From ad4f54ea86bd8a1836bd270566374927fe9c5b08 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Simon Glass Date: Sun, 30 Aug 2015 19:19:36 -0600 Subject: arm: Remove palmtreo680 board This board has not been converted to generic board by the deadline. Remove it. Signed-off-by: Simon Glass --- board/palmtreo680/Kconfig | 9 - board/palmtreo680/MAINTAINERS | 6 - board/palmtreo680/Makefile | 9 - board/palmtreo680/README | 563 ---------------------------------------- board/palmtreo680/palmtreo680.c | 148 ----------- 5 files changed, 735 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 board/palmtreo680/Kconfig delete mode 100644 board/palmtreo680/MAINTAINERS delete mode 100644 board/palmtreo680/Makefile delete mode 100644 board/palmtreo680/README delete mode 100644 board/palmtreo680/palmtreo680.c (limited to 'board') diff --git a/board/palmtreo680/Kconfig b/board/palmtreo680/Kconfig deleted file mode 100644 index b5fdb9a361..0000000000 --- a/board/palmtreo680/Kconfig +++ /dev/null @@ -1,9 +0,0 @@ -if TARGET_PALMTREO680 - -config SYS_BOARD - default "palmtreo680" - -config SYS_CONFIG_NAME - default "palmtreo680" - -endif diff --git a/board/palmtreo680/MAINTAINERS b/board/palmtreo680/MAINTAINERS deleted file mode 100644 index b0ff9d0283..0000000000 --- a/board/palmtreo680/MAINTAINERS +++ /dev/null @@ -1,6 +0,0 @@ -PALMTREO680 BOARD -#M: Mike Dunn -S: Orphan (since 2014-06) -F: board/palmtreo680/ -F: include/configs/palmtreo680.h -F: configs/palmtreo680_defconfig diff --git a/board/palmtreo680/Makefile b/board/palmtreo680/Makefile deleted file mode 100644 index 4f79e4bf11..0000000000 --- a/board/palmtreo680/Makefile +++ /dev/null @@ -1,9 +0,0 @@ -# -# Palm Treo680 Support -# -# Copyright (C) 2013 Mike Dunn -# -# This file is released under the terms of GPL v2 and any later version. -# See the file COPYING in the root directory of the source tree for details. - -obj-y := palmtreo680.o diff --git a/board/palmtreo680/README b/board/palmtreo680/README deleted file mode 100644 index c8799c6ab1..0000000000 --- a/board/palmtreo680/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,563 +0,0 @@ - -README for the Palm Treo 680. - -Copyright (C) 2013 Mike Dunn - -You may reproduce the contents of this file entirely or in part, but please -credit me by name if you do. Thanks. - - -Intro -===== - -Yes, you can program u-boot onto the flash of your Palm Treo 680 so that u-boot -(then Linux, Android, ...) runs at power-up. This document describes how, and -gives some implementation details on this port of u-boot and describes how the -Treo 680 boots from reset. - -But first, I probably don't need to tell you that after doing this, your phone -will no longer run PalmOS. You *may* be able to later restore your phone to its -original state by creating a backup image of the flash before writing u-boot -(details below), but this is not heavily tested and should not be relied upon. -There is also the possibility that something may go wrong during the process of -programming u-boot, leaving you with a bricked phone. If you follow these -instructions carefully this chance will be minimized, but I do not recommend -that you program u-boot onto a phone that you can not afford to lose, and -certainly not one that contains important data that is not backed up elsewhere. -I AM NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR THE LOSS OF YOUR PHONE. DO THIS AT YOUR OWN RISK. -Having said that, feel free to send me a note cursing me out if something does -go wrong, but please tell me what happened exactly. For that matter, I'd love -to hear from you if you succeed. - - -Details on the SPL -================== - -The docg4 features a 2k region at the start of its address space that interfaces -to the system bus like a NOR flash. This allows the docg4 to function as a boot -ROM. The Treo 680 uses this feature. The contents of this 2k region are -write-protected and can not be reprogrammed. Fortunately, the code it contains -does what we need to do, at least partially. After some essential hardware -initialization (like the SDRAM controller), it runs an IPL (initial program -loader) that copies 128K (no more, no less) from flash to a fixed address in -SDRAM (0xa1700000) and jumps to it. 128K is too small for u-boot, so we use it -to load a u-boot secondary program loader (SPL). But since our SPL only -occupies a little over 1k, we can economize on flash usage by having the IPL -load a portion of u-boot proper as well. We let the IPL load the first 128k of -a concatenated spl + u-boot image, and because the SPL is placed before u-boot -proper, the IPL jumps to the SPL, which copies the portion of u-boot that the -IPL has already loaded to its correct SDRAM address, and then loads the -remainder of u-boot and jumps to it. - - -The docg4's "reliable mode" -=========================== - -This is a special mode of operation of the docg4's integrated controller whereby -consecutive pairs of 2k regions are used in parallel (in some fashion) to store -2k of data. In other words, the normal capacity is halved, but the data -integrity is improved. In this mode, the data is read or written from pages in -even-numbered 2k regions (regions starting at 0x000, 0x1000, 0x2000, ...). The -odd-numbered 2k regions (regions starting at 0x800, 0x1800, 0x2800, ...) are -transparently used in parallel. In reliable mode, the odd-numbered 2k regions -are not meant to be read or written directly. - -Reliable mode is used by the IPL because there is not enough space in its 2k -footprint to implement the BCH ecc algorithm. Data that is read while reliable -mode is enabled must have been written in reliable mode, or the read fails. -However, data written in reliable mode can also be read in normal mode (just not -as reliably), but only from the even-numbered 2k regions; the odd-numbered 2k -regions appear to contain junk, and will generate ecc errors. When the IPL and -SPL read from flash, the odd-numbered 2k regions are explicitly skipped. The -same is true for the flash_u-boot utility when it writes the u-boot image in -reliable mode. - -The docg4 Linux driver supports writing in reliable mode (it is enabled by the -module parameter), but not reading. However, the u-boot docg4_spl driver does -read in reliable mode, in the same fashion as the IPL. - - -Details on the IPL and its data format -====================================== - -Starting from block 5 and counting upward, the IPL will search for and load the -first two blocks it finds that contain a magic number in the oob of the first -page of the block. The contents are loaded to SDRAM starting at address -0xa1700000. After two blocks have been loaded, it jumps to 0xa1700000. The -number of blocks loaded and the load address in SDRAM are hard-coded; only the -flash offset of the blocks can vary at run-time (based on the presence of the -magic number). - -In addition to using the docg4's reliable mode, the IPL expects each 512 byte -page to be written redundantly in the subsequent page. The hardware is capable -of detecting bit errors (but not correcting them), and if a bit error is -detected when a page is read, the page contents are discarded and the subsequent -page is read. - -Reliable mode reduces the capacity of a block by half, and the redundant pages -reduce it by half again. As a result, the normal 256k capacity of a block is -reduced to 64k for the purposes of the IPL/SPL. - -For the sake of simplicity and uniformity, the u-boot SPL mimics the operation -of the IPL, and expects the image to be stored in the same format. - - -Instructions on Programming u-boot to flash -=========================================== - -To program u-boot to your flash, you will need to boot the Linux kernel on your -phone using a PalmOS bootloader such as cocoboot. The details of building and -running Linux on your Treo (cross-compiling, creating a root filesystem, -configuring the kernel, etc) are beyond the scope of this document. The -remainder of this document describes in detail how to program u-boot to the -flash using Linux running on the Treo. - - -Hardware Prerequisites -====================== - -A Palm Treo 680: - (dugh) - -A Palm usb cable: - You'll need this to establish a usbtty console connection to u-boot from a - desktop PC. Currently there is no support in u-boot for the pxa27x keypad - (coming soon), so a serial link must be used for the console. - These cables are still widely available if you don't already have one. - -A Linux desktop PC. - You may be able to use Windows for the u-boot console if you have a usb driver - that is compatible with the Linux usbserial driver, but for programming u-boot - to flash, you'll really want to use a Linux PC. - - -Treo-side Software Prerequisites -================================ - -Linux bootloader for PalmOS: - - Cocoboot is the only one I'm aware of. If you don't already have this, you - can download it from - https://download.enlightenment.org/misc/Illume/Treo-650/2008-11-13/sdcard-base.tar.gz - which is a compressed tar archive of the contents of an sd card containing - cocoboot. Use mkdosfs to create a fat16 filesystem on the first primary - partition of the card, mount the partition, and extract the tar file to it. - You will probably need to edit the cocoboot.conf file to customize the - parameters passed to the kernel. - - -Linux kernel: - - The kernel on the Treo 680 is still a little rough around the edges, and the - official kernel frequently breaks on the Treo :( A development kernel - specifically for the Treo 680 can be found on github: - http://github.com/mike-dunn/linux-treo680 - The master branch of this tree has been tested on the Treo, and I recommend - using this kernel for programming u-boot. As of this writing, there may be a - bug in the docg4 nand flash driver that sometimes causes block erasures to - fail. This has been fixed in the above tree. - - If you choose to use the official kernel, it must contain the docg4 driver that - includes the reliable_mode module parameter. This was a later enhancement to - the driver, and was merged to the kernel as of v3.8. Do not try to use an - earlier kernel that contains the docg4 driver without support for writing in - reliable mode. If you try to program u-boot to flash with the docg4 driver - loaded without the reliable_mode parameter enabled, you *will* brick your - phone! - - For the purpose of programming u-boot to flash, the following options must be - enabled in the Treo kernel's .config: - - CONFIG_MTD=y - CONFIG_MTD_CMDLINE_PARTS=y - CONFIG_MTD_CHAR=y - CONFIG_MTD_NAND_DOCG4=m - - Note that the docg4 nand driver is configured as a module, because we will - want to load and unload it with reliable_mode enabled or disabled as needed. - - You will also need to specify mtd partitions on the kernel command line. In - the instructions that follow, we will assume that the flash blocks to which - u-boot will be programmed are defined by the second partition on the device. - The u-boot config file (include/configs/palmtreo680.h) places the u-boot image - at the start of block 6 (offset 0x180000), which is the first writable - (non-protected) block on the flash (this is also where the PalmOS SPL starts). - The u-boot image occupies four blocks, so to create the u-boot partition, pass - this command line to the kernel: - mtdparts=Msys_Diskonchip_G4:1536k(protected_part)ro,1024k(bootloader_part),-(filesys_part) - This will create three partitions: - protected_part: the first six blocks, which are read-only - bootloader_part: the next four blocks, for the u-boot image - filesys_part: the remainder of the device - The mtdchar kernel device driver will use device nodes /dev/mtd0, /dev/mtd1, - and /dev/mtd2 for these partitions, respectively. Ensure that your root file - system at least has /dev/mtd1 if you are not running udev or mdev. - -Userspace Utilities: - - In addition to everything necessary to provide a useful userspace environment - (busybox is indispensable, of course), you will need the mtd-utils package on - your root filesystem. I use version 1.5.0 of mtd-utils, and I suggest you use - this version as well, or at leat a version very close to this one, as - mtd-utils has tended to be fluid. - - Note that busybox includes a version of mtd-utils. These are deficient and - should not be used. When you run one of these utilities (nanddump, etc), - ensure you are invoking the separate executable from mtd-utils, and not the - one built into busybox. I recommend that you configure busybox with its - mtd-utils disabled to avoid any possibility of confusion. - - You will also need to cross-compile the userspace Linux utility in - tools/palmtreo680/flash_u-boot.c, which we will run on the Treo to perform the - actual write of the u-boot image to flash. This utility links against libmtd - from the mtd-utils package. - - -Desktop PC-side Software Prerequisites -====================================== - -Terminal emulator application: - minicom, kermit, etc. - -Linux kernel: - Compiled with CONFIG_USB_SERIAL enabled. Build this as a module. - - -Recommended (Not directly related to u-boot) -============================================ - -Working directly on the Treo's tiny screen and keypad is difficult and -error-prone. I recommend that you log into the Linux kernel running on your -Treo from your desktop PC using ethernet over usb. The desktop's kernel must be -configured with CONFIG_USB_USBNET, CONFIG_USB_NET_CDCETHER, and -CONFIG_USB_NET_CDC_SUBSET. The Treo's kernel will need CONFIG_USB_ETH, and its -init script will need to start an ssh daemon like dropbear. Note that the usb0 -network interface will not appear on the desktop PC until the Treo kernel's usb -ethernet gadget driver has initialized. You must wait for this to occur (watch -the PC's kernel log) before you can assign usb0 an ip address and log in to the -Treo. If you also build the Treo's kernel with CONFIG_IP_PNP enabled, you can -pass its ip address on the kernel command line, and obviate the need to -initialize the network interface in your init script. - -Having the Palm usb cable connected to the host has the added benefit of keeping -power supplied to your Treo, reducing the drain on the battery. If something -goes wrong while you're programming u-boot to the flash, you will have lots of -time to correct it before the battery dies. - -I have encountered a situation where the kernel is sometimes unable to mount a -root filesystem on the mmc card due to the mmc controller not initializing in -time, (and CONFIG_MMC_UNSAFE_RESUME doesn't seem to help) so I recommend that -you build a minimal root filesystem into the kernel using the kernel's initramfs -feature (CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD). If you want your root filesystem on the mmc -card, your init script can mount and switch_root to the mmc card after a short -sleep. But keep in mind that in this case you won't be able to use an mmc card -to transfer files between your desktop and the Treo once Linux is running. -Another option for transfering files is to mount an nfs filesystem exported by -the desktop PC. For greatest convenience, you can export the root filesystem -itself from your desktop PC and switch_root to it in your init script. This -will work if your initramfs init script contains a loop that waits for you to -initialize the usb0 network interface on the desktop PC; e.g., loop while a ping -to the desktop PC returns an error. After the loop exits, do the nfs mount and -call switch_root. (You can not use the kernel nfsroot feature because the -network will not be up when the kernel expects it to be; i.e., not until you -configure the usb0 interface on the desktop.) Use the nfs 'nolock' option when -mounting to avoid the need to run a portmapper like rpcbind. - - -Preliminaries -============= - -Once Linux is running on your Treo, you may want to perform a few sanity checks -before programming u-boot. These checks will verify my assumptions regarding -all the Treo 680s out there, and also ensure that the flash and mtd-utils are -working correctly. If you are impatient and reckless, you may skip this -section, but see disclaimer at the top of this file! - -Load the docg4 driver: - - $ modprobe docg4 ignore_badblocks=1 reliable_mode=1 - -We tell the driver to use the docg4's "reliable mode" when writing because this -is the format required by the IPL, which runs from power-up and loads the first -portion of u-boot. We must ignore bad blocks because linux mtd uses out-of-band -(oob) bytes to mark bad blocks, which will cause the blocks written by PalmOS to -be misidentified as "bad" by libmtd. - -Check the kernel log to ensure that all's well: - - $ dmesg | tail - <... snip ...> - docg4 docg4: NAND device: 128MiB Diskonchip G4 detected - 3 cmdlinepart partitions found on MTD device Msys_Diskonchip_G4 - Creating 3 MTD partitions on "Msys_Diskonchip_G4": - 0x000000000000-0x000000180000 : "protected_part" - 0x000000180000-0x000000280000 : "bootloader_part" - 0x000000280000-0x000008000000 : "filesys_part" - -Ensure that the partition boundaries are as shown. (If no partitions are shown, -did you remember to pass them to the kernel on the command line?) We will write -u-boot to bootloader_part, which starts at offset 0x180000 (block 6) and spans 4 -256k blocks. This partition is accessed through the device node /dev/mtd1. - -The docg4 contains a read-only table that identifies blocks that were marked as -bad at the factory. This table is in the page at offset 0x2000, which is within -the partition protected_part (/dev/mtd0). There is a slight chance that one or -more of the four blocks that we will use for u-boot is listed in the table, so -use nanddump to inspect the table to see if this is the case: - - $ nanddump -p -l 512 -s 0x2000 -o /dev/mtd0 - ECC failed: 0 - ECC corrected: 0 - Number of bad blocks: 0 - Number of bbt blocks: 0 - Block size 262144, page size 512, OOB size 16 - Dumping data starting at 0x00002000 and ending at 0x00002200... - 0x00002000: ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff - <... snip ...> - -The format of the table is simple: one bit per block, with block numbers -increasing from left to right, starting with block 0 as the most significant bit -of the first byte. A bit will be clear if the corresponding block is bad. We -want to use blocks 6 throgh 9, so both of the two least significant bits of the -first byte must be set, as must the two most significant bits of the second -byte. If this is not true in your case (you are very unlucky), you should use -the first contiguous set of four good blocks after block 6, and adjust the -partition boundaries accordingly. You will also have to change the value of -CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_OFFS in include/configs/palmtreo680.h and recompile -u-boot. Because the two blocks loaded by the IPL do not have to be contiguous, -but our SPL expects them to be, you will need to erase any good blocks that are -at an offset prior to CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_OFFS, so that the IPL does not find -the magic number in oob and load it. Once you have done all this, the -instructions in this file still apply, except that the instructions below for -restoring the original PalmOS block contents may need to be modified. - -Next, use nanddump to verify that the PalmOS SPL is where we expect it to be. -The SPL can be identified by a magic number in the oob bytes of the first page -of each of the two blocks containing the SPL image. Pages are 512 bytes in -size, so to dump the first page, plus the oob: - - $ nanddump -p -l 512 -s 0 -o /dev/mtd1 - ECC failed: 0 - ECC corrected: 0 - Number of bad blocks: 0 - Number of bbt blocks: 0 - Block size 262144, page size 512, OOB size 16 - Dumping data starting at 0x00000000 and ending at 0x00000200... - 0x00000000: 0a 00 00 ea 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 - <... snip ...> - 0x000001f0: 13 4c 21 60 13 4d 2a 69 13 4b 29 69 89 1a 99 42 - OOB Data: 42 49 50 4f 30 30 30 10 3a e2 00 92 be a0 11 ff - -Verify that the first seven bytes of oob data match those in the above line. -(This is ASCII "BIPO000".) - -Do the same for the next block: - $ nanddump -p -l 512 -s 0x40000 -o /dev/mtd1 - -The first seven oob bytes in last line should read: - - OOB Data: 42 49 50 4f 30 30 31 81 db 8e 8f 46 07 9b 59 ff - -(This is ASCII "BIPO001".) - -For additional assurance, verify that the next block does *not* contain SPL -data. - - $ nanddump -p -l 512 -s 0x80000 -o /dev/mtd1 - -It doesn't matter what the oob contains, as long as the first four bytes are -*not* ASCII "BIPO". PalmOS should only be using two blocks for the SPL -(although we will need four for u-boot). - -If you want, you can back up the contents of bootloader_part to a file. You may -be able to restore it later, if desired (see "Restoring PalmOS" below). - - $ nanddump -l 0x100000 -s 0 -o -f bootloader_part.orig /dev/mtd1 - -nanddump will spew voluminous warnings about uncorrectable ecc errors. This is -a consequence of reading pages that were written in reliable mode, and is -expected (these should all occur on pages in odd-numbered 2k regions; i.e., -0x800, 0xa00, 0xc00, 0xe00, 0x1800, 0x1a00, ...). The size of the file -bootloader_part.orig should be 1081344, which is 2048 pages, each of size 512 -plus 16 oob bytes. If you are using initramfs for the root filesystem, don't -forget to copy the file to permanent storage, such as an mmc card. - -If all of the above went well, you can now program u-boot. - - -Programming u-boot -================== - -Our u-boot includes a small SPL that must be prepended to u-boot proper. From -the base u-boot source directory on your desktop PC: - - $ cat spl/u-boot-spl.bin u-boot.bin > u-boot-concat.bin - -cd to the tools/palmtreo680/ directory, and cross-compile flash_u-boot.c for the -Treo: - - $(CC) -o flash_u-boot $(CFLAGS) $(INCLUDEPATH) $(LIBPATH) flash_u-boot.c -lmtd - -Substitute variable values from your cross-compilation environment as -appropriate. Note that it links to libmtd from mtd-utils, and this must be -included in $(LIBPATH) and $(INCLUDEPATH). - -Transfer u-boot-concat.bin and the compiled flash_u-boot utility to the Treo's -root filesystem. On the Treo, cd to the directory where these files were -placed. - -Load the docg4 driver if you have not already done so. - - $ modprobe docg4 ignore_badblocks=1 reliable_mode=1 - -Erase the blocks to which we will write u-boot: - - $ flash_erase /dev/mtd1 0x00 4 - -If no errors are reported, write u-boot to the flash: - - $ ./flash_u-boot u-boot-concat.bin /dev/mtd1 - -You can use nanddump (see above) to verify that the data was written. This -time, "BIPO" should be seen in the first four oob bytes of the first page of all -four blocks in /dev/mtd1; i.e., at offsets 0x00000, 0x40000, 0x80000, 0xc0000. - -Shutdown linux, remove and re-insert the battery, hold your breath... - - -Enjoying u-boot -=============== - -After you insert the battery, the u-boot splash screen should appear on the lcd -after a few seconds. With the usb cable connecting the Treo to your PC, in the -kernel log of your PC you should see - - <6>usb 3-1: New USB device found, idVendor=0525, idProduct=a4a6 - <6>usb 3-1: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=3 - <6>usb 3-1: Product: U-Boot 2013.01-00167-gd62ef56-dirty - <6>usb 3-1: Manufacturer: Das U-Boot - -Load the usbserial module on your desktop PC: - - $ modprobe usbserial vendor=0x0525 product=0xa4a6 - -and run your favorite terminal emulation utility (minicom, kermit, etc) with the -serial device set to /dev/ttyUSB0 (assuming this is your only usb serial -device). You should be at the u-boot console (type 'help'). - -There is not much that is unique about using u-boot on the palm treo 680. -Kernels can be loaded from mmc, flash, and from the desktop PC via kermit. You -can expand the size of the second partition on the flash to contain a kernel, or -else put the kernel(s) in their own partition. - -Nand commands work as expected, with the excepton that blocks not written by the -linux mtd subsystem may be misidentified by the u-boot docg4 driver as "bad" if -they contain data in the oob bytes. This will be the case for the blocks -containing the u-boot image, for example. To work around this, use 'nand scrub' -instead of 'nand erase' to erase these blocks, and 'nand read.raw' to read them -to memory. (It would be useful if u-boot's nand commands provided a way to -explicitly ignore "bad" blocks, because read.raw does not perform ecc.) The -'nand dump' command will read these "bad" blocks, however. - -Currently u-boot itself can only be programmed to flash from Linux; there is no -support for reliable mode in u-boot's docg4 flash driver. This should be -corrected soon. - - -Customizing -=========== - -If you change u-boot's configuration significantly (adding or removing -features), you may have to adjust the value of CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_SIZE. -This is the size of the concatenated spl + u-boot image, and tells the SPL how -many flash blocks it needs to load. It will be rounded up to the next 64k -boundary (the spl flash block capacity), so it does not have to be exact, but -you must ensure that it is not less than the actual image size. If it is larger -than the image, blocks may be needlessly loaded, but if too small, u-boot may -only be partially loaded, resulting in a boot failure (bricked phone), so better -to be too large. The flash_u-boot utility will work with any size image and -write the required number of blocks, provided that the partition is large -enough. - -As the first writable block on the device, block 6 seems to make the most sense -as the flash offset for writing u-boot (and this is where PalmOS places its -SPL). But you can place it elsewhere if you like. If you do, you need to -adjust CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_OFFS accordingly, and you must ensure that blocks -preceeding the ones containing u-boot do *not* have the magic number in oob (the -IPL looks for this). In other words, make sure that any blocks that previously -contained the u-boot image or PalmOS SPL are erased (and optionally written with -something else) so that the IPL does not load it. Also make sure that the new -u-boot starting offset is at the start of a flash partition (check the kernel -log after loading the docg4 driver), and pass the corresponding mtd device file -to the flash_u-boot utility. - -The u-boot built-in default environment is used because a writable environment -in flash did not seem worth the cost of a 256k flash block. But adding this -should be straightforward. - - -Restoring PalmOS -================ - -If you backed up the contents of bootloader_part flash partition earlier, you -should be able to restore it with the shell script shown below. The first two -blocks of data contain the PalmOS SPL and were written in reliable mode, whereas -the next two blocks were written in normal mode, so the script has to load and -unload the docg4 driver. Make sure that the mtd-utils nandwrite and flash_erase -are in your path (and are not those from busybox). Also double-check that the -backup image file bootloader_part.orig is exactly 1081344 bytes in length. If -not, it was not backed up correctly. Run the script as: - - ./restore_bootpart bootloader_part.orig /dev/mtd1 - -The script will take a minute or so to run. When it finishes, you may want to -verify with nanddump that the data looks correct before you cycle power, because -if the backup or restore failed, your phone will be bricked. Note that as a -consequence of reliable mode, the odd-numbered 2k regions in the first two -blocks will not exactly match the contents of the backup file, (so unfortunately -we can't simply dump the flash contents to a file and do a binary diff with the -original back-up image to verify that it was restored correctly). Also, -nanddump will report uncorrectable ecc errors when it reads those regions. - -#!/bin/sh - -if [ $# -ne 2 ]; then - echo "usage: $0: " - exit 1 -fi - -# reliable mode used for the first two blocks -modprobe -r docg4 -modprobe docg4 ignore_badblocks=1 reliable_mode=1 || exit 1 - -# erase all four blocks -flash_erase $2 0 4 - -# Program the first two blocks in reliable mode. -# 2k (4 pages) is written at a time, skipping alternate 2k regions -# Note that "2k" is 2112 bytes, including 64 oob bytes -file_ofs=0 -flash_ofs=0 -page=0 -while [ $page -ne 1024 ]; do - dd if=$1 bs=2112 skip=$file_ofs count=1 | nandwrite -o -n -s $flash_ofs $2 - || exit 1 - file_ofs=$((file_ofs+2)) - flash_ofs=$((flash_ofs+0x1000)) - page=$((page+8)) -done; - -# normal mode used for the next two blocks -modprobe -r docg4 -modprobe docg4 ignore_badblocks=1 || exit 1 -dd if=$1 bs=1 skip=$file_ofs count=540672 | nandwrite -o -n -s 0x80000 $2 - || exit 1 -modprobe -r docg4 - -TODO -==== - - - Keypad support. - - Interactive boot menu using keypad and lcd. - - Add reliable mode support to the u-boot docg4 driver. - - U-boot command that will write a new image to the bootloader partition in - flash. - - Linux FTD support. diff --git a/board/palmtreo680/palmtreo680.c b/board/palmtreo680/palmtreo680.c deleted file mode 100644 index f4f6e1f5b9..0000000000 --- a/board/palmtreo680/palmtreo680.c +++ /dev/null @@ -1,148 +0,0 @@ -/* - * Palm Treo 680 Support - * - * Copyright (C) 2013 Mike Dunn - * - * This file is released under the terms of GPL v2 and any later version. - * See the file COPYING in the root directory of the source tree for details. - * - */ - -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include - -DECLARE_GLOBAL_DATA_PTR; - -static struct nand_chip docg4_nand_chip; - -int board_init(void) -{ - /* We have RAM, disable cache */ - dcache_disable(); - icache_disable(); - - gd->bd->bi_arch_number = CONFIG_MACH_TYPE; - gd->bd->bi_boot_params = CONFIG_SYS_DRAM_BASE + 0x100; - - return 0; -} - -int dram_init(void) -{ - /* IPL initializes SDRAM (we're already running from it) */ - gd->ram_size = PHYS_SDRAM_1_SIZE; - return 0; -} - -#ifdef CONFIG_LCD -void lcd_enable(void) -{ - /* - * Undo the L_BIAS / gpio77 pin configuration performed by the pxa lcd - * driver code. We need it as an output gpio. - */ - writel((readl(GAFR2_L) & ~(0xc << 24)), GAFR2_L); - - /* power-up and enable the lcd */ - writel(0x00400000, GPSR(86)); /* enable; drive high */ - writel(0x00002000, GPSR(77)); /* power; drive high */ - writel(0x02000000, GPCR(25)); /* enable_n; drive low */ - - /* turn on LCD backlight and configure PWM for reasonable brightness */ - writel(0x00, PWM_CTRL0); - writel(0x1b1, PWM_PERVAL0); - writel(0xfd, PWM_PWDUTY0); - writel(0x00000040, GPSR(38)); /* backlight power on */ -} -#endif - -#ifdef CONFIG_MMC -int board_mmc_init(bd_t *bis) -{ - writel(1 << 10, GPSR(42)); /* power on */ - return pxa_mmc_register(0); -} -#endif - -void board_nand_init(void) -{ - /* we have one 128M diskonchip G4 */ - - struct mtd_info *mtd = &nand_info[0]; - struct nand_chip *nand = &docg4_nand_chip; - if (docg4_nand_init(mtd, nand, 0)) - hang(); -} - -#ifdef CONFIG_SPL_BUILD -void nand_boot(void) -{ - __attribute__((noreturn)) void (*uboot)(void); - - extern const void *_start, *_end; /* boundaries of spl in memory */ - - /* size of spl; ipl loads this, and then a portion of u-boot */ - const size_t spl_image_size = ((size_t)&_end - (size_t)&_start); - - /* the flash offset of the blocks that are loaded by the spl */ - const uint32_t spl_load_offset = CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_OFFS + - DOCG4_IPL_LOAD_BLOCK_COUNT * DOCG4_BLOCK_SIZE; - - /* total number of bytes loaded by IPL */ - const size_t ipl_load_size = - DOCG4_IPL_LOAD_BLOCK_COUNT * DOCG4_BLOCK_CAPACITY_SPL; - - /* number of bytes of u-boot proper that was loaded by the IPL */ - const size_t ipl_uboot_load_size = ipl_load_size - spl_image_size; - - /* number of remaining bytes of u-boot that the SPL must load */ - const size_t spl_load_size = - CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_SIZE - ipl_load_size; - - /* memory address where we resume loading u-boot */ - void *const load_addr = - (void *)(CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_DST + ipl_uboot_load_size); - - /* - * Copy the portion of u-boot already read from flash by the IPL to its - * correct load address. - */ - memcpy((void *)CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_DST, &_end, ipl_uboot_load_size); - - /* - * Resume loading u-boot where the IPL left off. - */ - nand_spl_load_image(spl_load_offset, spl_load_size, load_addr); - -#ifdef CONFIG_NAND_ENV_DST - nand_spl_load_image(CONFIG_ENV_OFFSET, CONFIG_ENV_SIZE, - (void *)CONFIG_NAND_ENV_DST); - -#ifdef CONFIG_ENV_OFFSET_REDUND - nand_spl_load_image(CONFIG_ENV_OFFSET_REDUND, CONFIG_ENV_SIZE, - (void *)CONFIG_NAND_ENV_DST + CONFIG_ENV_SIZE); -#endif -#endif - /* - * Jump to U-Boot image - */ - uboot = (void *)CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_START; - (*uboot)(); -} - -void board_init_f(ulong bootflag) -{ - nand_boot(); -} - -#endif /* CONFIG_SPL_BUILD */ -- cgit v1.2.1