Update the L2 AUX CTRL settings for the SoCFPGA.
Enabling D and I prefetch bits helps improve SDRAM performance on the
platform.
Also, we need to enable bit 22 of the L2. By not having bit 22 set in the
PL310 Auxiliary Control register (shared attribute override enable) has the
side effect of transforming Normal Shared Non-cacheable reads into Cacheable
no-allocate reads.
Coherent DMA buffers in Linux always have a Cacheable alias via the
kernel linear mapping and the processor can speculatively load cache
lines into the PL310 controller. With bit 22 cleared, Non-cacheable
reads would unexpectedly hit such cache lines leading to buffer
corruption.
Signed-off-by: Dinh Nguyen <dinguyen@opensource.altera.com>
Having bit 22 cleared in the PL310 Auxiliary Control register (shared
attribute override enable) has the side effect of transforming Normal
Shared Non-cacheable reads into Cacheable no-allocate reads.
Coherent DMA buffers in Linux always have a Cacheable alias via the
kernel linear mapping and the processor can speculatively load cache
lines into the PL310 controller. With bit 22 cleared, Non-cacheable
reads would unexpectedly hit such cache lines leading to buffer
corruption.
This was inspired by a patch from Catalin Marinas [1] and also from recent
discussions in the linux-arm-kernel list [2] where Russell King and Rob Herring
suggested that bootloaders should initialize the cache.
[1] http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/2010-November/031810.html
[2] https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/2/20/199
Signed-off-by: Fabio Estevam <fabio.estevam@freescale.com>
Acked-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
PL310 is the L2$ controller from ARM used in many SoCs
including the Cortex-A9 based OMAP4430
Add support for some of the key PL310 operations
- Invalidate all
- Invalidate range
- Flush(clean & invalidate) all
- Flush range
Signed-off-by: Aneesh V <aneesh@ti.com>