[PATCH] [POWERPC] MPC8360E-RDK: Device tree and board file
Anton Vorontsov
avorontsov at ru.mvista.com
Fri Dec 28 03:00:29 EST 2007
On Thu, Dec 27, 2007 at 09:38:23AM -0600, Timur Tabi wrote:
> Anton Vorontsov wrote:
>
> >I wonder what are the symptoms if microcode is at fault? According
> >to errata description, hang isn't something I should get on the
> >transmit attempt.
>
> Well, if the microcode fails, you'll never know. I tried to explain the
> need for a unified microcode validation mechanism to the QE microcode
> developers, but I didn't get very far.
>
> >Well. All I've found is: QERAMPTCH.zip ("RAM Microcode Patches for
> >PowerQUICC II Pro Family QE Errata"), which should fix QE_UART5 errata
> >for MPC8323 Rev 1.1.
>
> I don't know what that is, but it doesn't apply. I'm talking about the
> QE and QE UART patches I've posted to this mailing list over the past
> month.
:-) I didn't get it wrong. QERAMPTCH.zip is the microcode (they
name it "microcode patches") I've tried, it has nothing to do with
your Linux patches.
> Once Kumar applies them to them to his for-2.6.25 branch, it'll
> make life easier for everyone.
>
> Can I assume it works for MPC8360 too?
>
> No. Microcode is very sensitive to the processor and the revision. A
> microcode for 8360 2.1 won't work on 8360 2.0.
>
> I forgot to give you the actual microcode. :-) I'll email it to you later.
Much thanks! Also, could you provide the magic python script to
generate binary firmwares to try loading fw from the linux? Or
just a .bin file.
> >Here are dts entries I use:
> >
> > firmware {
> > id = "Soft-UART";
> > extended_modes = <0 0>;
> > virtual_traps = <0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0>;
> > };
>
> This entry is created by U-Boot only if it uploads the microcode. This
> should not be in the DTS.
Sure thing. That was just a quirk for the quick testing, to not tinker
with u-boot part.
> >
> > ucc at 2400 {
> > device_type = "serial";
> > compatible = "ucc_uart";
> > reg = <0x2400 0x200>;
> > device-id = <5>;
> > port-number = <0>;
> > rx-clock-name = "brg7";
> > tx-clock-name = "brg8";
> > interrupts = <40>;
> > interrupt-parent = <&qeic>;
> > soft-uart;
> > };
> >
> > ucc at 3400 {
> > device_type = "serial";
> > compatible = "ucc_uart";
> > reg = <0x3400 0x200>;
> > device-id = <6>;
> > port-number = <1>;
> > rx-clock-name = "brg14";
> > tx-clock-name = "brg14";
> > interrupts = <41>;
> > interrupt-parent = <&qeic>;
> > };
>
> You need to have separate BRGs for TX and RX when using soft-uart mode,
> and you MUST use soft-uart mode on the 8360.
Yup, I know. In the original email I've explained that I deliberately
configured two uarts differently for the testing purposes.
Thanks!
--
Anton Vorontsov
email: cbou at mail.ru
backup email: ya-cbou at yandex.ru
irc://irc.freenode.net/bd2
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