Commit 63e413d1 authored by Greg Ungerer's avatar Greg Ungerer Committed by Linus Torvalds

[PATCH] m68knommu: create configurable RAM setup

Reworked the way RAM regions are defined. Instead of coding all the
variations for each board type we now just configure RAM base and size
in the usual Kconfig setup. This much simplifies the code, and makes it
a lot more flexible when setting up new boards or board varients.
Signed-off-by: default avatarGreg Ungerer <gerg@uclinux.org>
Signed-off-by: default avatarLinus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
parent d2f386d7
......@@ -472,38 +472,46 @@ config 4KSTACKS
running more threads on a system and also reduces the pressure
on the VM subsystem for higher order allocations.
choice
prompt "RAM size"
default AUTO
config RAMAUTO
bool "AUTO"
---help---
Configure the RAM size on your platform. Many platforms can auto
detect this, on those choose the AUTO option. Otherwise set the
RAM size you intend using.
config RAM4MB
bool "4MiB"
help
Set RAM size to be 4MiB.
config RAM8MB
bool "8MiB"
help
Set RAM size to be 8MiB.
config RAM16MB
bool "16MiB"
help
Set RAM size to be 16MiB.
config RAM32MB
bool "32MiB"
help
Set RAM size to be 32MiB.
endchoice
comment "RAM configuration"
config RAMBASE
hex "Address of the base of RAM"
default "0"
help
Define the address that RAM starts at. On many platforms this is
0, the base of the address space. And this is the default. Some
platforms choose to setup their RAM at other addresses within the
processor address space.
config RAMSIZE
hex "Size of RAM (in bytes)"
default "0x400000"
help
Define the size of the system RAM. If you select 0 then the
kernel will try to probe the RAM size at runtime. This is not
supported on all CPU types.
config VECTORBASE
hex "Address of the base of system vectors"
default "0"
help
Define the address of the the system vectors. Commonly this is
put at the start of RAM, but it doesn't have to be. On ColdFire
platforms this address is programmed into the VBR register, thus
actually setting the address to use.
config KERNELBASE
hex "Address of the base of kernel code"
default "0x400"
help
Typically on m68k systems the kernel will not start at the base
of RAM, but usually some small offset from it. Define the start
address of the kernel here. The most common setup will have the
processor vectors at the base of RAM and then the start of the
kernel. On some platforms some RAM is reserved for boot loaders
and the kernel starts after that. The 0x400 default was based on
a system with the RAM based at address 0, and leaving enough room
for the theoretical maximum number of 256 vectors.
choice
prompt "RAM bus width"
......@@ -511,7 +519,7 @@ choice
config RAMAUTOBIT
bool "AUTO"
---help---
help
Select the physical RAM data bus size. Not needed on most platforms,
so you can generally choose AUTO.
......@@ -545,7 +553,9 @@ config RAMKERNEL
config ROMKERNEL
bool "ROM"
help
The kernel will be resident in FLASH/ROM when running.
The kernel will be resident in FLASH/ROM when running. This is
often referred to as Execute-in-Place (XIP), since the kernel
code executes from the position it is stored in the FLASH/ROM.
endchoice
......
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