| Please mail me (Jon Diekema, diekema_jon@si.com or diekema@cideas.com) |
| if you have questions, comments or corrections. |
| |
| * EST SBC8260 Linux memory mapping rules |
| |
| http://www.estc.com/ |
| http://www.estc.com/products/boards/SBC8260-8240_ds.html |
| |
| Initial conditions: |
| ------------------- |
| |
| Tasks that need to be perform by the boot ROM before control is |
| transferred to zImage (compressed Linux kernel): |
| |
| - Define the IMMR to 0xf0000000 |
| |
| - Initialize the memory controller so that RAM is available at |
| physical address 0x00000000. On the SBC8260 is this 16M (64M) |
| SDRAM. |
| |
| - The boot ROM should only clear the RAM that it is using. |
| |
| The reason for doing this is to enhances the chances of a |
| successful post mortem on a Linux panic. One of the first |
| items to examine is the 16k (LOG_BUF_LEN) circular console |
| buffer called log_buf which is defined in kernel/printk.c. |
| |
| - To enhance boot ROM performance, the I-cache can be enabled. |
| |
| Date: Mon, 22 May 2000 14:21:10 -0700 |
| From: Neil Russell <caret@c-side.com> |
| |
| LiMon (LInux MONitor) runs with and starts Linux with MMU |
| off, I-cache enabled, D-cache disabled. The I-cache doesn't |
| need hints from the MMU to work correctly as the D-cache |
| does. No D-cache means no special code to handle devices in |
| the presence of cache (no snooping, etc). The use of the |
| I-cache means that the monitor can run acceptably fast |
| directly from ROM, rather than having to copy it to RAM. |
| |
| - Build the board information structure (see |
| include/asm-ppc/est8260.h for its definition) |
| |
| - The compressed Linux kernel (zImage) contains a bootstrap loader |
| that is position independent; you can load it into any RAM, |
| ROM or FLASH memory address >= 0x00500000 (above 5 MB), or |
| at its link address of 0x00400000 (4 MB). |
| |
| Note: If zImage is loaded at its link address of 0x00400000 (4 MB), |
| then zImage will skip the step of moving itself to |
| its link address. |
| |
| - Load R3 with the address of the board information structure |
| |
| - Transfer control to zImage |
| |
| - The Linux console port is SMC1, and the baud rate is controlled |
| from the bi_baudrate field of the board information structure. |
| On thing to keep in mind when picking the baud rate, is that |
| there is no flow control on the SMC ports. I would stick |
| with something safe and standard like 19200. |
| |
| On the EST SBC8260, the SMC1 port is on the COM1 connector of |
| the board. |
| |
| |
| EST SBC8260 defaults: |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Chip |
| Memory Sel Bus Use |
| --------------------- --- --- ---------------------------------- |
| 0x00000000-0x03FFFFFF CS2 60x (16M or 64M)/64M SDRAM |
| 0x04000000-0x04FFFFFF CS4 local 4M/16M SDRAM (soldered to the board) |
| 0x21000000-0x21000000 CS7 60x 1B/64K Flash present detect (from the flash SIMM) |
| 0x21000001-0x21000001 CS7 60x 1B/64K Switches (read) and LEDs (write) |
| 0x22000000-0x2200FFFF CS5 60x 8K/64K EEPROM |
| 0xFC000000-0xFCFFFFFF CS6 60x 2M/16M flash (8 bits wide, soldered to the board) |
| 0xFE000000-0xFFFFFFFF CS0 60x 4M/16M flash (SIMM) |
| |
| Notes: |
| ------ |
| |
| - The chip selects can map 32K blocks and up (powers of 2) |
| |
| - The SDRAM machine can handled up to 128Mbytes per chip select |
| |
| - Linux uses the 60x bus memory (the SDRAM DIMM) for the |
| communications buffers. |
| |
| - BATs can map 128K-256Mbytes each. There are four data BATs and |
| four instruction BATs. Generally the data and instruction BATs |
| are mapped the same. |
| |
| - The IMMR must be set above the kernel virtual memory addresses, |
| which start at 0xC0000000. Otherwise, the kernel may crash as |
| soon as you start any threads or processes due to VM collisions |
| in the kernel or user process space. |
| |
| |
| Details from Dan Malek <dan_malek@mvista.com> on 10/29/1999: |
| |
| The user application virtual space consumes the first 2 Gbytes |
| (0x00000000 to 0x7FFFFFFF). The kernel virtual text starts at |
| 0xC0000000, with data following. There is a "protection hole" |
| between the end of kernel data and the start of the kernel |
| dynamically allocated space, but this space is still within |
| 0xCxxxxxxx. |
| |
| Obviously the kernel can't map any physical addresses 1:1 in |
| these ranges. |
| |
| |
| Details from Dan Malek <dan_malek@mvista.com> on 5/19/2000: |
| |
| During the early kernel initialization, the kernel virtual |
| memory allocator is not operational. Prior to this KVM |
| initialization, we choose to map virtual to physical addresses |
| 1:1. That is, the kernel virtual address exactly matches the |
| physical address on the bus. These mappings are typically done |
| in arch/ppc/kernel/head.S, or arch/ppc/mm/init.c. Only |
| absolutely necessary mappings should be done at this time, for |
| example board control registers or a serial uart. Normal device |
| driver initialization should map resources later when necessary. |
| |
| Although platform dependent, and certainly the case for embedded |
| 8xx, traditionally memory is mapped at physical address zero, |
| and I/O devices above physical address 0x80000000. The lowest |
| and highest (above 0xf0000000) I/O addresses are traditionally |
| used for devices or registers we need to map during kernel |
| initialization and prior to KVM operation. For this reason, |
| and since it followed prior PowerPC platform examples, I chose |
| to map the embedded 8xx kernel to the 0xc0000000 virtual address. |
| This way, we can enable the MMU to map the kernel for proper |
| operation, and still map a few windows before the KVM is operational. |
| |
| On some systems, you could possibly run the kernel at the |
| 0x80000000 or any other virtual address. It just depends upon |
| mapping that must be done prior to KVM operational. You can never |
| map devices or kernel spaces that overlap with the user virtual |
| space. This is why default IMMR mapping used by most BDM tools |
| won't work. They put the IMMR at something like 0x10000000 or |
| 0x02000000 for example. You simply can't map these addresses early |
| in the kernel, and continue proper system operation. |
| |
| The embedded 8xx/82xx kernel is mature enough that all you should |
| need to do is map the IMMR someplace at or above 0xf0000000 and it |
| should boot far enough to get serial console messages and KGDB |
| connected on any platform. There are lots of other subtle memory |
| management design features that you simply don't need to worry |
| about. If you are changing functions related to MMU initialization, |
| you are likely breaking things that are known to work and are |
| heading down a path of disaster and frustration. Your changes |
| should be to make the flexibility of the processor fit Linux, |
| not force arbitrary and non-workable memory mappings into Linux. |
| |
| - You don't want to change KERNELLOAD or KERNELBASE, otherwise the |
| virtual memory and MMU code will get confused. |
| |
| arch/ppc/Makefile:KERNELLOAD = 0xc0000000 |
| |
| include/asm-ppc/page.h:#define PAGE_OFFSET 0xc0000000 |
| include/asm-ppc/page.h:#define KERNELBASE PAGE_OFFSET |
| |
| - RAM is at physical address 0x00000000, and gets mapped to |
| virtual address 0xC0000000 for the kernel. |
| |
| |
| Physical addresses used by the Linux kernel: |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| 0x00000000-0x3FFFFFFF 1GB reserved for RAM |
| 0xF0000000-0xF001FFFF 128K IMMR 64K used for dual port memory, |
| 64K for 8260 registers |
| |
| |
| Logical addresses used by the Linux kernel: |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| 0xF0000000-0xFFFFFFFF 256M BAT0 (IMMR: dual port RAM, registers) |
| 0xE0000000-0xEFFFFFFF 256M BAT1 (I/O space for custom boards) |
| 0xC0000000-0xCFFFFFFF 256M BAT2 (RAM) |
| 0xD0000000-0xDFFFFFFF 256M BAT3 (if RAM > 256MByte) |
| |
| |
| EST SBC8260 Linux mapping: |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| DBAT0, IBAT0, cache inhibited: |
| |
| Chip |
| Memory Sel Use |
| --------------------- --- --------------------------------- |
| 0xF0000000-0xF001FFFF n/a IMMR: dual port RAM, registers |
| |
| DBAT1, IBAT1, cache inhibited: |
| |