Linux 2.4.27-pre6-bk hangs on MPC8540 board

Kumar Gala kumar.gala at freescale.com
Fri Aug 13 08:11:52 EST 2004


See you are still having issues.  A few questions:
1. What version of the silicon do you have?
2. What board is this on (customer, ADS, etc.)?
3. What firmware/bootloader (and if u-boot, what version)

thanks

- kumar

On Aug 12, 2004, at 2:38 PM, Cordes, Aaron M wrote:

>
> I should mention that our SDRAM is connected to the 8540's DDR
> controller, not LocalBus.
>
> Aaron
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Cordes, Aaron M
> Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 2:34 PM
> To: 'wd at denx.de'
> Cc: linuxppc-embedded at lists.linuxppc.org
> Subject: RE: Linux 2.4.27-pre6-bk hangs on MPC8540 board
>
>
> Is there a way in Linux or the 8540 to prevent burst accesses, in order
> to test whether they are the problem?  I scanned the processor's
> reference manual, but I didn't see anything that would let me do this.
>
> Thanks
> Aaron
>
> Aaron Cordes
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: wd at denx.de [mailto:wd at denx.de]
> Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 9:08 AM
> To: Cordes, Aaron M
> Cc: linuxppc-embedded at lists.linuxppc.org
> Subject: Re: Linux 2.4.27-pre6-bk hangs on MPC8540 board
>
>
> In message
> <EE7CAF713952AC4A970DD7CD8B4C12A042DCA7 at emss09m06.us.lmco.com> you
> wrote:
>>
>> We are bringing up an 8540-based board, and are getting hangs at
>> random spots when booting Linux.  Sometimes the hangs occur while the
>> kernel is initializing, sometimes the boot gets far enough where I can
>
>> log in and run a couple of programs.  Eventually the board locks up
>> with no oopses or panics.  If I connect to the board with a debugger,
>> the processor is usually stopped in the Data miss exception handler,
>> and there is usually memory corruption in the kernel code.
>
> That's it: memory problems.
>
>> I ran memory tests using both Edink and U-boot and they all passed, so
>> I'm reluctant to blame hardware for the memory corruption.  Has anyone
>
>> seen similar behavior, or have any suggestions of things I might try?
>
> All those memory tests only can test simple read and write  accesses;
> they  all  fail to access burst mode accesses, which will happen when
> Linux starts runing, and which are failing.
>
> Your SDRAM initialization is bad, and  the  system  crashes  when  it
> tries to fetch instructions from RAM. Note that simple read and write
> accesses may still work, it's the burst mode that is failing.
>
> It is NOT sufficient to program the memory controller  of  your  CPU;
> each  SDRAM  chip  also  requires  a specific initialization sequence
> which you must adhere  to  to  the  letter  -  check  with  the  chip
> manufacturer's manual.
>
> Best regards,
>
> Wolfgang Denk
>
> --
> Software Engineering:  Embedded and Realtime Systems,  Embedded Linux
> Phone: (+49)-8142-4596-87  Fax: (+49)-8142-4596-88  Email: wd at denx.de
> If
> this is a service economy, why is the service so bad?
>


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