| 5b886432 | 23-Apr-2018 |
Derek Basehore <dbasehore@chromium.org> |
rockchip/rk3399: Add watchdog support in pmusram
To catch early hangs in resume, this sets up the watchdog before anything else in the pmusram code (ignoring setting up the stack...). This uses hard
rockchip/rk3399: Add watchdog support in pmusram
To catch early hangs in resume, this sets up the watchdog before anything else in the pmusram code (ignoring setting up the stack...). This uses hard coded settings for the watchdog until the proper watchdog restore later on in the firmware/kernel.
This also restores the old watchdog register values before the PLLs are restored to make sure we don't temporarily switch over to a 1/3s timeout on the watchdog when the pclk_wdt goes from 4MHz to 100MHz.
Change-Id: I8f7652089a88783271b17482117b4609330abe80 Signed-off-by: Derek Basehore <dbasehore@chromium.org>
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| ff4735cf | 20-Apr-2018 |
Lin Huang <hl@rock-chips.com> |
rockchip/rk3399: Split M0 binary into two
All the m0 code run in SRAM before, but we need to watch PMU_POWER_ST when SOC enter into FSM, and SRAM will shutdown during this time, so this code need ru
rockchip/rk3399: Split M0 binary into two
All the m0 code run in SRAM before, but we need to watch PMU_POWER_ST when SOC enter into FSM, and SRAM will shutdown during this time, so this code need run in PMUSRAM. But PMUSRAM only 8K space, we can not put all the m0 binary into PMUSRAM, Split the M0 binary into two, dram part still run in SRAM, and suspend part run in PMUSRAM.
Change-Id: Ie08bdf3e2b8838f12b9297fe60ab0aad219684b1 Signed-off-by: Lin Huang <hl@rock-chips.com>
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| 0a2d5b43 | 02-Feb-2018 |
Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com> |
types: use int-ll64 for both aarch32 and aarch64
Since commit 031dbb122472 ("AArch32: Add essential Arch helpers"), it is difficult to use consistent format strings for printf() family between aarch
types: use int-ll64 for both aarch32 and aarch64
Since commit 031dbb122472 ("AArch32: Add essential Arch helpers"), it is difficult to use consistent format strings for printf() family between aarch32 and aarch64.
For example, uint64_t is defined as 'unsigned long long' for aarch32 and as 'unsigned long' for aarch64. Likewise, uintptr_t is defined as 'unsigned int' for aarch32, and as 'unsigned long' for aarch64.
A problem typically arises when you use printf() in common code.
One solution could be, to cast the arguments to a type long enough for both architectures. For example, if 'val' is uint64_t type, like this:
printf("val = %llx\n", (unsigned long long)val);
Or, somebody may suggest to use a macro provided by <inttypes.h>, like this:
printf("val = %" PRIx64 "\n", val);
But, both would make the code ugly.
The solution adopted in Linux kernel is to use the same typedefs for all architectures. The fixed integer types in the kernel-space have been unified into int-ll64, like follows:
typedef signed char int8_t; typedef unsigned char uint8_t;
typedef signed short int16_t; typedef unsigned short uint16_t;
typedef signed int int32_t; typedef unsigned int uint32_t;
typedef signed long long int64_t; typedef unsigned long long uint64_t;
[ Linux commit: 0c79a8e29b5fcbcbfd611daf9d500cfad8370fcf ]
This gets along with the codebase shared between 32 bit and 64 bit, with the data model called ILP32, LP64, respectively.
The width for primitive types is defined as follows:
ILP32 LP64 int 32 32 long 32 64 long long 64 64 pointer 32 64
'long long' is 64 bit for both, so it is used for defining uint64_t. 'long' has the same width as pointer, so for uintptr_t.
We still need an ifdef conditional for (s)size_t.
All 64 bit architectures use "unsigned long" size_t, and most 32 bit architectures use "unsigned int" size_t. H8/300, S/390 are known as exceptions; they use "unsigned long" size_t despite their architecture is 32 bit.
One idea for simplification might be to define size_t as 'unsigned long' across architectures, then forbid the use of "%z" string format. However, this would cause a distortion between size_t and sizeof() operator. We have unknowledge about the native type of sizeof(), so we need a guess of it anyway. I want the following formula to always return 1:
__builtin_types_compatible_p(size_t, typeof(sizeof(int)))
Fortunately, ARM is probably a majority case. As far as I know, all 32 bit ARM compilers use "unsigned int" size_t.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
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