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  1. Sep 03, 2010
    • Haavard Skinnemoen's avatar
      avr32: Add simple paging support · 1f36f73f
      Haavard Skinnemoen authored
      
      Use the MMU hardware to set up 1:1 mappings between physical and virtual
      addresses. This allows us to bypass the cache when accessing the flash
      without having to do any physical-to-virtual address mapping in the CFI
      driver.
      
      The virtual memory mappings are defined at compile time through a sorted
      array of virtual memory range objects. When a TLB miss exception
      happens, the exception handler does a binary search through the array
      until it finds a matching entry and loads it into the TLB. The u-boot
      image itself is covered by a fixed TLB entry which is never replaced.
      
      This makes the 'saveenv' command work again on ATNGW100 and other boards
      using the CFI driver, hopefully without breaking any rules.
      
      Signed-off-by: default avatarHaavard Skinnemoen <haavard.skinnemoen@atmel.com>
      1f36f73f
  2. Oct 18, 2008
  3. Sep 10, 2008
  4. Sep 01, 2008
    • Haavard Skinnemoen's avatar
      avr32: refactor the portmux/gpio code · ab0df36f
      Haavard Skinnemoen authored
      
        - Separate the portmux configuration functionality from the GPIO pin
          control API.
        - Separate the controller-specific code from the chip-specific code.
        - Allow "ganged" port configuration (multiple pins at once).
        - Add more flexibility to the "canned" peripheral select functions:
            - Allow using more than 23 address bits, more chip selects, as
      	well as NAND- and CF-specific pins.
            - Make the MACB SPEED pin optional, and choose between MII/RMII
      	using a parameter instead of an #ifdef.
            - Make it possible to use other MMC slots than slot 0, and support
      	different MMC/SDCard data bus widths.
        - Use more reasonable pull-up defaults; floating pins may consume a
          lot of power.
        - Get rid of some custom portmux code from the mimc200 board code. The
          old gpio/portmux API couldn't really handle its requirements, but
          the new one can.
        - Add documentation.
      
      The end result is slightly smaller code for all boards. Which isn't
      really the point, but at least it isn't any larger.
      
      This has been verified on ATSTK1002 and ATNGW100. I'd appreciate if
      the board maintainers could help me test this on their boards. In
      particular, the mimc200 port has lost a lot of code, so I'm hoping Mark
      can help me out.
      
      Signed-off-by: default avatarHaavard Skinnemoen <haavard.skinnemoen@atmel.com>
      Cc: Hans-Christian Egtvedt <hans-christian.egtvedt@atmel.com>
      Cc: Mark Jackson <mpfj@mimc.co.uk>
      Cc: Alex Raimondi <alex.raimondi@miromico.ch>
      Cc: Julien May <julien.may@miromico.ch>
      
      Changes since v1:
        * Enable pullup on NWAIT
        * Add missing include to portmux-pio.h
        * Rename CONFIG_PIO2 -> CONFIG_PORTMUX_PIO to match docs
      ab0df36f
  5. Aug 12, 2008
  6. Aug 06, 2008
  7. Jul 31, 2008
    • Wolfgang Denk's avatar
      Fix printf() format problems with configurable prompts · c37207d7
      Wolfgang Denk authored
      
      U-Boot allows for configurable prompt strings using the
      CONFIG_AUTOBOOT_PROMPT resp. CONFIG_MENUPROMPT definitions. So far,
      the assumption was that any such user defined problts would contain
      exactly one "%d" format specifier. But some boards did not.
      
      To allow for flexible boot prompts without adding too complex code we
      now allow to specify the whole list of printf() arguments in the user
      definition. This is powerful, but requires a responsible user who
      really understands what he is doing, as he needs to know for exanple
      which variables are available in the respective context.
      
      Signed-off-by: default avatarWolfgang Denk <wd@denx.de>
      c37207d7
  8. Jul 09, 2008
  9. May 27, 2008
  10. Feb 05, 2008
  11. Dec 17, 2007
  12. Nov 01, 2007
  13. Oct 02, 2007
  14. Sep 18, 2007
  15. Sep 15, 2007
  16. Aug 30, 2007
  17. Jul 10, 2007
  18. Jul 05, 2007
  19. Apr 14, 2007
  20. Oct 24, 2006
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