[PATCH 5/8] of: Add Tegra124 EMC bindings
Andrew Bresticker
abrestic at chromium.org
Tue Jul 22 10:22:27 PDT 2014
On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 9:45 AM, Stephen Warren <swarren at wwwdotorg.org> wrote:
>
> Does the bootloader adjust the DT that's passed to the kernel so that
> only the relevant single set of EMC timings is contained in the DT?
No, the DT contains all possible EMC timings for that board.
> On a system where the boot ROM initializes RAM, and where the HW design
> might have multiple SDRAM configuration, here's what usually happens:
>
> a) The BCT contains N sets of SDRAM configurations.
>
> b) The boot ROM reads the SDRAM strapping bits, and uses them to pick
> the correct SDRAM configuration from the N sets in the BCT.
>
> c) The kernel DT has N sets of SDRAM configurations.
>
> d) The kernel reads the SDRAM strapping bits, and uses them to pick the
> correct SDRAM configuration from the N sets in the DT.
>
> On the ChromeOS boards (so (a) and (b) above are irrelevant) where N is
> too large to fit into APBDEV_PMC_STRAPPING_OPT_A_0[7:4], (c) and (d)
> won't work. I assume the kernel DT therefore must be adjusted to only
> contain the single SDRAM configuration that is relevant for the current HW?
>
> (isn't STRAPPING_OPT_A split into 2 2-bit fields; 2 bits for SDRAM index
> and 2 bits for boot flash index, so max N is quite small?)
Right, there are normally only 2 SDRAM strapping bits available.
ChromeOS gets around this by having 4 identical boot device entries in
the BCT, so all possible values of STRAPPING_OPT_A[7:6] map to the
same boot device. This allows us to use all 4 strapping bits in
coreboot to pick the SDRAM configuration.
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