18 Dec, 2006

1 commit


04 Dec, 2006

1 commit

  • XScale cores either have a DSP coprocessor (which contains a single
    40 bit accumulator register), or an iWMMXt coprocessor (which contains
    eight 64 bit registers.)

    Because of the small amount of state in the DSP coprocessor, access to
    the DSP coprocessor (CP0) is always enabled, and DSP context switching
    is done unconditionally on every task switch. Access to the iWMMXt
    coprocessor (CP0/CP1) is enabled only when an iWMMXt instruction is
    first issued, and iWMMXt context switching is done lazily.

    CONFIG_IWMMXT is supposed to mean 'the cpu we will be running on will
    have iWMMXt support', but boards are supposed to select this config
    symbol by hand, and at least one pxa27x board doesn't get this right,
    so on that board, proc-xscale.S will incorrectly assume that we have a
    DSP coprocessor, enable CP0 on boot, and we will then only save the
    first iWMMXt register (wR0) on context switches, which is Bad.

    This patch redefines CONFIG_IWMMXT as 'the cpu we will be running on
    might have iWMMXt support, and we will enable iWMMXt context switching
    if it does.' This means that with this patch, running a CONFIG_IWMMXT=n
    kernel on an iWMMXt-capable CPU will no longer potentially corrupt iWMMXt
    state over context switches, and running a CONFIG_IWMMXT=y kernel on a
    non-iWMMXt capable CPU will still do DSP context save/restore.

    These changes should make iWMMXt work on PXA3xx, and as a side effect,
    enable proper acc0 save/restore on non-iWMMXt capable xsc3 cores such
    as IOP13xx and IXP23xx (which will not have CONFIG_CPU_XSCALE defined),
    as well as setting and using HWCAP_IWMMXT properly.

    Signed-off-by: Lennert Buytenhek
    Acked-by: Dan Williams
    Signed-off-by: Russell King

    Lennert Buytenhek
     

30 Nov, 2006

2 commits


21 Sep, 2006

1 commit


18 Sep, 2006

1 commit


26 Apr, 2006

1 commit


15 Dec, 2005

1 commit


30 Sep, 2005

1 commit


04 Jun, 2005

1 commit


17 Apr, 2005

1 commit

  • Initial git repository build. I'm not bothering with the full history,
    even though we have it. We can create a separate "historical" git
    archive of that later if we want to, and in the meantime it's about
    3.2GB when imported into git - space that would just make the early
    git days unnecessarily complicated, when we don't have a lot of good
    infrastructure for it.

    Let it rip!

    Linus Torvalds