[PATCH 1/9] ARM: ARMv7-M uses BE-8, not BE-32
Arnd Bergmann
arnd at arndb.de
Thu Feb 18 08:12:13 PST 2016
On Thursday 18 February 2016 11:06:08 Nicolas Pitre wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Feb 2016, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
>
> > When configuring the kernel for big-endian, we set either BE-8 or BE-32
> > based on the CPU architecture level. Until linux-4.4, we did not have
> > any ARMv7-M platform allowing big-endian builds, but now i.MX/Vybrid
> > is in that category, adn we get a build error because of this:
> >
> > arch/arm/kernel/module-plts.c: In function 'get_module_plt':
> > arch/arm/kernel/module-plts.c:60:46: error: implicit declaration of function '__opcode_to_mem_thumb32' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
> >
> > This comes down to picking the wrong default, ARMv7-M uses BE8
> > like ARMv7-A does. Changing the default gets the kernel to compile
> > and presumably works.
>
> Was it tested without BE8 when it was submitted upstream? I don't think
> you can switch this freely on a given hardware platform and expect it to
> still work.
>
>
mach-imx contains a number of different SoCs, and one SoC was recently
tested successfully after a number of endianess bugs got fixed. This was
an i.mx6 using a Cortex-A9 core, but we are now also able to build
vybrid vf610 big-endian based on that selection. This SoC supports
Linux running either on its Cortex-A5 or its Cortex-M3 (or M4?) cores.
I am rather sure nobody has ever run Linux in big-endian mode on the
Cortex-M platform, specifically because it was always wrong and could
not be enabled in Kconfig.
Arnd
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