diff options
author | Timur Tabi <timur@freescale.com> | 2010-03-29 12:51:07 -0500 |
---|---|---|
committer | Kumar Gala <galak@kernel.crashing.org> | 2010-03-30 10:50:22 -0500 |
commit | 9ff32d8ccf0e23b5577c25610f001af8d761b4a2 (patch) | |
tree | 43cce2d1c3caf0a05fdbb33f6a44855f4965433f /include/asm-ppc | |
parent | 33f57bd553edf29dffef5a6c7d76e169c79a6049 (diff) |
mpc86xx: set the DDR BATs after calculating true DDR size
After determining how much DDR is actually in the system, set DBAT0 and
IBAT0 accordingly. This ensures that the CPU won't attempt to access
(via speculation) addresses outside of actual memory.
On 86xx systems, DBAT0 and IBAT0 (the BATs for DDR) are initialized to 2GB
and kept that way. If the system has less than 2GB of memory (typical for
an MPC8610 HPCD), the CPU may attempt to access this memory during
speculation. The zlib code is notorious for generating such memory reads,
and indeed on the MPC8610, uncompressing the Linux kernel causes a machine
check (without this patch).
Currently we are limited to power of two sized DDR since we only use a
single bat. If a non-power of two size is used that is less than
CONFIG_MAX_MEM_MAPPED u-boot will crash.
Signed-off-by: Timur Tabi <timur@freescale.com>
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <galak@kernel.crashing.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/asm-ppc')
-rw-r--r-- | include/asm-ppc/mmu.h | 6 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/include/asm-ppc/mmu.h b/include/asm-ppc/mmu.h index fd1024947d9..ce7f0810051 100644 --- a/include/asm-ppc/mmu.h +++ b/include/asm-ppc/mmu.h @@ -213,7 +213,11 @@ extern void print_bats(void); #define BATL_PADDR(x) ((phys_addr_t)((x & 0xfffe0000) \ | ((x & 0x0e00ULL) << 24) \ | ((x & 0x04ULL) << 30))) -#define BATU_SIZE(x) (1UL << (fls((x & BATU_BL_MAX) >> 2) + 17)) +#define BATU_SIZE(x) (1ULL << (fls((x & BATU_BL_MAX) >> 2) + 17)) + +/* bytes into BATU_BL */ +#define TO_BATU_BL(x) \ + (u32)((((1ull << __ilog2_u64((u64)x)) / (128 * 1024)) - 1) * 4) /* Used to set up SDR1 register */ #define HASH_TABLE_SIZE_64K 0x00010000 |