Request review of device tree documentation
Frank Rowand
frank.rowand at am.sony.com
Fri Jun 18 18:12:03 EDT 2010
On 06/15/10 23:52, M. Warner Losh wrote:
> In message: <4C187013.5000400 at firmworks.com>
> Mitch Bradley <wmb at firmworks.com> writes:
> : Mike Rapoport wrote:
> : > Mitch Bradley wrote:
> : >> Mike Rapoport wrote:
> : >>> Mitch Bradley wrote:
> : >>>
> : >>>> The second topic is the hypothetical use of OFW as a HAL. That will
> : >>>> not happen for several reasons. The opposition to the idea is
> : >>>> widespread and deeply held, and there are good arguments to support
> : >>>> that opposition. Furthermore, the economic conditions necessary for
> : >>>> the creation of such a HAL do not exist in the ARM world, nor indeed
> : >>>> in the Linux world in general. (The necessary condition is the
> : >>>> ability for one company to impose a substantial change by fiat -
> : >>>> essentially a monopoly position.)
> : >>>>
> : >>>> Shall we agree, then, that any further discussion of the HAL issue is
> : >>>> "just for fun", and that nobody needs to feel threatened that it would
> : >>>> actually happen?
> : >>>
> : >>> I've recently worked with vendor versions of U-Boot for advanced ARM
> : >>> SoCs. There is already *huge* chunk of HAL code in those versions. And
> : >>> if there would be possibility to have callbacks into the firmware
> : >>> these chunks would only grow, IMHO.
> : >>
> : >> How can there be HAL code in U-Boot unless there is already the
> : >> possibility to have callbacks into the firmware?
> : >
> : > Currently it aims to abstract hardware from U-Boot and reuse the same
> : > HW access code across operating systems and bootloaders. If this code
> : > would have callbacks I afraid the things would became worse.
> :
> : The only way I can understand what you said is if I assume that by
> : "callback", you mean the following sequence:
> :
> : a) U-boot loads and executes the OS, providing to the OS the address
> : of some HW access routines that it can use
> : b) The OS calls one of those HW access routines
> : c) During the execution of that HW access routine, that routine calls
> : "back" into the OS, before returning. So a call into the OS is nested
> : inside a call into U-boot resident code.
> :
> : If that is what you are worried about, it is not what we were
> : discussing. We were discussing - and many people were against - step
> : (b).
> :
> : Are you saying that step (b) - the OS calling into routines provided
> : by U-Boot - is already the status quo?
>
> I don't know about status quo, but it certainly is supported. There's
> an option to allow for a secondary boot loader, such as FreeBSD's
> /boot/loader, to call back into uboot to read things from
> flash/disk/whatever, do network access, etc. Not so much a HAL, but
> more of an echo of the functionality provided by PC BIOS functions.
> /boot/loader can be viewed as a mini OS that calls back into uboot to
> have it do things. Once /boot/loader loads FreeBSD, btw, it and uboot
> disappear from the scene, so this isn't exactly a HAL situation...
Just for reference, there is a patch request on LKML to enable calling
openfirmware from the kernel on OLPC:
http://lkml.org/lkml/2010/6/18/336
-Frank
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