At present the low-level init is skipped on rockchip. Among other things
this means that the instruction cache is left disabled. Fix this.
Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
This patch was merged shortly before the v2015.10 as a minimal fix for
booting on rockchip. Now that the patch series from Hans to do the
relocation in generic code has been merged it can be dropped.
This reverts commit b1f492ca9e.
Signed-off-by: Sjoerd Simons <sjoerd.simons@collabora.co.uk>
Acked-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
since different rockchip soc need different spl file,
so rename board-spl.c.
Signed-off-by: Lin Huang <hl@rock-chips.com>
Acked-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
some rockchip soc will not include lib/timer.c in SPL stage,
so implement timer driver for some soc can use us delay function in SPL.
Signed-off-by: Lin Huang <hl@rock-chips.com>
Acked-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
When malloc_base initially gets setup in the SPL it is based on the
current (early) stack pointer, which for rockchip is pointing into SRAM.
This means simple memory allocations happen in SRAM space, which is
somewhat unfortunate. Specifically a bounce buffer for the mmc allocated
in SRAM space seems to cause the mmc engine to stall/fail causing
timeouts and a failure to load the main u-boot image.
To resolve this, reconfigure the malloc_base to start at the relocated
stack pointer after DRAM has been setup.
For reference, things did work fine on rockchip before 596380db was
merged to fix memalign_simple due to a combination of rockchip SDRAM
starting at address 0 and the dw_mmc driver not checking errors from
bounce_buffer_start. As a result, when a bounce buffer needed to be
allocated mem_align simple would fail and return NULL. The mmc driver
ignored the error and happily continued with the bounce buffer address
being set to 0, which just happened to work fine..
Signed-off-by: Sjoerd Simons <sjoerd.simons@collabora.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Hans de Goede <hdegoede@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
Add code for starting up U-Boot SPL and U-Boot proper. This is generic and
makes use of devices provided by the board- or SoC-specific code.
Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>