u-boot/include/configs/ds414.h

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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ */
mvebu: Support Synology DS414 This adds support for the MV78230 based DS414 NAS by Synology. The relevant bits have been extracted from the 'synogpl-5004-armadaxp' package Synology kindly published, garnished with a fair amount of trial-and-error. Sadly, support is far from perfect. The major parts I have failed in are SATA and XHCI support. Details about these and some other things follow: Device Tree ----------- The device tree file armada-xp-synology-ds414.dts has been copied from Linux and enhanced by recent U-Boot specific changes to armada-xp-gp.dts. SATA Support ------------ There is a Marvell 88SX7042 controller attached to PCIe which is supported by Linux's sata_mv driver but sadly not U-Boot's sata_mv. I'm not sure if extending the latter to support PCI devices is worth the effort at all. Porting sata_mv from Linux exceeded my brain's capacities. :( XHCI Support ------------ There is an EtronTech EJ168A XHCI controller attached to PCIe which drives the two rear USB3 ports. After a bit of playing around I managed to get it recognized by xhci-pci, but never was able to access any devices attached to it. Enabling it in ds414 board config shows that it does not respond to commands for whatever reason. The (somewhat) bright side to it is that it is not even supported in Synology's customized U-Boot, but that also means nowhere to steal the relevant bits from. EHCI Support ------------ This seems functional after issuing 'usb start'. At least it detects USB storage devices, and IIRC reading from them was OK. OTOH Linux fails to register the controller if 'usb start' wasn't given before in U-Boot. According to Synology sources, this board seems to support USB device (gadget?) mode. Though I didn't play around with it. PCIe Support ------------ This is fine, but trying to gate the clocks of unused lanes will hang PCI enum. In addition to that, pci_mvebu seems not to support DM_PCI. DDR3 Training ------------- Marvell/Synology uses eight PUPs instead of four. Does not look like this is meant to be customized in mainline U-Boot at all. OTOH I have no idea what a "PUP" actually is. PEX Init -------- Synology uses different values than mainline U-Boot with this patch: pex_max_unit_get returns 2, pex_max_if_get returns 7 and max_serdes_lines is set to 7. Not changing this seems to not have an impact, although I'm not entirely sure it does not cause issues I am not aware of. Static Environment ------------------ This allows to boot stock Synology firmware at least. In order to be a little more flexible when it comes to booting custom kernels, do not only load zImage partition, but also rd.gz into memory. This way it is possible to use about 7MB for kernel with piggyback initramfs. Signed-off-by: Phil Sutter <phil@nwl.cc> Acked-by: Stefan Roese <sr@denx.de> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2015-12-25 13:41:25 +00:00
/*
* Copyright (C) 2014 Stefan Roese <sr@denx.de>
*/
#ifndef _CONFIG_SYNOLOGY_DS414_H
#define _CONFIG_SYNOLOGY_DS414_H
/*
* High Level Configuration Options (easy to change)
*/
/*
* TEXT_BASE needs to be below 16MiB, since this area is scrubbed
* for DDR ECC byte filling in the SPL before loading the main
* U-Boot into it.
*/
/* I2C */
#define CONFIG_I2C_MVTWSI_BASE0 MVEBU_TWSI_BASE
/* PCIe support */
#ifndef CONFIG_SPL_BUILD
#define CONFIG_PCI_SCAN_SHOW
#endif
/*
* mv-common.h should be defined after CMD configs since it used them
* to enable certain macros
*/
#include "mv-common.h"
/*
* Memory layout while starting into the bin_hdr via the
* BootROM:
*
* 0x4000.4000 - 0x4003.4000 headers space (192KiB)
* 0x4000.4030 bin_hdr start address
* 0x4003.4000 - 0x4004.7c00 BootROM memory allocations (15KiB)
* 0x4007.fffc BootROM stack top
*
* The address space between 0x4007.fffc and 0x400f.fff is not locked in
* L2 cache thus cannot be used.
*/
/* SPL */
/* Defines for SPL */
#define CONFIG_SPL_MAX_SIZE ((128 << 10) - 0x4030)
#define CONFIG_SPL_BSS_START_ADDR (0x40000000 + (128 << 10))
#define CONFIG_SPL_BSS_MAX_SIZE (16 << 10)
#ifdef CONFIG_SPL_BUILD
#define CONFIG_SYS_MALLOC_SIMPLE
#endif
#define CONFIG_SPL_STACK (0x40000000 + ((192 - 16) << 10))
#define CONFIG_SPL_BOOTROM_SAVE (CONFIG_SPL_STACK + 4)
/* Default Environment */
#define CONFIG_BOOTCOMMAND \
"sf probe; " \
"sf read ${loadaddr} 0xd0000 0x2d0000; " \
"sf read ${ramdisk_addr_r} 0x3a0000 0x430000; " \
"bootm ${loadaddr} ${ramdisk_addr_r}"
#define CONFIG_EXTRA_ENV_SETTINGS \
"initrd_high=0xffffffff\0" \
"ramdisk_addr_r=0x8000000\0" \
"usb0Mode=host\0usb1Mode=host\0usb2Mode=device\0" \
"ethmtu=1500\0eth1mtu=1500\0" \
"update_uboot=sf probe; dhcp; " \
"mw.b ${loadaddr} 0x0 0xd0000; " \
"tftpboot ${loadaddr} u-boot-spl.kwb; " \
"sf update ${loadaddr} 0x0 0xd0000\0"
mvebu: Support Synology DS414 This adds support for the MV78230 based DS414 NAS by Synology. The relevant bits have been extracted from the 'synogpl-5004-armadaxp' package Synology kindly published, garnished with a fair amount of trial-and-error. Sadly, support is far from perfect. The major parts I have failed in are SATA and XHCI support. Details about these and some other things follow: Device Tree ----------- The device tree file armada-xp-synology-ds414.dts has been copied from Linux and enhanced by recent U-Boot specific changes to armada-xp-gp.dts. SATA Support ------------ There is a Marvell 88SX7042 controller attached to PCIe which is supported by Linux's sata_mv driver but sadly not U-Boot's sata_mv. I'm not sure if extending the latter to support PCI devices is worth the effort at all. Porting sata_mv from Linux exceeded my brain's capacities. :( XHCI Support ------------ There is an EtronTech EJ168A XHCI controller attached to PCIe which drives the two rear USB3 ports. After a bit of playing around I managed to get it recognized by xhci-pci, but never was able to access any devices attached to it. Enabling it in ds414 board config shows that it does not respond to commands for whatever reason. The (somewhat) bright side to it is that it is not even supported in Synology's customized U-Boot, but that also means nowhere to steal the relevant bits from. EHCI Support ------------ This seems functional after issuing 'usb start'. At least it detects USB storage devices, and IIRC reading from them was OK. OTOH Linux fails to register the controller if 'usb start' wasn't given before in U-Boot. According to Synology sources, this board seems to support USB device (gadget?) mode. Though I didn't play around with it. PCIe Support ------------ This is fine, but trying to gate the clocks of unused lanes will hang PCI enum. In addition to that, pci_mvebu seems not to support DM_PCI. DDR3 Training ------------- Marvell/Synology uses eight PUPs instead of four. Does not look like this is meant to be customized in mainline U-Boot at all. OTOH I have no idea what a "PUP" actually is. PEX Init -------- Synology uses different values than mainline U-Boot with this patch: pex_max_unit_get returns 2, pex_max_if_get returns 7 and max_serdes_lines is set to 7. Not changing this seems to not have an impact, although I'm not entirely sure it does not cause issues I am not aware of. Static Environment ------------------ This allows to boot stock Synology firmware at least. In order to be a little more flexible when it comes to booting custom kernels, do not only load zImage partition, but also rd.gz into memory. This way it is possible to use about 7MB for kernel with piggyback initramfs. Signed-off-by: Phil Sutter <phil@nwl.cc> Acked-by: Stefan Roese <sr@denx.de> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2015-12-25 13:41:25 +00:00
/* increase autoneg timeout, my NIC sucks */
#define PHY_ANEG_TIMEOUT 16000
mvebu: Support Synology DS414 This adds support for the MV78230 based DS414 NAS by Synology. The relevant bits have been extracted from the 'synogpl-5004-armadaxp' package Synology kindly published, garnished with a fair amount of trial-and-error. Sadly, support is far from perfect. The major parts I have failed in are SATA and XHCI support. Details about these and some other things follow: Device Tree ----------- The device tree file armada-xp-synology-ds414.dts has been copied from Linux and enhanced by recent U-Boot specific changes to armada-xp-gp.dts. SATA Support ------------ There is a Marvell 88SX7042 controller attached to PCIe which is supported by Linux's sata_mv driver but sadly not U-Boot's sata_mv. I'm not sure if extending the latter to support PCI devices is worth the effort at all. Porting sata_mv from Linux exceeded my brain's capacities. :( XHCI Support ------------ There is an EtronTech EJ168A XHCI controller attached to PCIe which drives the two rear USB3 ports. After a bit of playing around I managed to get it recognized by xhci-pci, but never was able to access any devices attached to it. Enabling it in ds414 board config shows that it does not respond to commands for whatever reason. The (somewhat) bright side to it is that it is not even supported in Synology's customized U-Boot, but that also means nowhere to steal the relevant bits from. EHCI Support ------------ This seems functional after issuing 'usb start'. At least it detects USB storage devices, and IIRC reading from them was OK. OTOH Linux fails to register the controller if 'usb start' wasn't given before in U-Boot. According to Synology sources, this board seems to support USB device (gadget?) mode. Though I didn't play around with it. PCIe Support ------------ This is fine, but trying to gate the clocks of unused lanes will hang PCI enum. In addition to that, pci_mvebu seems not to support DM_PCI. DDR3 Training ------------- Marvell/Synology uses eight PUPs instead of four. Does not look like this is meant to be customized in mainline U-Boot at all. OTOH I have no idea what a "PUP" actually is. PEX Init -------- Synology uses different values than mainline U-Boot with this patch: pex_max_unit_get returns 2, pex_max_if_get returns 7 and max_serdes_lines is set to 7. Not changing this seems to not have an impact, although I'm not entirely sure it does not cause issues I am not aware of. Static Environment ------------------ This allows to boot stock Synology firmware at least. In order to be a little more flexible when it comes to booting custom kernels, do not only load zImage partition, but also rd.gz into memory. This way it is possible to use about 7MB for kernel with piggyback initramfs. Signed-off-by: Phil Sutter <phil@nwl.cc> Acked-by: Stefan Roese <sr@denx.de> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2015-12-25 13:41:25 +00:00
#endif /* _CONFIG_SYNOLOGY_DS414_H */