When U-Boot started using SPDX tags we were among the early adopters and
there weren't a lot of other examples to borrow from. So we picked the
area of the file that usually had a full license text and replaced it
with an appropriate SPDX-License-Identifier: entry. Since then, the
Linux Kernel has adopted SPDX tags and they place it as the very first
line in a file (except where shebangs are used, then it's second line)
and with slightly different comment styles than us.
In part due to community overlap, in part due to better tag visibility
and in part for other minor reasons, switch over to that style.
This commit changes all instances where we have a single declared
license in the tag as both the before and after are identical in tag
contents. There's also a few places where I found we did not have a tag
and have introduced one.
Signed-off-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
Now that we have support for running with caches enabled in HYP mode,
opt in to that on the Raspberry Pi 2. This brings a significant performance
boost.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <agraf@suse.de>
In a number of places we had wordings of the GPL (or LGPL in a few
cases) license text that were split in such a way that it wasn't caught
previously. Convert all of these to the correct SPDX-License-Identifier
tag.
Signed-off-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
BCM2835 (used on Raspberry Pi) and BCM2836 (used on Raspberry Pi 2)
are similar enough. One of the biggest differences is the ARM
processor. It is reasonable to collect the source files into a
single place, arch/arm/mach-bcm283x/.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
Acked-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org>
Commit 86c6326 "ARM: arm1176: enable instruction cache in
arch_cpu_init()" defined arch_cpu_init() in a file that is shared across
all arm1176 SoCs. tnetv107x already implemented this function, which
caused linking to break. Move the new conflicting arch_cpu_init() into
arm1176/bcm2835/init.c so that it doesn't conflict; grep indicates this
function is usually defined at the SoC-level, not the CPU-level, at least
for ARM.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org>
Acked-by: Marek Vasut <marex@denx.de>
This SoC is used in the Raspberry Pi, for example.
For more details, see:
http://www.broadcom.com/products/BCM2835http://www.raspberrypi.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/BCM2835-ARM-Peripherals.pdf.
Initial support is enough to boot to a serial console, execute a minimal
set of U-Boot commands, download data over a serial port, and boot a
Linux kernel. No storage or network drivers are implemented.
GPIO driver originally by Vikram Narayanan <vikram186@gmail.com>
with many fixes from myself.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org>