u-boot/arch/arm/mach-bcm283x/Kconfig

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config BCM2835
bool "Broadcom BCM2835 SoC support"
depends on ARCH_BCM283X
select CPU_ARM1176
config BCM2836
bool "Broadcom BCM2836 SoC support"
depends on ARCH_BCM283X
select ARMV7_LPAE
select CPU_V7A
rpi: BCM2837 and Raspberry Pi 3 32-bit support The Raspberry Pi 3 contains a BCM2837 SoC. The BCM2837 is a BCM2836 with the CPU complex swapped out for a quad-core ARMv8. This can operate in 32- or 64-bit mode. 32-bit mode is the current default selected by the VideoCore firmware on the Raspberry Pi 3. This patch adds a 32-bit port of U-Boot for the Raspberry Pi 3. >From U-Boot's perspective, the only delta between the RPi 2 and RPi 3 is a change in usage of the SoC UARTs. On all previous Pis, the PL011 was the only UART in use. The Raspberry Pi 3 adds a Bluetooth module which uses a UART to connect to the SoC. By default, the PL011 is used for this purpose since it has larger FIFOs than the other "mini" UART. However, this can be configured via the VideoCore firmware's config.txt file. This patch hard-codes use of the mini UART in the RPi 3 port. If your system uses the PL011 UART for the console even on the RPi 3, please use the RPi 2 U-Boot port instead. A future change might determine which UART to use at run-time, thus allowing the RPi 2 and RPi 3 (32-bit) ports to be squashed together. The mini UART has some limitations. One externally visible issue in the BCM2837 integration is that the UART divides the SoC's "core clock" to generate the baud rate. The core clock is typically variable, and under control of the VideoCore firmware for thermal management reasons. If the VC FW does modify the core clock rate, UART communication will be corrupted since the baud rate will vary from the expected value. This was not an issue for the PL011 UART, since it is fed by a fixed 3MHz clock. To work around this, the VideoCore firmware can be told not to modify the SoC core clock. However, the only way this can happen and be thermally safe is to limit the core clock to a low/minimum frequency. This leaves performance on the table for use-cases that don't care about a UART console. Consequently, use of the mini UART console must be explicitly requested by entering the following line into config.txt: enable_uart=1 A recent version of the VC firmware is required to ensure that the mini UART is fully and correctly initialized by the VC FW; at least firmware.git 046effa13ebc "firmware: arm_loader: emmc clock depends on core clock See: https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/issues/572". Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2016-03-25 04:15:20 +00:00
config BCM2837
bool "Broadcom BCM2837 SoC support"
depends on ARCH_BCM283X
config BCM2837_32B
bool "Broadcom BCM2837 SoC 32-bit support"
depends on ARCH_BCM283X
select BCM2837
select ARMV7_LPAE
select CPU_V7A
config BCM2837_64B
bool "Broadcom BCM2837 SoC 64-bit support"
depends on ARCH_BCM283X
select BCM2837
select ARM64
menu "Broadcom BCM283X family"
depends on ARCH_BCM283X
choice
prompt "Broadcom BCM283X board select"
optional
config TARGET_RPI
bool "Raspberry Pi (all BCM2835 variants)"
help
Support for all ARM1176-/BCM2835-based Raspberry Pi variants, such as
the A, A+, B, B+, Compute Module, and Zero. This option cannot
support BCM2836/BCM2837-based Raspberry Pis such as the RPi 2 and
RPi 3 due to different peripheral address maps.
This option creates a build targeting the ARM1176 ISA.
select BCM2835
config TARGET_RPI_0_W
bool "Raspberry Pi Zero W"
help
Support for all ARM1176-/BCM2835-based Raspberry Pi variants, such as
the RPi Zero model W.
This option assumes the VideoCore firmware is configured to use the
mini UART (rather than PL011) for the serial console. This is the
default on the RPi Zero W. To enable the UART console, the following
non-default option must be present in config.txt: enable_uart=1.
This is required for U-Boot to operate correctly, even if you only
care about the HDMI/usbkbd console.
This option creates a build targeting the ARMv7/AArch32 ISA.
select BCM2835
config TARGET_RPI_2
bool "Raspberry Pi 2"
help
Support for all BCM2836-based Raspberry Pi variants, such as
the RPi 2 model B.
This option also supports BCM2837-based variants such as the RPi 3
Model B, when run in 32-bit mode, provided you have configured the
VideoCore firmware to select the PL011 UART for the console by:
a) config.txt should contain dtoverlay=pi3-miniuart-bt.
b) You should run the following to tell the VC FW to process DT when
booting, and copy u-boot.bin.img (rather than u-boot.bin) to the SD
card as the kernel image:
path/to/kernel/scripts/mkknlimg --dtok u-boot.bin u-boot.bin.img
This works as of firmware.git commit 046effa13ebc "firmware:
arm_loader: emmc clock depends on core clock See:
https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/issues/572".
This option creates a build targeting the ARMv7/AArch32 ISA.
select BCM2836
rpi: BCM2837 and Raspberry Pi 3 32-bit support The Raspberry Pi 3 contains a BCM2837 SoC. The BCM2837 is a BCM2836 with the CPU complex swapped out for a quad-core ARMv8. This can operate in 32- or 64-bit mode. 32-bit mode is the current default selected by the VideoCore firmware on the Raspberry Pi 3. This patch adds a 32-bit port of U-Boot for the Raspberry Pi 3. >From U-Boot's perspective, the only delta between the RPi 2 and RPi 3 is a change in usage of the SoC UARTs. On all previous Pis, the PL011 was the only UART in use. The Raspberry Pi 3 adds a Bluetooth module which uses a UART to connect to the SoC. By default, the PL011 is used for this purpose since it has larger FIFOs than the other "mini" UART. However, this can be configured via the VideoCore firmware's config.txt file. This patch hard-codes use of the mini UART in the RPi 3 port. If your system uses the PL011 UART for the console even on the RPi 3, please use the RPi 2 U-Boot port instead. A future change might determine which UART to use at run-time, thus allowing the RPi 2 and RPi 3 (32-bit) ports to be squashed together. The mini UART has some limitations. One externally visible issue in the BCM2837 integration is that the UART divides the SoC's "core clock" to generate the baud rate. The core clock is typically variable, and under control of the VideoCore firmware for thermal management reasons. If the VC FW does modify the core clock rate, UART communication will be corrupted since the baud rate will vary from the expected value. This was not an issue for the PL011 UART, since it is fed by a fixed 3MHz clock. To work around this, the VideoCore firmware can be told not to modify the SoC core clock. However, the only way this can happen and be thermally safe is to limit the core clock to a low/minimum frequency. This leaves performance on the table for use-cases that don't care about a UART console. Consequently, use of the mini UART console must be explicitly requested by entering the following line into config.txt: enable_uart=1 A recent version of the VC firmware is required to ensure that the mini UART is fully and correctly initialized by the VC FW; at least firmware.git 046effa13ebc "firmware: arm_loader: emmc clock depends on core clock See: https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/issues/572". Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2016-03-25 04:15:20 +00:00
config TARGET_RPI_3_32B
bool "Raspberry Pi 3 32-bit build"
help
Support for all BCM2837-based Raspberry Pi variants, such as
the RPi 3 model B, in AArch32 (32-bit) mode.
This option assumes the VideoCore firmware is configured to use the
mini UART (rather than PL011) for the serial console. This is the
default on the RPi 3. To enable the UART console, the following non-
default option must be present in config.txt: enable_uart=1. This is
required for U-Boot to operate correctly, even if you only care
about the HDMI/usbkbd console.
rpi: BCM2837 and Raspberry Pi 3 32-bit support The Raspberry Pi 3 contains a BCM2837 SoC. The BCM2837 is a BCM2836 with the CPU complex swapped out for a quad-core ARMv8. This can operate in 32- or 64-bit mode. 32-bit mode is the current default selected by the VideoCore firmware on the Raspberry Pi 3. This patch adds a 32-bit port of U-Boot for the Raspberry Pi 3. >From U-Boot's perspective, the only delta between the RPi 2 and RPi 3 is a change in usage of the SoC UARTs. On all previous Pis, the PL011 was the only UART in use. The Raspberry Pi 3 adds a Bluetooth module which uses a UART to connect to the SoC. By default, the PL011 is used for this purpose since it has larger FIFOs than the other "mini" UART. However, this can be configured via the VideoCore firmware's config.txt file. This patch hard-codes use of the mini UART in the RPi 3 port. If your system uses the PL011 UART for the console even on the RPi 3, please use the RPi 2 U-Boot port instead. A future change might determine which UART to use at run-time, thus allowing the RPi 2 and RPi 3 (32-bit) ports to be squashed together. The mini UART has some limitations. One externally visible issue in the BCM2837 integration is that the UART divides the SoC's "core clock" to generate the baud rate. The core clock is typically variable, and under control of the VideoCore firmware for thermal management reasons. If the VC FW does modify the core clock rate, UART communication will be corrupted since the baud rate will vary from the expected value. This was not an issue for the PL011 UART, since it is fed by a fixed 3MHz clock. To work around this, the VideoCore firmware can be told not to modify the SoC core clock. However, the only way this can happen and be thermally safe is to limit the core clock to a low/minimum frequency. This leaves performance on the table for use-cases that don't care about a UART console. Consequently, use of the mini UART console must be explicitly requested by entering the following line into config.txt: enable_uart=1 A recent version of the VC firmware is required to ensure that the mini UART is fully and correctly initialized by the VC FW; at least firmware.git 046effa13ebc "firmware: arm_loader: emmc clock depends on core clock See: https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/issues/572". Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2016-03-25 04:15:20 +00:00
This option creates a build targeting the ARMv7/AArch32 ISA.
select BCM2837_32B
rpi: BCM2837 and Raspberry Pi 3 32-bit support The Raspberry Pi 3 contains a BCM2837 SoC. The BCM2837 is a BCM2836 with the CPU complex swapped out for a quad-core ARMv8. This can operate in 32- or 64-bit mode. 32-bit mode is the current default selected by the VideoCore firmware on the Raspberry Pi 3. This patch adds a 32-bit port of U-Boot for the Raspberry Pi 3. >From U-Boot's perspective, the only delta between the RPi 2 and RPi 3 is a change in usage of the SoC UARTs. On all previous Pis, the PL011 was the only UART in use. The Raspberry Pi 3 adds a Bluetooth module which uses a UART to connect to the SoC. By default, the PL011 is used for this purpose since it has larger FIFOs than the other "mini" UART. However, this can be configured via the VideoCore firmware's config.txt file. This patch hard-codes use of the mini UART in the RPi 3 port. If your system uses the PL011 UART for the console even on the RPi 3, please use the RPi 2 U-Boot port instead. A future change might determine which UART to use at run-time, thus allowing the RPi 2 and RPi 3 (32-bit) ports to be squashed together. The mini UART has some limitations. One externally visible issue in the BCM2837 integration is that the UART divides the SoC's "core clock" to generate the baud rate. The core clock is typically variable, and under control of the VideoCore firmware for thermal management reasons. If the VC FW does modify the core clock rate, UART communication will be corrupted since the baud rate will vary from the expected value. This was not an issue for the PL011 UART, since it is fed by a fixed 3MHz clock. To work around this, the VideoCore firmware can be told not to modify the SoC core clock. However, the only way this can happen and be thermally safe is to limit the core clock to a low/minimum frequency. This leaves performance on the table for use-cases that don't care about a UART console. Consequently, use of the mini UART console must be explicitly requested by entering the following line into config.txt: enable_uart=1 A recent version of the VC firmware is required to ensure that the mini UART is fully and correctly initialized by the VC FW; at least firmware.git 046effa13ebc "firmware: arm_loader: emmc clock depends on core clock See: https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/issues/572". Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2016-03-25 04:15:20 +00:00
ARM: add Raspberry Pi 3 64-bit config On all Pis so far, the VC FW provides a short stub to set up the ARM CPU before entering the kernel (a/k/a U-Boot for us). This feature is not currently supported by the VC FW when booting in 64-bit mode. However, this feature will likely appear in the near future, and this U-Boot port assumes that such a feature is in place. Without that feature, or a temporary workaround described below, U-Boot will not boot. Once the VC FW does provide the ARM stub, u-boot.bin built for rpi_3 can be used drectly as kernel7.img, in the same way as any other RPi port. The following config.txt is required: # Fix mini UART input frequency, and setup/enable up the UART. # Without this option, U-Boot will not boot, even if you don't care # about the serial console. This option will always be required for # all RPi3 use-cases, unless the PL011 UART is used, which is not # yet supported by rpi_3* builds of U-Boot. enable_uart=1 # Boot in AArch64 (64-bit) mode. # It is possible that a future VC FW will remove the need for this # option, instead auto-setting 32-/64-bit mode based on the "kernel" # filename present on the SD card. arm_control=0x200 Prior to the VC FW providing the ARM boot stub, you can use the following steps to build an equivalent stub into the U-Boot binary: git clone https://github.com/swarren/rpi-3-aarch64-demo.git \ ../rpi-3-aarch64-demo (cd ../rpi-3-aarch64-demo && ./build.sh) Build U-Boot for rpi_3 in the usual way cat ../rpi-3-aarch64-demo/armstub64.bin u-boot.bin > u-boot.bin.stubbed Use u-boot.bin.stubbed as kernel7.img on the Pi SD card. In this case, the following additional entries are required in config.txt: # Tell the FW to load the kernel image at address 0, the reset vector. kernel_old=1 Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2016-04-02 03:14:15 +00:00
config TARGET_RPI_3
bool "Raspberry Pi 3 64-bit build"
help
Support for all BCM2837-based Raspberry Pi variants, such as
the RPi 3 model B, in AArch64 (64-bit) mode.
This option assumes the VideoCore firmware is configured to use the
mini UART (rather than PL011) for the serial console. This is the
default on the RPi 3. To enable the UART console, the following non-
default option must be present in config.txt: enable_uart=1. This is
required for U-Boot to operate correctly, even if you only care
about the HDMI/usbkbd console.
At the time of writing, the VC FW requires a non-default option in
config.txt to request the ARM CPU boot in 64-bit mode:
arm_control=0x200
The VC FW typically provides ARM "stub" code to set up the CPU and
quiesce secondary SMP CPUs. This is not currently true in 64-bit
mode. In order to boot U-Boot before the VC FW is enhanced, please
see the commit description for the commit which added RPi3 support
for a workaround. Since the instructions are temporary, they are not
duplicated here. The VC FW enhancement is tracked in
https://github.com/raspberrypi/firmware/issues/579.
This option creates a build targeting the ARMv8/AArch64 ISA.
select BCM2837_64B
ARM: add Raspberry Pi 3 64-bit config On all Pis so far, the VC FW provides a short stub to set up the ARM CPU before entering the kernel (a/k/a U-Boot for us). This feature is not currently supported by the VC FW when booting in 64-bit mode. However, this feature will likely appear in the near future, and this U-Boot port assumes that such a feature is in place. Without that feature, or a temporary workaround described below, U-Boot will not boot. Once the VC FW does provide the ARM stub, u-boot.bin built for rpi_3 can be used drectly as kernel7.img, in the same way as any other RPi port. The following config.txt is required: # Fix mini UART input frequency, and setup/enable up the UART. # Without this option, U-Boot will not boot, even if you don't care # about the serial console. This option will always be required for # all RPi3 use-cases, unless the PL011 UART is used, which is not # yet supported by rpi_3* builds of U-Boot. enable_uart=1 # Boot in AArch64 (64-bit) mode. # It is possible that a future VC FW will remove the need for this # option, instead auto-setting 32-/64-bit mode based on the "kernel" # filename present on the SD card. arm_control=0x200 Prior to the VC FW providing the ARM boot stub, you can use the following steps to build an equivalent stub into the U-Boot binary: git clone https://github.com/swarren/rpi-3-aarch64-demo.git \ ../rpi-3-aarch64-demo (cd ../rpi-3-aarch64-demo && ./build.sh) Build U-Boot for rpi_3 in the usual way cat ../rpi-3-aarch64-demo/armstub64.bin u-boot.bin > u-boot.bin.stubbed Use u-boot.bin.stubbed as kernel7.img on the Pi SD card. In this case, the following additional entries are required in config.txt: # Tell the FW to load the kernel image at address 0, the reset vector. kernel_old=1 Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@wwwdotorg.org> Reviewed-by: Tom Rini <trini@konsulko.com>
2016-04-02 03:14:15 +00:00
endchoice
config SYS_BOARD
default "rpi"
config SYS_VENDOR
default "raspberrypi"
config SYS_SOC
default "bcm283x"
config SYS_CONFIG_NAME
default "rpi"
endmenu