Current LITEX_LAST_IRQ looks like a typo that blocks compilation of
`arty_a7/knsh` configuration.
This fixes the build but I have no such device for test.
Found it was LITEX_IRQ_LAST before commit #ee84ea3 so likely typo was
introduced by then.
Signed-off-by: Yanfeng Liu <yfliu2008@qq.com>
Changes:
- Documentation/platforms/risc-v/k230 revised for both modes
- arch/risc-v/include/k230/irq.h add S-mode IRQs
- under arch/risc-v/src/k230 folder:
- Make.defs drop use of k230_exception_m.S
- hardware/k230_clint.h add S-mode defs, revised freq
- k230_head.S unified flat/kernel mode support
- k230_irq.c add S-mode support with debug dump
- k230_mm_init.c revised for K230 S-mode
- k230_start.c revised for flat/s-mode,
- arch/risc-v/src/k230/k230_timerisr.c unified flat/s-mode support.
- under boards/risc-v/k230/canmv230 folder:
- configs/nsh/defconfig fix RAM size
- include/board_memorymap.h cleanup for S-mode
- src/.gitignore ignore romfs_boot.c
- src/Makefile add romfs support
Renames:
- under boards/risc-v/k230/canmv230/src/ folder:
- canmv_init.c from k230_appinit.c making room for more k230 devices
Dropped:
- under arch/risc-v/src/k230/
- k230_exception_m.S as hybrid mode not ready yet.
New files in boards/riscv/k230/canmv230:
- configs/knsh/defconfig S-mode config
- scripts/ld-kernel.script S-mode linker script
- src/romfs.h User space ROMFS defs needed in S-mode
- src/romfs_stub.c Stub ROMFS image
Signed-off-by: Yanfeng Liu <yfliu2008@qq.com>
The code is mainly derived from the NuttX qemu-rv/rv-virt codebase.
Major changes:
- boards/Kconfig: add new BOARD_K230_CANMV
- arch/risc-v/Kconfig: add new CHIP_K230 chip and ARCH_RV_MMIO_BITS
- arch/risc-v/src/common/riscv_mtimer.c: use ARCH_RV_MMIO_BITS to
select MMIO access width
New additions:
- arch/risc-v/include/k230/: k230 SoC definitions
- arch/risc-v/src/k230/: k230 SoC sources
- boards/risc-v/k230/canmv230/: CanMV-K230 board sources and configs
- Documentation/platforms/risc-v/k230/: simple doc
Note that only FLAT build works for canmv230 now.
This PR has changes in RiscV common layer thus may affect other RiscV ports
It changes the mtime/mtimecmp access control from using config ARCH_RV64 to
newly intorduced config ARCH_RV_MMIO_BITS.
Original design uses ARCH_RV64 to select 64bit MMIO in riscv_mtimer.c, this
can't cope with the situation with K230 --- it has ARCH_RV64 but only can do
32bit MMIO. So a new ARCH_RV_MMIO_BITS config has been introduced. Its value
depicts the MMIO width in bits. The MMIO_BITS defaults to 32/64 for RV32/
RV64 respectively. This allows the macro to replace current use of ARCH_RV64
in riscv_mtimer.c.
The new MMIO_BITS config is a derived one, and for RiscV chips with
equal CPU and MMIO widths there is no need to explicitly set it as the
default rule will do that. Only chips with different CPU and MMIO widths
need set it in Kconfig.
So by design this change should be safe but RiscV ports should be checked.
"ostest" verification has been done for:
- canmv230/nsh
- rv-vivt/nsh
- rv-virt/nsh64
configuration generation and manual check of derived RV_MMIO_BITS has been
done for:
- star64/nsh
- arty_a7/nsh
- bl602evb/nsh
Signed-off-by: Yanfeng Liu <yfliu2008@qq.com>
There is a problem with the current elf loader for risc-v: when a pair of
PCREL_HI20 / LO12 relocations are encountered, it is assumed that these
will follow each other immediately, as follows:
label:
auipc a0, %pcrel_hi(symbol) // R_RISCV_PCREL_HI20
load/store a0, %pcrel_lo(label)(a0) // R_RISCV_PCREL_LO12_I/S
With this assumption, the hi/lo relocations are both done when a hi20
relocation entry is encountered, first to the current instruction (addr)
and to the next instruction (addr + 4).
However, this assumption is wrong. There is nothing in the elf relocation
specification[1] that mandates this. Thus, the hi/lo relocation always
needs to first fixup the hi-part, and when the lo-part is encountered, it
needs to find the corresponding hi relocation entry, via the given "label".
This necessitates (re-)visiting the relocation entries for the current
section as well as looking for "label" in the symbol table.
The NuttX elf loader does not allow such operations to be done in the
machine specific part, so this patch fixes the relocation issue by
introducing an architecture specific cache for the hi20 relocation and
symbol table entries. When a lo12 relocation is encountered, the cache
can be consulted to find the hi20 part.
[1] https://github.com/riscv-non-isa/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/blob/master/riscv-elf.adoc
This PR adds support for the Bouffalo Lab BL808 SoC, based on T-Head C906 64-bit RISC-V Core. This will be used by the upcoming port of NuttX for PINE64 Ox64 SBC.
Most of the code was derived from NuttX for Star64 JH7110. The UART Driver was derived from BL602 NuttX. The source files are explained in the articles here: https://github.com/lupyuen/nuttx-ox64
`Kconfig`: Added ARCH_CHIP_BL808 for BL808 SoC
`include/bl808/chip.h`: BL808 Definitions
`include/bl808/irq.h`: External Interrupts
`src/bl808/chip.h`: Interrupt Stack Macro
`src/bl808/bl808_allocateheap.c`: Kernel Heap
`src/bl808/bl808_head.S`: Linux Header and Boot Code
`src/bl808/bl808_irq.c`: Configure Interrupts
`src/bl808/bl808_irq_dispatch.c`: Dispatch Interrupts
`src/bl808/bl808_memorymap.h`: Memory Map
`src/bl808/bl808_mm_init.c`, `bl808_mm_init.h`: Memory Mgmt
`src/bl808/bl808_pgalloc.c`: Page Allocator
`src/bl808/bl808_serial.c`, `bl808_serial.h`: UART Driver
`src/bl808/bl808_start.c`: Startup Code
`src/bl808/bl808_timerisr.c`: Timer Interrupt
`src/bl808/hardware/bl808_memorymap.h`: PLIC and UART Base Address
`src/bl808/hardware/bl808_plic.h`: PLIC Register Addresses
`src/bl808/hardware/bl808_uart.h`: UART Register Addresses
`src/bl808/Kconfig`: BL808 Config
`src/bl808/Make.defs`: Makefile
I can never remember whether the static page table list contains the
table's physical or kernel virtual address.. Add the fact as a comment
there.
Also add the limitations that come from this static page table approach
for Sv32.
Previously, GPIO interrupts were not correctly mapped to the peripheral base register responsible for the interrupt.
Change the IRQ number calculation so the interrupts work correctly on all GPIO peripheral bases.
This PR adds support for the StarFive JH7110 RISC-V SoC. This will be used by the upcoming port of NuttX for PINE64 Star64 SBC. [The source files are explained in the articles here](https://github.com/lupyuen/nuttx-star64)
Modified Files in arch/risc-v:
Kconfig: Added ARCH_CHIP_JH7110 for JH7110 SoC
New Files in arch/risc-v:
include/jh7110/chip.h: JH7110 Definitions
include/jh7110/irq.h: Support 127 External Interrupts
src/jh7110/chip.h: Interrupt Stack Macro
src/jh7110/jh7110_allocateheap.c: Kernel Heap
src/jh7110/jh7110_head.S: Linux Header and Boot Code
src/jh7110/jh7110_irq.c: Configure Interrupts
src/jh7110/jh7110_irq_dispatch.c: Dispatch Interrupts
src/jh7110/jh7110_memorymap.h: Memory Map
src/jh7110/jh7110_mm_init.c, jh7110_mm_init.h: Memory Mgmt
src/jh7110/jh7110_pgalloc.c: Page Allocator
src/jh7110/jh7110_start.c: Startup Code
src/jh7110/jh7110_timerisr.c: Timer Interrupt
src/jh7110/hardware/jh7110_memorymap.h: PLIC Base Address
src/jh7110/hardware/jh7110_plic.h: PLIC Register Addresses
src/jh7110/Kconfig: JH7110 Config
src/jh7110/Make.defs: Makefile
- Save the FPU registers into the tcb so they don't get lost if the stack
frame for xcp.regs moves (as it does)
- Handle interger and FPU register save/load separately
- Integer registers are saved/loaded always, like before
- FPU registers are only saved during a context switch:
- Save ONLY if FPU is dirty
- Restore always if FPU has been used (not in FSTATE_OFF, FSTATE_INIT)
- Remove all lazy-FPU related logic from the macros, it is not needed
- Save the FPU registers into the tcb so they don't get lost if the stack
frame for xcp.regs moves (as it does)
- Handle interger and FPU register save/load separately
- Integer registers are saved/loaded always, like before
- FPU registers are only saved during a context switch:
- Save ONLY if FPU is dirty
- Restore always if FPU has been used (not in FSTATE_OFF, FSTATE_INIT)
- Remove all lazy-FPU related logic from the macros, it is not needed
If a kernel stack exists, use that whenever the user process is in
privileged mode, i.e. running an exception or in system call. Previously
the exception context was stored into the user's stack, which is not ideal.
Why?
1. Because the exception entry status (REG_INT_CTX) is needed by the
kernel, and this is now in user memory which requires that the correct
user mappings are active when it is accessed.
2. The user must currently account for the exception stack frame (which
is BIG) in its own stack allocation. Moving the exception context save
to the kernel stack offloads this responsibility from the user to the
kernel, which is IMO the correct behavior.
3. The kernel access to user memory is currently allowed without condition,
however this is not ideal either. The privileged mode status CSR allows
blocking access to user memory via the STATUS_SUM-bit, which should be
disabled by default and only enabled when access to user space is really
needed. This patch allows implementing such features.
minidump will backtrace failure when use C code to save user context,
because the stack push operation in C code can disrupt the stack information.
Signed-off-by: zhangyuan21 <zhangyuan21@xiaomi.com>
Initially supporting ESP32-C3 chip, to be followed by other RISC-V-based
chips from Espressif.
Signed-off-by: Gustavo Henrique Nihei <gustavo.nihei@espressif.com>
The function is not relevant any longer, remove it. Also remove
save_addrenv_t, the parameter taken by up_addrenv_restore.
Implement addrenv_select() / addrenv_restore() to handle the temporary
instantiation of address environments, e.g. when a process is being
created.
This is preparation for moving address environments out of the group
structure into the tcb.
Why move ? Because the group is destroyed very early in the exit phase,
but the MMU mappings are needed until the context switch to the next
process is complete. Otherwise the MMU will lose its mappings and the
system will crash.
1.Move __XSTR from include/arch.h to include/irq.h
2.Move FLOAD/FSTORE and REGLOAD/REGSTORE from include/arch.h to src/common/riscv_internal.h
Signed-off-by: Xiang Xiao <xiaoxiang@xiaomi.com>
The FPU register saving upon vfork entry was missing.
Also added macro that tells the actual size of an FPU reg, instead
of just having a coefficient for qfpu/no-qfpu.
Summary:
- This commit adds support for semihosting and hostfs
Impact:
- None
Testing:
- Tested with nsh and nsh64 (defconfig will be updated later)
Signed-off-by: Masayuki Ishikawa <Masayuki.Ishikawa@jp.sony.com>
by renaming riscv_dispatch_syscall to sys_callx, so the caller
don't need the immediate step(syscallx->riscv_dispatch_syscall)
Signed-off-by: Xiang Xiao <xiaoxiang@xiaomi.com>