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1 | |
2 | Adding a new board to LinuxSH | |
3 | ================================ | |
4 | ||
5 | Paul Mundt <lethal@linux-sh.org> | |
6 | ||
7 | This document attempts to outline what steps are necessary to add support | |
8 | for new boards to the LinuxSH port under the new 2.5 and 2.6 kernels. This | |
9 | also attempts to outline some of the noticeable changes between the 2.4 | |
10 | and the 2.5/2.6 SH backend. | |
11 | ||
12 | 1. New Directory Structure | |
13 | ========================== | |
14 | ||
15 | The first thing to note is the new directory structure. Under 2.4, most | |
16 | of the board-specific code (with the exception of stboards) ended up | |
17 | in arch/sh/kernel/ directly, with board-specific headers ending up in | |
18 | include/asm-sh/. For the new kernel, things are broken out by board type, | |
19 | companion chip type, and CPU type. Looking at a tree view of this directory | |
20 | heirarchy looks like the following: | |
21 | ||
22 | Board-specific code: | |
23 | ||
24 | . | |
25 | |-- arch | |
26 | | `-- sh | |
27 | | `-- boards | |
28 | | |-- adx | |
29 | | | `-- board-specific files | |
30 | | |-- bigsur | |
31 | | | `-- board-specific files | |
32 | | | | |
33 | | ... more boards here ... | |
34 | | | |
35 | `-- include | |
36 | `-- asm-sh | |
37 | |-- adx | |
38 | | `-- board-specific headers | |
39 | |-- bigsur | |
40 | | `-- board-specific headers | |
41 | | | |
42 | .. more boards here ... | |
43 | ||
44 | It should also be noted that each board is required to have some certain | |
45 | headers. At the time of this writing, io.h is the only thing that needs | |
46 | to be provided for each board, and can generally just reference generic | |
47 | functions (with the exception of isa_port2addr). | |
48 | ||
49 | Next, for companion chips: | |
50 | . | |
51 | `-- arch | |
52 | `-- sh | |
53 | `-- cchips | |
54 | `-- hd6446x | |
55 | |-- hd64461 | |
56 | | `-- cchip-specific files | |
57 | `-- hd64465 | |
58 | `-- cchip-specific files | |
59 | ||
60 | ... and so on. Headers for the companion chips are treated the same way as | |
61 | board-specific headers. Thus, include/asm-sh/hd64461 is home to all of the | |
62 | hd64461-specific headers. | |
63 | ||
64 | Finally, CPU family support is also abstracted: | |
65 | . | |
66 | |-- arch | |
67 | | `-- sh | |
68 | | |-- kernel | |
69 | | | `-- cpu | |
70 | | | |-- sh2 | |
71 | | | | `-- SH-2 generic files | |
72 | | | |-- sh3 | |
73 | | | | `-- SH-3 generic files | |
74 | | | `-- sh4 | |
75 | | | `-- SH-4 generic files | |
76 | | `-- mm | |
77 | | `-- This is also broken out per CPU family, so each family can | |
78 | | have their own set of cache/tlb functions. | |
79 | | | |
80 | `-- include | |
81 | `-- asm-sh | |
82 | |-- cpu-sh2 | |
83 | | `-- SH-2 specific headers | |
84 | |-- cpu-sh3 | |
85 | | `-- SH-3 specific headers | |
86 | `-- cpu-sh4 | |
87 | `-- SH-4 specific headers | |
88 | ||
89 | It should be noted that CPU subtypes are _not_ abstracted. Thus, these still | |
90 | need to be dealt with by the CPU family specific code. | |
91 | ||
92 | 2. Adding a New Board | |
93 | ===================== | |
94 | ||
95 | The first thing to determine is whether the board you are adding will be | |
96 | isolated, or whether it will be part of a family of boards that can mostly | |
97 | share the same board-specific code with minor differences. | |
98 | ||
99 | In the first case, this is just a matter of making a directory for your | |
100 | board in arch/sh/boards/ and adding rules to hook your board in with the | |
101 | build system (more on this in the next section). However, for board families | |
102 | it makes more sense to have a common top-level arch/sh/boards/ directory | |
103 | and then populate that with sub-directories for each member of the family. | |
104 | Both the Solution Engine and the hp6xx boards are an example of this. | |
105 | ||
106 | After you have setup your new arch/sh/boards/ directory, remember that you | |
107 | also must add a directory in include/asm-sh for headers localized to this | |
108 | board. In order to interoperate seamlessly with the build system, it's best | |
109 | to have this directory the same as the arch/sh/boards/ directory name, | |
110 | though if your board is again part of a family, the build system has ways | |
111 | of dealing with this, and you can feel free to name the directory after | |
112 | the family member itself. | |
113 | ||
114 | There are a few things that each board is required to have, both in the | |
115 | arch/sh/boards and the include/asm-sh/ heirarchy. In order to better | |
116 | explain this, we use some examples for adding an imaginary board. For | |
117 | setup code, we're required at the very least to provide definitions for | |
118 | get_system_type() and platform_setup(). For our imaginary board, this | |
119 | might look something like: | |
120 | ||
121 | /* | |
122 | * arch/sh/boards/vapor/setup.c - Setup code for imaginary board | |
123 | */ | |
124 | #include <linux/init.h> | |
125 | ||
126 | const char *get_system_type(void) | |
127 | { | |
128 | return "FooTech Vaporboard"; | |
129 | } | |
130 | ||
131 | int __init platform_setup(void) | |
132 | { | |
133 | /* | |
134 | * If our hardware actually existed, we would do real | |
135 | * setup here. Though it's also sane to leave this empty | |
136 | * if there's no real init work that has to be done for | |
137 | * this board. | |
138 | */ | |
139 | ||
140 | /* | |
141 | * Presume all FooTech boards have the same broken timer, | |
142 | * and also presume that we've defined foo_timer_init to | |
143 | * do something useful. | |
144 | */ | |
145 | board_time_init = foo_timer_init; | |
146 | ||
147 | /* Start-up imaginary PCI ... */ | |
148 | ||
149 | /* And whatever else ... */ | |
150 | ||
151 | return 0; | |
152 | } | |
153 | ||
154 | Our new imaginary board will also have to tie into the machvec in order for it | |
155 | to be of any use. Currently the machvec is slowly on its way out, but is still | |
156 | required for the time being. As such, let us take a look at what needs to be | |
157 | done for the machvec assignment. | |
158 | ||
159 | machvec functions fall into a number of categories: | |
160 | ||
161 | - I/O functions to IO memory (inb etc) and PCI/main memory (readb etc). | |
162 | - I/O remapping functions (ioremap etc) | |
163 | - some initialisation functions | |
164 | - a 'heartbeat' function | |
165 | - some miscellaneous flags | |
166 | ||
167 | The tree can be built in two ways: | |
168 | - as a fully generic build. All drivers are linked in, and all functions | |
169 | go through the machvec | |
170 | - as a machine specific build. In this case only the required drivers | |
171 | will be linked in, and some macros may be redefined to not go through | |
172 | the machvec where performance is important (in particular IO functions). | |
173 | ||
174 | There are three ways in which IO can be performed: | |
175 | - none at all. This is really only useful for the 'unknown' machine type, | |
176 | which us designed to run on a machine about which we know nothing, and | |
177 | so all all IO instructions do nothing. | |
178 | - fully custom. In this case all IO functions go to a machine specific | |
179 | set of functions which can do what they like | |
180 | - a generic set of functions. These will cope with most situations, | |
181 | and rely on a single function, mv_port2addr, which is called through the | |
182 | machine vector, and converts an IO address into a memory address, which | |
183 | can be read from/written to directly. | |
184 | ||
185 | Thus adding a new machine involves the following steps (I will assume I am | |
186 | adding a machine called vapor): | |
187 | ||
188 | - add a new file include/asm-sh/vapor/io.h which contains prototypes for | |
189 | any machine specific IO functions prefixed with the machine name, for | |
190 | example vapor_inb. These will be needed when filling out the machine | |
191 | vector. | |
192 | ||
193 | This is the minimum that is required, however there are ample | |
194 | opportunities to optimise this. In particular, by making the prototypes | |
195 | inline function definitions, it is possible to inline the function when | |
196 | building machine specific versions. Note that the machine vector | |
197 | functions will still be needed, so that a module built for a generic | |
198 | setup can be loaded. | |
199 | ||
200 | - add a new file arch/sh/boards/vapor/mach.c. This contains the definition | |
201 | of the machine vector. When building the machine specific version, this | |
202 | will be the real machine vector (via an alias), while in the generic | |
203 | version is used to initialise the machine vector, and then freed, by | |
204 | making it initdata. This should be defined as: | |
205 | ||
206 | struct sh_machine_vector mv_vapor __initmv = { | |
207 | .mv_name = "vapor", | |
208 | } | |
209 | ALIAS_MV(vapor) | |
210 | ||
211 | - finally add a file arch/sh/boards/vapor/io.c, which contains | |
212 | definitions of the machine specific io functions. | |
213 | ||
214 | A note about initialisation functions. Three initialisation functions are | |
215 | provided in the machine vector: | |
216 | - mv_arch_init - called very early on from setup_arch | |
217 | - mv_init_irq - called from init_IRQ, after the generic SH interrupt | |
218 | initialisation | |
219 | - mv_init_pci - currently not used | |
220 | ||
221 | Any other remaining functions which need to be called at start up can be | |
222 | added to the list using the __initcalls macro (or module_init if the code | |
223 | can be built as a module). Many generic drivers probe to see if the device | |
224 | they are targeting is present, however this may not always be appropriate, | |
225 | so a flag can be added to the machine vector which will be set on those | |
226 | machines which have the hardware in question, reducing the probe to a | |
227 | single conditional. | |
228 | ||
229 | 3. Hooking into the Build System | |
230 | ================================ | |
231 | ||
232 | Now that we have the corresponding directories setup, and all of the | |
233 | board-specific code is in place, it's time to look at how to get the | |
234 | whole mess to fit into the build system. | |
235 | ||
236 | Large portions of the build system are now entirely dynamic, and merely | |
237 | require the proper entry here and there in order to get things done. | |
238 | ||
239 | The first thing to do is to add an entry to arch/sh/Kconfig, under the | |
240 | "System type" menu: | |
241 | ||
242 | config SH_VAPOR | |
243 | bool "Vapor" | |
244 | help | |
245 | select Vapor if configuring for a FooTech Vaporboard. | |
246 | ||
247 | next, this has to be added into arch/sh/Makefile. All boards require a | |
248 | machdir-y entry in order to be built. This entry needs to be the name of | |
249 | the board directory as it appears in arch/sh/boards, even if it is in a | |
250 | sub-directory (in which case, all parent directories below arch/sh/boards/ | |
251 | need to be listed). For our new board, this entry can look like: | |
252 | ||
253 | machdir-$(CONFIG_SH_VAPOR) += vapor | |
254 | ||
255 | provided that we've placed everything in the arch/sh/boards/vapor/ directory. | |
256 | ||
257 | Next, the build system assumes that your include/asm-sh directory will also | |
258 | be named the same. If this is not the case (as is the case with multiple | |
259 | boards belonging to a common family), then the directory name needs to be | |
260 | implicitly appended to incdir-y. The existing code manages this for the | |
261 | Solution Engine and hp6xx boards, so see these for an example. | |
262 | ||
263 | Once that is taken care of, it's time to add an entry for the mach type. | |
264 | This is done by adding an entry to the end of the arch/sh/tools/mach-types | |
265 | list. The method for doing this is self explanatory, and so we won't waste | |
266 | space restating it here. After this is done, you will be able to use | |
267 | implicit checks for your board if you need this somewhere throughout the | |
268 | common code, such as: | |
269 | ||
270 | /* Make sure we're on the FooTech Vaporboard */ | |
271 | if (!mach_is_vapor()) | |
272 | return -ENODEV; | |
273 | ||
274 | also note that the mach_is_boardname() check will be implicitly forced to | |
275 | lowercase, regardless of the fact that the mach-types entries are all | |
276 | uppercase. You can read the script if you really care, but it's pretty ugly, | |
277 | so you probably don't want to do that. | |
278 | ||
279 | Now all that's left to do is providing a defconfig for your new board. This | |
280 | way, other people who end up with this board can simply use this config | |
281 | for reference instead of trying to guess what settings are supposed to be | |
282 | used on it. | |
283 | ||
284 | Also, as soon as you have copied over a sample .config for your new board | |
285 | (assume arch/sh/configs/vapor_defconfig), you can also use this directly as a | |
286 | build target, and it will be implicitly listed as such in the help text. | |
287 | ||
288 | Looking at the 'make help' output, you should now see something like: | |
289 | ||
290 | Architecture specific targets (sh): | |
291 | zImage - Compressed kernel image (arch/sh/boot/zImage) | |
292 | adx_defconfig - Build for adx | |
293 | cqreek_defconfig - Build for cqreek | |
294 | dreamcast_defconfig - Build for dreamcast | |
295 | ... | |
296 | vapor_defconfig - Build for vapor | |
297 | ||
298 | which then allows you to do: | |
299 | ||
300 | $ make ARCH=sh CROSS_COMPILE=sh4-linux- vapor_defconfig vmlinux | |
301 | ||
302 | which will in turn copy the defconfig for this board, run it through | |
303 | oldconfig (prompting you for any new options since the time of creation), | |
304 | and start you on your way to having a functional kernel for your new | |
305 | board. | |
306 |