u-boot/include/init.h
Simon Glass 91caa3bb89 event: Use an event to replace last_stage_init()
Add a new event which handles this function. Convert existing use of
the function to use the new event instead.

Make sure that EVENT is enabled by affected boards, by selecting it from
the LAST_STAGE_INIT option. For x86, enable it by default since all boards
need it.

For controlcenterdc, inline the get_tpm() function and make sure the event
is not built in SPL.

Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
2023-08-31 13:16:55 -04:00

373 lines
10 KiB
C

/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ */
/*
* (C) Copyright 2000-2009
* Wolfgang Denk, DENX Software Engineering, wd@denx.de.
*
* Copy the startup prototype, previously defined in common.h
* Copyright (C) 2018, STMicroelectronics - All Rights Reserved
*/
#ifndef __INIT_H_
#define __INIT_H_ 1
#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ /* put C only stuff in this section */
#include <linux/types.h>
/*
* In case of the EFI app the UEFI firmware provides the low-level
* initialisation.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_EFI
#define ll_boot_init() false
#else
#include <asm/global_data.h>
#define ll_boot_init() (!(gd->flags & GD_FLG_SKIP_LL_INIT))
#endif
/*
* Function Prototypes
*/
/* common/board_f.c */
void board_init_f(ulong dummy);
/**
* arch_cpu_init() - basic cpu-dependent setup for an architecture
*
* This is called after early malloc is available. It should handle any
* CPU- or SoC- specific init needed to continue the init sequence. See
* board_f.c for where it is called. If this is not provided, a default
* version (which does nothing) will be used.
*
* Return: 0 on success, otherwise error
*/
int arch_cpu_init(void);
/**
* mach_cpu_init() - SoC/machine dependent CPU setup
*
* This is called after arch_cpu_init(). It should handle any
* SoC or machine specific init needed to continue the init sequence. See
* board_f.c for where it is called. If this is not provided, a default
* version (which does nothing) will be used.
*
* Return: 0 on success, otherwise error
*/
int mach_cpu_init(void);
/**
* arch_fsp_init() - perform post-relocation firmware support package init
*
* Where U-Boot relies on binary blobs to handle part of the system init, this
* function can be used to set up the blobs. This is used on some Intel
* platforms.
*
* Return: 0
*/
int arch_fsp_init_r(void);
int dram_init(void);
/**
* dram_init_banksize() - Set up DRAM bank sizes
*
* This can be implemented by boards to set up the DRAM bank information in
* gd->bd->bi_dram(). It is called just before relocation, after dram_init()
* is called.
*
* If this is not provided, a default implementation will try to set up a
* single bank. It will do this if CONFIG_NR_DRAM_BANKS and
* CFG_SYS_SDRAM_BASE are set. The bank will have a start address of
* CFG_SYS_SDRAM_BASE and the size will be determined by a call to
* get_effective_memsize().
*
* Return: 0 if OK, -ve on error
*/
int dram_init_banksize(void);
long get_ram_size(long *base, long size);
phys_size_t get_effective_memsize(void);
int testdram(void);
/**
* arch_setup_dest_addr() - Fix up initial reloc address
*
* This is called in generic board init sequence in common/board_f.c at the end
* of the setup_dest_addr() initcall. Each architecture could provide this
* function to make adjustments to the initial reloc address.
*
* If an implementation is not provided, it will just be a nop stub.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int arch_setup_dest_addr(void);
/**
* arch_reserve_stacks() - Reserve all necessary stacks
*
* This is used in generic board init sequence in common/board_f.c. Each
* architecture could provide this function to tailor the required stacks.
*
* On entry gd->start_addr_sp is pointing to the suggested top of the stack.
* The callee ensures gd->start_add_sp is 16-byte aligned, so architectures
* require only this can leave it untouched.
*
* On exit gd->start_addr_sp and gd->irq_sp should be set to the respective
* positions of the stack. The stack pointer(s) will be set to this later.
* gd->irq_sp is only required, if the architecture needs it.
*
* Return: 0 if no error
*/
int arch_reserve_stacks(void);
/**
* arch_reserve_mmu() - Reserve memory for MMU TLB table
*
* Architecture-specific routine for reserving memory for the MMU TLB table.
* This is used in generic board init sequence in common/board_f.c.
*
* If an implementation is not provided, it will just be a nop stub.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int arch_reserve_mmu(void);
/**
* arch_setup_bdinfo() - Architecture dependent boardinfo setup
*
* Architecture-specific routine for populating various boardinfo fields of
* gd->bd. It is called during the generic board init sequence.
*
* If an implementation is not provided, it will just be a nop stub.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int arch_setup_bdinfo(void);
/**
* setup_bdinfo() - Generic boardinfo setup
*
* Routine for populating various generic boardinfo fields of
* gd->bd. It is called during the generic board init sequence.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int setup_bdinfo(void);
#if defined(CONFIG_SAVE_PREV_BL_INITRAMFS_START_ADDR) || \
defined(CONFIG_SAVE_PREV_BL_FDT_ADDR)
/**
* save_prev_bl_data - Save prev bl data in env vars.
*
* When u-boot is chain-loaded, save previous bootloader data,
* like initramfs address to environment variables.
*
* Return: 0 if ok; -ENODATA on error
*/
int save_prev_bl_data(void);
#endif
/**
* cpu_secondary_init_r() - CPU-specific secondary initialization
*
* After non-volatile devices, environment and cpu code are setup, have
* another round to deal with any initialization that might require
* full access to the environment or loading of some image (firmware)
* from a non-volatile device.
*
* It is called during the generic post-relocation init sequence.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int cpu_secondary_init_r(void);
/**
* pci_ep_init() - Initialize pci endpoint devices
*
* It is called during the generic post-relocation init sequence.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int pci_ep_init(void);
/**
* pci_init() - Enumerate pci devices
*
* It is called during the generic post-relocation init sequence to enumerate
* pci buses. This is needed, for instance, in the case of DM PCI-based
* Ethernet devices, which will not be detected without having the enumeration
* performed earlier.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int pci_init(void);
/**
* init_cache_f_r() - Turn on the cache in preparation for relocation
*
* Return: 0 if OK, -ve on error
*/
int init_cache_f_r(void);
#if !CONFIG_IS_ENABLED(CPU)
/**
* print_cpuinfo() - Display information about the CPU
*
* Return: 0 if OK, -ve on error
*/
int print_cpuinfo(void);
#endif
int timer_init(void);
#if defined(CONFIG_DTB_RESELECT)
int embedded_dtb_select(void);
#endif
/* common/init/board_init.c */
extern ulong monitor_flash_len;
/**
* ulong board_init_f_alloc_reserve - allocate reserved area
* @top: top of the reserve area, growing down.
*
* This function is called by each architecture very early in the start-up
* code to allow the C runtime to reserve space on the stack for writable
* 'globals' such as GD and the malloc arena.
*
* Return: bottom of reserved area
*/
ulong board_init_f_alloc_reserve(ulong top);
/**
* board_init_f_init_reserve - initialize the reserved area(s)
* @base: top from which reservation was done
*
* This function is called once the C runtime has allocated the reserved
* area on the stack. It must initialize the GD at the base of that area.
*/
void board_init_f_init_reserve(ulong base);
struct global_data;
/**
* arch_setup_gd() - Set up the global_data pointer
* @gd_ptr: Pointer to global data
*
* This pointer is special in some architectures and cannot easily be assigned
* to. For example on x86 it is implemented by adding a specific record to its
* Global Descriptor Table! So we we provide a function to carry out this task.
* For most architectures this can simply be:
*
* gd = gd_ptr;
*/
void arch_setup_gd(struct global_data *gd_ptr);
/* common/board_r.c */
void board_init_r(struct global_data *id, ulong dest_addr)
__attribute__ ((noreturn));
int cpu_init_r(void);
int mac_read_from_eeprom(void);
int set_cpu_clk_info(void);
int update_flash_size(int flash_size);
int arch_early_init_r(void);
int misc_init_r(void);
/* common/board_info.c */
int checkboard(void);
int show_board_info(void);
/**
* board_get_usable_ram_top() - get uppermost address for U-Boot relocation
*
* Some systems have reserved memory areas in high memory. By implementing this
* function boards can indicate the highest address value to be used when
* relocating U-Boot. The returned address is exclusive (i.e. 1 byte above the
* last usable address).
*
* Due to overflow on systems with 32bit phys_addr_t a value 0 is used instead
* of 4GiB.
*
* @total_size: monitor length in bytes (size of U-Boot code)
* Return: uppermost address for U-Boot relocation
*/
phys_addr_t board_get_usable_ram_top(phys_size_t total_size);
int board_early_init_f(void);
/* manipulate the U-Boot fdt before its relocation */
int board_fix_fdt(void *rw_fdt_blob);
int board_late_init(void);
int board_postclk_init(void); /* after clocks/timebase, before env/serial */
int board_early_init_r(void);
/**
* arch_initr_trap() - Init traps
*
* Arch specific routine for initializing traps. It is called during the
* generic board init sequence, after relocation.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int arch_initr_trap(void);
/**
* init_addr_map()
*
* Initialize non-identity virtual-physical memory mappings for 32bit CPUs.
* It is called during the generic board init sequence, after relocation.
*
* Return: 0 if OK
*/
int init_addr_map(void);
/**
* main_loop() - Enter the main loop of U-Boot
*
* This normally runs the command line.
*/
void main_loop(void);
#if defined(CONFIG_ARM)
void relocate_code(ulong addr_moni);
#else
void relocate_code(ulong start_addr_sp, struct global_data *new_gd,
ulong relocaddr)
__attribute__ ((noreturn));
#endif
/* Print a numeric value (for use in arch_print_bdinfo()) */
void bdinfo_print_num_l(const char *name, ulong value);
void bdinfo_print_num_ll(const char *name, unsigned long long value);
/* Print a string value (for use in arch_print_bdinfo()) */
void bdinfo_print_str(const char *name, const char *str);
/* Print a clock speed in MHz */
void bdinfo_print_mhz(const char *name, unsigned long hz);
/**
* bdinfo_print_size - print size variables in bdinfo format
* @name: string to print before the size
* @size: size to print
*
* Helper function for displaying size variables as properly formatted bdinfo
* entries. The size is printed as "xxx Bytes", "xxx KiB", "xxx MiB",
* "xxx GiB", etc. as needed;
*
* For use in arch_print_bdinfo().
*/
void bdinfo_print_size(const char *name, uint64_t size);
/* Show arch-specific information for the 'bd' command */
void arch_print_bdinfo(void);
int do_bdinfo(struct cmd_tbl *cmdtp, int flag, int argc, char *const argv[]);
#endif /* __ASSEMBLY__ */
/* Put only stuff here that the assembler can digest */
#endif /* __INIT_H_ */