Instead of relying on dtc being provided by the build host use the
dtc from $(LINUX_DIR) similar to how it's done also in u-boot.mk.
For this to work kernel.mk now needs to be included before
trusted-firmware-a.mk, add this include to all affected packages.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
ARM Trusted Firmware builds do not depend on any target libraries as
they are bare-metal builds. However, the compiler aborts due to
-Werror=missing-include-dirs if the include dir doesn't exists and this
can happen when building with parallelisation as that makes it likely
for arm-trusted-firmware-* to be build very early before any of the
libraries which would implicitely create the directory.
Fix this by making sure the include dir exists before building.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
The version string generated for ARM Trusted-Firmware-A was stated as
"OpenWRT". Fix that by changing it to the exact spelling "OpenWrt"
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Upon boot it now prints:
NOTICE: BL1: v2.4(release):OpenWRT v2.4-1 (espressobin-v3-v5-1gb-2cs) (Marvell-devel-18.12.0)
Signed-off-by: Andre Heider <a.heider@gmail.com>
The include/trusted-firmware-a.mk file is based on the
include/u-boot.mk file and should be used to build a Trusted Firmware-A
(TFA) which was previously named Arm trusted firmware.
This is useful for targets where the TFA is board specific like for
Marvell SoCs and probably also NXP Layerscape SoCs.
This also makes use of this abstraction in the
arm-trusted-firmware-mvebu package to build board specific ATF binaries.
The ATF binaries will be automatically activated and build when the
board is selected in the normal build or all boards are selected. This
should also activate the build when build bot creates images.
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>