n
+# select 405GP
+# help
+# This option enables support for the CPCI405 board.
+
+#config EP405
+# bool "EP405/EP405PC"
+# depends on 40x
+# default n
+# select 405GP
+# help
+# This option enables support for the EP405/EP405PC boards.
+
+#config EP405PC
+# bool "EP405PC Support"
+# depends on EP405
+# default y
+# help
+# This option enables support for the extra features of the EP405PC board.
+
+#config REDWOOD_5
+# bool "Redwood-5"
+# depends on 40x
+# default n
+# select STB03xxx
+# help
+# This option enables support for the IBM STB04 evaluation board.
+
+#config REDWOOD_6
+# bool "Redwood-6"
+# depends on 40x
+# default n
+# select STB03xxx
+# help
+# This option enables support for the IBM STBx25xx evaluation board.
+
+#config SYCAMORE
+# bool "Sycamore"
+# depends on 40x
+# default n
+# select 405GPR
+# help
+# This option enables support for the IBM PPC405GPr evaluation board.
+
+#config WALNUT
+# bool "Walnut"
+# depends on 40x
+# default y
+# select 405GP
+# help
+# This option enables support for the IBM PPC405GP evaluation board.
+
+#config XILINX_ML300
+# bool "Xilinx-ML300"
+# depends on 40x
+# default y
+# select VIRTEX_II_PRO
+# help
+# This option enables support for the Xilinx ML300 evaluation board.
+
+endmenu
+
+# 40x specific CPU modules, selected based on the board above.
+config NP405H
+ bool
+ #depends on ASH
+
+# OAK doesn't exist but wanted to keep this around for any future 403GCX boards
+config 403GCX
+ bool
+ #depends on OAK
+ select IBM405_ERR51
+
+config 405GP
+ bool
+ select IBM405_ERR77
+ select IBM405_ERR51
+
+config 405EP
+ bool
+
+config 405GPR
+ bool
+
+config VIRTEX_II_PRO
+ bool
+ select IBM405_ERR77
+ select IBM405_ERR51
+
+config STB03xxx
+ bool
+ select IBM405_ERR77
+ select IBM405_ERR51
+
+# 40x errata/workaround config symbols, selected by the CPU models above
+
+# All 405-based cores up until the 405GPR and 405EP have this errata.
+config IBM405_ERR77
+ bool
+
+# All 40x-based cores, up until the 405GPR and 405EP have this errata.
+config IBM405_ERR51
+ bool
+
+menu "AMCC 44x options"
+ depends on 44x
+
+#config BAMBOO
+# bool "Bamboo"
+# depends on 44x
+# default n
+# select 440EP
+# help
+# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440EP evaluation board.
+
+config EBONY
+ bool "Ebony"
+ depends on 44x
+ default y
+ select 440GP
+ help
+ This option enables support for the IBM PPC440GP evaluation board.
+
+#config LUAN
+# bool "Luan"
+# depends on 44x
+# default n
+# select 440SP
+# help
+# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440SP evaluation board.
+
+#config OCOTEA
+# bool "Ocotea"
+# depends on 44x
+# default n
+# select 440GX
+# help
+# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440GX evaluation board.
+
+endmenu
+
+# 44x specific CPU modules, selected based on the board above.
+config 440EP
+ bool
+ select PPC_FPU
+ select IBM440EP_ERR42
+
+config 440GP
+ bool
+ select IBM_NEW_EMAC_ZMII
+
+config 440GX
+ bool
+
+config 440SP
+ bool
+
+config 440A
+ bool
+ depends on 440GX
+ default y
+
+# 44x errata/workaround config symbols, selected by the CPU models above
+config IBM440EP_ERR42
+ bool
+
+#config XILINX_OCP
+# bool
+# depends on XILINX_ML300
+# default y
+
+#config BIOS_FIXUP
+# bool
+# depends on BUBINGA || EP405 || SYCAMORE || WALNUT
+# default y
+
+#config PPC4xx_DMA
+# bool "PPC4xx DMA controller support"
+# depends on 4xx
+
+#config PPC4xx_EDMA
+# bool
+# depends on !STB03xxx && PPC4xx_DMA
+# default y
--- /dev/null
+++ linux-2.6/arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Makefile
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+# empty makefile so make clean works
\ No newline at end of file
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/platforms/4xx/Kconfig
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,208 +0,0 @@
-config 4xx
- bool
- depends on 40x || 44x
- default y
-
-config BOOKE
- bool
- depends on 44x
- default y
-
-menu "AMCC 40x options"
- depends on 40x
-
-#config BUBINGA
-# bool "Bubinga"
-# depends on 40x
-# default n
-# select 405EP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM 405EP evaluation board.
-
-#config CPCI405
-# bool "CPCI405"
-# depends on 40x
-# default n
-# select 405GP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the CPCI405 board.
-
-#config EP405
-# bool "EP405/EP405PC"
-# depends on 40x
-# default n
-# select 405GP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the EP405/EP405PC boards.
-
-#config EP405PC
-# bool "EP405PC Support"
-# depends on EP405
-# default y
-# help
-# This option enables support for the extra features of the EP405PC board.
-
-#config REDWOOD_5
-# bool "Redwood-5"
-# depends on 40x
-# default n
-# select STB03xxx
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM STB04 evaluation board.
-
-#config REDWOOD_6
-# bool "Redwood-6"
-# depends on 40x
-# default n
-# select STB03xxx
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM STBx25xx evaluation board.
-
-#config SYCAMORE
-# bool "Sycamore"
-# depends on 40x
-# default n
-# select 405GPR
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC405GPr evaluation board.
-
-#config WALNUT
-# bool "Walnut"
-# depends on 40x
-# default y
-# select 405GP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC405GP evaluation board.
-
-#config XILINX_ML300
-# bool "Xilinx-ML300"
-# depends on 40x
-# default y
-# select VIRTEX_II_PRO
-# help
-# This option enables support for the Xilinx ML300 evaluation board.
-
-endmenu
-
-# 40x specific CPU modules, selected based on the board above.
-config NP405H
- bool
- #depends on ASH
-
-# OAK doesn't exist but wanted to keep this around for any future 403GCX boards
-config 403GCX
- bool
- #depends on OAK
- select IBM405_ERR51
-
-config 405GP
- bool
- select IBM405_ERR77
- select IBM405_ERR51
-
-config 405EP
- bool
-
-config 405GPR
- bool
-
-config VIRTEX_II_PRO
- bool
- select IBM405_ERR77
- select IBM405_ERR51
-
-config STB03xxx
- bool
- select IBM405_ERR77
- select IBM405_ERR51
-
-# 40x errata/workaround config symbols, selected by the CPU models above
-
-# All 405-based cores up until the 405GPR and 405EP have this errata.
-config IBM405_ERR77
- bool
-
-# All 40x-based cores, up until the 405GPR and 405EP have this errata.
-config IBM405_ERR51
- bool
-
-menu "AMCC 44x options"
- depends on 44x
-
-#config BAMBOO
-# bool "Bamboo"
-# depends on 44x
-# default n
-# select 440EP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440EP evaluation board.
-
-config EBONY
- bool "Ebony"
- depends on 44x
- default y
- select 440GP
- help
- This option enables support for the IBM PPC440GP evaluation board.
-
-#config LUAN
-# bool "Luan"
-# depends on 44x
-# default n
-# select 440SP
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440SP evaluation board.
-
-#config OCOTEA
-# bool "Ocotea"
-# depends on 44x
-# default n
-# select 440GX
-# help
-# This option enables support for the IBM PPC440GX evaluation board.
-
-endmenu
-
-# 44x specific CPU modules, selected based on the board above.
-config 440EP
- bool
- select PPC_FPU
- select IBM440EP_ERR42
-
-config 440GP
- bool
- select IBM_NEW_EMAC_ZMII
-
-config 440GX
- bool
-
-config 440SP
- bool
-
-config 440A
- bool
- depends on 440GX
- default y
-
-# 44x errata/workaround config symbols, selected by the CPU models above
-config IBM440EP_ERR42
- bool
-
-#config XILINX_OCP
-# bool
-# depends on XILINX_ML300
-# default y
-
-#config BIOS_FIXUP
-# bool
-# depends on BUBINGA || EP405 || SYCAMORE || WALNUT
-# default y
-
-#config PPC4xx_DMA
-# bool "PPC4xx DMA controller support"
-# depends on 4xx
-
-#config PPC4xx_EDMA
-# bool
-# depends on !STB03xxx && PPC4xx_DMA
-# default y
--- linux-2.6.orig/arch/powerpc/platforms/4xx/Makefile
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-# empty makefile so make clean works
\ No newline at end of file
--
^ permalink raw reply
* [patch 00/14] Current 4xx patch series
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linuxppc-dev
For those interested, here's my current 4xx patch series. There are a few
cleanups as a pre-requisite for 40x support, some minimal Walnut support, and
another round of Bamboo patches. These are all based off of Paul's current
tree.
Patches 1 through 7 are likely ready to be merged if there are no large
objections. The Walnut stuff likely needs another round or two. The Bamboo
patches can likely go in, but there is no rush there.
Ethernet for 4xx in general is still provided by the out-of-tree emac rewrite
that Ben and David have poked at. If it doesn't get merged soon, I'll take
a look at getting it working again.
As an aside, I'll likely be setting up a git tree for 4xx soon. Hopefully
that will help with some of the larger-ish patches.
josh
--
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] POWERPC: Added RTC support for mpc8313RDB and utilize "clock-frequency"
From: Jon Loeliger @ 2007-07-17 18:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vitaly Bordug; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras
In-Reply-To: <20070717214824.04db9e88@vitb.ru.mvista.com>
On Tue, 2007-07-17 at 12:48, Vitaly Bordug wrote:
> 't.
> >
> Yet many boards still have this stuff (like pretty recent 86xx) - should
> we at least add some comments or clean that up?
Hrm. Alright. I'm on deck for a patch here, I see... :-)
But you might notice that the most recent board port
that I added, mpc8544_ds.c, does NOT have it:
static void __init mpc8544_ds_setup_arch(void)
{
if (ppc_md.progress)
ppc_md.progress("mpc8544_ds_setup_arch()", 0);
printk("MPC8544 DS board from Freescale Semiconductor\n");
}
Thanks,
jdl
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] POWERPC: Added RTC support for mpc8313RDB and utilize "clock-frequency"
From: Scott Wood @ 2007-07-17 17:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vitaly Bordug; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras
In-Reply-To: <20070717214824.04db9e88@vitb.ru.mvista.com>
Vitaly Bordug wrote:
> On Tue, 17 Jul 2007 11:36:45 -0500
> Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com> wrote:
>>We should be removing this from board files that have it, not adding it
>>to ones that don't.
>
> Yet many boards still have this stuff (like pretty recent 86xx) - should
> we at least add some comments or clean that up?
See above. :-)
AFAICT, it's just copied from board to board without thought. It should
be removed.
>>The ppc_md RTC functions should really just go away, though -- setting
>>the clock on bootup can be done by generic code, and periodically
>>updating the RTC when using NTP can be done from userspace.
>
> If those ppc_md hookups would be declared deprecated, there's no much sense in the upper,
> apparently. But I am not sure they will be... I'm inclined to let this patch floating since
> interacting with rtc class from within BSP code just does not worth it.
I'm not sure they will either; I just wish they would be. :-)
In the meantime, some sort of workqueue-based hookup to the RTC class
API should be used. I believe there have been patches along those lines
posted in the past.
-Scott
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH 01/10] IB/ehca: Support for multiple event queues
From: Roland Dreier @ 2007-07-17 17:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michael S. Tsirkin
Cc: Joachim Fenkes, LKML, LinuxPPC-Dev, Hoang-Nam Nguyen, OF-General,
Stefan Roscher
In-Reply-To: <20070717043740.GB8527@mellanox.co.il>
> Here's some anecdotal evidence :)
> http://lists.openfabrics.org/pipermail/general/2007-May/035758.html
Right, but then we went on to say that we probably want to use
multiple vectors to separate out multiple HCA ports rather than
send/sreceive on the same port. And the current IPoIB implementation
of having that second CQ seems suboptimal anyway, since it seems to
leave us susceptible to the interrupt overload that NAPI was supposed
to solve.
At a higher level, I'm left wondering why nobody talked about multiple
EQs during the last months of the 2.6.22 process and now all of a
sudden it becomes urgent in the last few days of the 2.6.23 merge
window. That's not really how I like to merge features....
- R.
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] POWERPC: add support of the GiGE switch for mpc8313RDB via fixed PHY
From: Vitaly Bordug @ 2007-07-17 17:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Scott Wood; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras
In-Reply-To: <20070717164331.GC7347@ld0162-tx32.am.freescale.net>
On Tue, 17 Jul 2007 11:43:31 -0500
Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com> wrote:
> This just comments on code style, not semantics... I agree with Segher
> that this isn't the way to do it.
That's nm, I'll rather include specific field into mac node,
so the function below will be rewritten.
--
Sincerely,
Vitaly
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] POWERPC: Added RTC support for mpc8313RDB and utilize "clock-frequency"
From: Vitaly Bordug @ 2007-07-17 17:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Scott Wood; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras
In-Reply-To: <20070717163645.GB7347@ld0162-tx32.am.freescale.net>
On Tue, 17 Jul 2007 11:36:45 -0500
Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 04:49:13AM +0400, Vitaly Bordug wrote:
> > + np = of_find_node_by_type(NULL, "cpu");
> > + if (np != 0) {
> > + const unsigned int *fp =
> > + get_property(np, "clock-frequency", NULL);
> > + if (fp != 0)
> > + loops_per_jiffy = *fp / HZ;
> > + else
> > + loops_per_jiffy = 50000000 / HZ;
> > + of_node_put(np);
> > + }
>
> This is not necessary. It's only used for /proc/cpuinfo (delays are done
> using tb_ticks_per_usec), and it'll be overwritten by the generic
> calibrate_delay() anyway.
>
> We should be removing this from board files that have it, not adding it
> to ones that don't.
>
Yet many boards still have this stuff (like pretty recent 86xx) - should
we at least add some comments or clean that up?
> > +#if defined (CONFIG_SENSORS_DS1337) && defined (CONFIG_I2C)
> > +
> > +extern int ds1337_do_command(int id, int cmd, void *arg);
> > +extern spinlock_t rtc_lock;
> > +#define DS1337_GET_DATE 0
> > +#define DS1337_SET_DATE 1
> > +
> > +static void mpc8313rdb_get_rtc_time(struct rtc_time *tm)
> > +{
> > + int result;
> > +
> > + result = ds1337_do_command(0, DS1337_GET_DATE, tm);
> > +
> > + if (result == 0)
> > + result = mktime(tm->tm_year, tm->tm_mon, tm->tm_mday, tm->tm_hour, tm->tm_min, tm->tm_sec);
> > +}
> > +
> > +static int mpc8313rdb_set_rtc_time(struct rtc_time *tm)
> > +{
> > + int result;
> > +
> > + result = ds1337_do_command(0, DS1337_SET_DATE, tm);
> > +
> > + return result;
> > +}
> > +
> > +static int __init rtc_hookup(void)
> > +{
> > + ppc_md.get_rtc_time = mpc8313rdb_get_rtc_time;
> > + ppc_md.set_rtc_time = mpc8313rdb_set_rtc_time;
> > + return 0;
> > +}
> > +late_initcall(rtc_hookup);
> > +#endif
>
> Please don't do this; drivers/i2c/chips/ds1337.c is deprecated. You
> should be using the RTC-class driver in drivers/rtc/rtc-ds1307.c, which
> has a non-device-specific API that can be used.
>
> The ppc_md RTC functions should really just go away, though -- setting
> the clock on bootup can be done by generic code, and periodically
> updating the RTC when using NTP can be done from userspace.
>
If those ppc_md hookups would be declared deprecated, there's no much sense in the upper,
apparently. But I am not sure they will be... I'm inclined to let this patch floating since
interacting with rtc class from within BSP code just does not worth it.
--
Sincerely,
Vitaly
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: regarding cpm_uart and platform_bus_type
From: Scott Wood @ 2007-07-17 16:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Alexandros Kostopoulos; +Cc: linuxppc-dev
In-Reply-To: <op.tvlxc2sjnhx3hy@phoenix>
On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 02:55:30PM +0300, Alexandros Kostopoulos wrote:
> I was wondering, since arch/powerpc is now based on device trees,
> shouldn't the cpm_uart driver (or at least a branch of it for
> arch/powerpc) be changed to use of_platform_bus_type instead of
> platform_bus_type?
Yes. The patch is on the way Really Soon Now(tm).
-Scott
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] USB_DR host support for FSL MPC831x
From: Scott Wood @ 2007-07-17 16:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vitaly Bordug; +Cc: Greg KH, linuxppc-dev
In-Reply-To: <20070717005832.23019.99739.stgit@localhost.localdomain>
On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 04:58:32AM +0400, Vitaly Bordug wrote:
> diff --git a/arch/powerpc/boot/dts/mpc8313erdb.dts b/arch/powerpc/boot/dts/mpc8313erdb.dts
> index 1b351dc..c330e79 100644
> --- a/arch/powerpc/boot/dts/mpc8313erdb.dts
> +++ b/arch/powerpc/boot/dts/mpc8313erdb.dts
> @@ -90,6 +90,7 @@
> interrupt-parent = < &ipic >;
> interrupts = <26 8>;
> phy_type = "utmi_wide";
> + control_init = <00000280>; // UTMI ext 48 MHz clk
fsl,usb-control-init, please.
> diff --git a/drivers/usb/host/ehci-hcd.c b/drivers/usb/host/ehci-hcd.c
> index 099aff6..994a127 100644
> --- a/drivers/usb/host/ehci-hcd.c
> +++ b/drivers/usb/host/ehci-hcd.c
> @@ -925,7 +925,7 @@ MODULE_LICENSE ("GPL");
> #define PCI_DRIVER ehci_pci_driver
> #endif
>
> -#ifdef CONFIG_MPC834x
> +#if defined(CONFIG_MPC834x) || defined(CONFIG_PPC_MPC831x)
> #include "ehci-fsl.c"
> #define PLATFORM_DRIVER ehci_fsl_driver
> #endif
It'd be better to define a CONFIG_FSL_EHCI and have the 834x and 831x
configs enable it.
-Scott
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] POWERPC: add support of the GiGE switch for mpc8313RDB via fixed PHY
From: Scott Wood @ 2007-07-17 16:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vitaly Bordug; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras
In-Reply-To: <20070717004936.21700.67900.stgit@localhost.localdomain>
This just comments on code style, not semantics... I agree with Segher
that this isn't the way to do it.
On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 04:49:37AM +0400, Vitaly Bordug wrote:
> +#if defined(CONFIG_FIXED_MII_1000_FDX)
> +
> +static int fixed_set_link (void)
> +{
> + struct fixed_info *phyinfo = fixed_mdio_get_phydev(0); /* only one fixed phy on this platform */
Line length.
> + for (np = NULL, i = 0;
> + (np = of_find_compatible_node(np, "mdio", "gianfar")) != NULL;
> + i++) {
Can't we just initialize np and i above, and use a while loop?
> + memset(&res, 0, sizeof(res));
Not necessary.
> + ret = of_address_to_resource(np, 0, &res);
> + if (ret)
> + return ret;
> + child = of_find_compatible_node(np, "ethernet-phy","fixed");
Space after comma.
> + if (!child)
> + return -ENXIO;
> + id = (u32*)of_get_property(child, "reg", NULL);
Cast not required.
> + if (!id)
> + return -ENXIO;
> + break;
Why are you using a loop at all if there's a break at the end and no
continue?
> + }
> + snprintf(phydev->dev.bus_id, BUS_ID_SIZE, PHY_ID_FMT, res.start, *id);
Only one space before res.start.
> + memset(phyinfo->regs,0xff,sizeof(phyinfo->regs[0])*phyinfo->regs_num);
Spaces after commas.
-Scott
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: PS3 Storage Driver O_DIRECT issue
From: Geoff Levand @ 2007-07-17 16:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Geert Uytterhoeven
Cc: Jens Axboe, James E.J. Bottomley, Olaf Hering, linux-scsi,
Alessandro Rubini, linux-kernel, linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.62.0707131532350.18802@pademelon.sonytel.be>
Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Jul 2007, Olaf Hering wrote:
>> This driver (or the generic PS3 code) has appearently problems with
>> O_DIRECT.
>> glibc aborts parted because the malloc metadata get corrupted. While it
>> is reproducible, the place where it crashes changes with every version
>> of the debug attempt.
>> I dont have a handle right now, all I know is that the metadata after a
>> malloc area get overwritten with zeros.
>>
>>
>> Can you have a look at this?
>> parted /dev/ps3da
>> print (a few times)
>
> I can't seem to reproduce this with parted 1.7.1-5.1 (from Debian
> etch/lenny/sid) and kernel 2.6.22-g77320894.
Hi.
I found this happens on Fedora 7:
[root@ps3-nfs ~]# uname -a
Linux ps3-nfs 2.6.22-ps3-linux-dev-g4d898766-dirty #1 SMP Wed Jul 11 13:29:46 PDT 2007 ppc64 ppc64 ppc64 GNU/Linux
[root@ps3-nfs ~]# parted --version
parted (GNU parted) 1.8.6
Here is the error message from parted:
Command History:
print
Error: SEGV_MAPERR (Address not mapped to object)
Backtrace has 20 calls on stack:
20: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6(ped_assert+0xb0) [0xfb7ea50]
19: parted [0x1000c6dc]
18: [0x100350]
17: [(nil)]
16: /lib/libc.so.6 [0xfdcfe64]
15: /lib/libc.so.6 [0xfdd0b34]
14: /lib/libc.so.6(__libc_memalign+0xec) [0xfdd1e1c]
13: /lib/libc.so.6(posix_memalign+0xbc) [0xfdd207c]
12: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6 [0xfb8f42c]
11: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6(ped_device_read+0x164) [0xfb7f5f4]
10: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6(ped_geometry_read+0x16c) [0xfb89a5c]
9: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6 [0xfba739c]
8: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6(ped_file_system_probe_specific+0x104) [0xfb80d04]
7: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6(ped_file_system_probe+0xec) [0xfb8134c]
6: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6 [0xfbbcc38]
5: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6 [0xfbbcfb4]
4: /usr/lib/libparted-1.8.so.6(ped_disk_new+0xc0) [0xfb88bf0]
3: parted [0x10006e00]
2: parted(command_run+0x1c) [0x10004d8c]
1: parted(interactive_mode+0x134) [0x1000e4b4]
Aborted
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] Add StorCenter DTS first draft.
From: Segher Boessenkool @ 2007-07-17 16:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Josh Boyer; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Jon Loeliger
In-Reply-To: <1184689617.15570.1.camel@weaponx.rchland.ibm.com>
>>> + flash@ff800000 {
>>> + device_type = "rom";
>>
>> I'm sure you know I find this "rom" binding to be crap.
>> However, I didn't yet write up the "cfi" binding, so I
>> can't complain ;-)
>
> Not all chips are CFI compliant.
I know :-)
> Be sure to write up the "jedec"
It's in the pipeline, it's quite a bit more complicated
than CFI though.
> and "nand" bindings while you're at it ;)
NAND is pure hell :-(
Segher
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] Allow exec on 32-bit from readable, non-exec pages, with a warning.
From: Segher Boessenkool @ 2007-07-17 16:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Kumar Gala; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras, Arnd Bergmann, David Gibson
In-Reply-To: <B07FAF3D-A8F4-45F5-8EEF-4506F4A31DF2@kernel.crashing.org>
>>> Way back when, I distinctly recall aborting my plans to implement
>>> per-page exec on 40x, precisely because of executables like this.
>>
>> I noticed some comments to that effect in the BookE code,
>> yes. It seems userland has been fixed enough that you
>> could think about enabling it again FWIW.
>
> Did I miss the posting of the patch with the fix?
glibc-2.2 seems to be the last "bad" one. We are at
glibc-2.6 or so nowadays...
Segher
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] POWERPC: Added RTC support for mpc8313RDB and utilize "clock-frequency"
From: Scott Wood @ 2007-07-17 16:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vitaly Bordug; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras
In-Reply-To: <20070717004913.21682.50282.stgit@localhost.localdomain>
On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 04:49:13AM +0400, Vitaly Bordug wrote:
> + np = of_find_node_by_type(NULL, "cpu");
> + if (np != 0) {
> + const unsigned int *fp =
> + get_property(np, "clock-frequency", NULL);
> + if (fp != 0)
> + loops_per_jiffy = *fp / HZ;
> + else
> + loops_per_jiffy = 50000000 / HZ;
> + of_node_put(np);
> + }
This is not necessary. It's only used for /proc/cpuinfo (delays are done
using tb_ticks_per_usec), and it'll be overwritten by the generic
calibrate_delay() anyway.
We should be removing this from board files that have it, not adding it
to ones that don't.
> +#if defined (CONFIG_SENSORS_DS1337) && defined (CONFIG_I2C)
> +
> +extern int ds1337_do_command(int id, int cmd, void *arg);
> +extern spinlock_t rtc_lock;
> +#define DS1337_GET_DATE 0
> +#define DS1337_SET_DATE 1
> +
> +static void mpc8313rdb_get_rtc_time(struct rtc_time *tm)
> +{
> + int result;
> +
> + result = ds1337_do_command(0, DS1337_GET_DATE, tm);
> +
> + if (result == 0)
> + result = mktime(tm->tm_year, tm->tm_mon, tm->tm_mday, tm->tm_hour, tm->tm_min, tm->tm_sec);
> +}
> +
> +static int mpc8313rdb_set_rtc_time(struct rtc_time *tm)
> +{
> + int result;
> +
> + result = ds1337_do_command(0, DS1337_SET_DATE, tm);
> +
> + return result;
> +}
> +
> +static int __init rtc_hookup(void)
> +{
> + ppc_md.get_rtc_time = mpc8313rdb_get_rtc_time;
> + ppc_md.set_rtc_time = mpc8313rdb_set_rtc_time;
> + return 0;
> +}
> +late_initcall(rtc_hookup);
> +#endif
Please don't do this; drivers/i2c/chips/ds1337.c is deprecated. You
should be using the RTC-class driver in drivers/rtc/rtc-ds1307.c, which
has a non-device-specific API that can be used.
The ppc_md RTC functions should really just go away, though -- setting
the clock on bootup can be done by generic code, and periodically
updating the RTC when using NTP can be done from userspace.
-Scott
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH 3/3] 82xx: SBCPQ2 board platform support
From: Segher Boessenkool @ 2007-07-17 16:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mark Zhan; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, paulus, Arnd Bergmann
In-Reply-To: <1184679661.18501.41.camel@mark>
>>>>> + np = of_find_compatible_node(NULL, "cpm-pic", "CPM2");
>>>>> + if (np == NULL) {
>>>>> + printk(KERN_ERR "PIC init: can not find cpm-pic node\n");
>>>>> + return;
>>>>> + }
>>>>
>>>> This looks like your device tree is wrong. Shouldn't the interrupt
>>>> controller have device_type="interrupt-controller" and a specific
>>>> compatible property instead of having the name in the device_type?
So, I looked it up :-)
The device_type should specify the specific interrupt
controller programming model, because a real OF typically
needs to know the meaning of the interrupt specifiers;
also, when the interrupt binding recommended practice
isn't used, it is needed to know the #interrupt-cells
(which is implicit from the device_type in that case).
If there is no defined binding for your interrupt
controller, just don't put a device_type in your tree at
all, for flat device trees.
>>> Here, I just copy the codes from mpc82xx_ads, is there anything
>>> wrong?
>>
>> I just checked the Recommended Practice document for interrupt
>> mapping
>> and it seems that it's ok. The interrupt controller needs to have
>> an property named "interrupt-controller", but does not need a
>> specific
>> device_type. So it appears to be correct here.
Please also look at the base specifications, not just
the imap thing. But you reached the correct conclusion.
Segher
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] Allow exec on 32-bit from readable, non-exec pages, with a warning.
From: Kumar Gala @ 2007-07-17 16:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Segher Boessenkool
Cc: linuxppc-dev, Paul Mackerras, Arnd Bergmann, David Gibson
In-Reply-To: <4CB813ED-9D8B-4A32-B4AC-65D27741D46C@kernel.crashing.org>
On Jul 17, 2007, at 10:18 AM, Segher Boessenkool wrote:
>>>>> Yeah. Giving the warning is a good thing though.
>>>>
>>>> No, it isn't; it's just noise, if we're not ever going to do
>>>> anything
>>>> to prevent the behaviour - and we can't.
>>>
>>> The same userland code will not run correctly on PPC64 or BookE
>>> systems. Is that not a reason to warn?
>>
>> Way back when, I distinctly recall aborting my plans to implement
>> per-page exec on 40x, precisely because of executables like this.
>
> I noticed some comments to that effect in the BookE code,
> yes. It seems userland has been fixed enough that you
> could think about enabling it again FWIW.
Did I miss the posting of the patch with the fix?
- k
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: Machine check exception. 2.6.20 powerpc tree.
From: Kumar Gala @ 2007-07-17 16:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ramirez-Ortiz, Jorge; +Cc: linuxppc-embedded
In-Reply-To: <35786B99AB3FDC45A8215724617919730136DA91@gbrwgceumf01.eu.xerox.net>
On Jul 17, 2007, at 9:21 AM, Ramirez-Ortiz, Jorge wrote:
> Running our multithreaded application on ppc8548 (E500 core) =20
> generates a machine check exception when trying to access some =20
> ASIC=92s registers mapped on the PCI space (This application maps a =20=
> PCI device to access its registers)
>
>
>
> machine_check_exception: task my_process, MCSR=3D0x10008, =
NIP=3D0x10153530
>
> Machine check in user mode.
>
> Caused by (from MCSR=3D10008): Guarded Load or Cache-Inhibited stwcx.
>
> Bus - Read Data Bus Error
>
>
>
> Here is the assembly dump of the region of code containing the =20
> offending instruction in user-space, with SRR0 pointing us at =20
> 0x10153530 when the exception is raised:
>
>
>
> 0x10153528 <_ZN2vk7in_le32EPVKj+16>: lwz r0,8(r31)
>
> 0x1015352c <_ZN2vk7in_le32EPVKj+20>: lwz r9,8(r31)
>
> 0x10153530 <_ZN2vk7in_le32EPVKj+24>: lwbrx r0,0,r0
>
> 0x10153534 <_ZN2vk7in_le32EPVKj+28>: twi 0,r0,0
>
> 0x10153538 <_ZN2vk7in_le32EPVKj+32>: isync
Can you get the code to dump the value of r0. I'm wondering if =20
you're really getting a read data bus error due to the fact that r0 =20
is pointing to a PCI address that doesn't have a device that will =20
respond.
- k
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH] Add StorCenter DTS first draft.
From: Josh Boyer @ 2007-07-17 16:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Segher Boessenkool; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, Jon Loeliger
In-Reply-To: <630B6BC9-389F-4F5C-AE8F-9C3131C4543E@kernel.crashing.org>
On Tue, 2007-07-17 at 16:57 +0200, Segher Boessenkool wrote:
>
> > + flash@ff800000 {
> > + device_type = "rom";
>
> I'm sure you know I find this "rom" binding to be crap.
> However, I didn't yet write up the "cfi" binding, so I
> can't complain ;-)
Not all chips are CFI compliant. Be sure to write up the "jedec" and
"nand" bindings while you're at it ;)
josh
^ permalink raw reply
* Re: [PATCH 1/3] 82xx: some 82xx platform hook functions can be shared by different boards
From: Scott Wood @ 2007-07-17 16:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Arnd Bergmann; +Cc: linuxppc-dev, paulus
In-Reply-To: <200707170259.47098.arnd@arndb.de>
On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 02:59:46AM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> This is a step in the wrong direction. CPUINFO_{VENDOR,MACHINE}
> comes from a platform specific header file, so you can not
> use these definitions in platform independent code without
> breaking multiplatform kernels.
My patchset just drops the vendor field, and uses ppc_md.name for the
machine name. The vendor name can be included in the latter.
> I know you're just moving that code, but it looks horribly wrong
> nonetheless. cpm2_immr is an __iomem variable, so you must not
> dereference it but instead should use the in_8() macro to
> access it.
>
> Once you get that right, you don't need the volatile variable
> any more.
My patchset addresses this.
-Scott
^ permalink raw reply
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