The SMC91X family is a ISA-age Ethernet controller.
I'm not particularly sure what it's doing in armvirt/64,
as it's unlikely there is a QEMU or real hardware configuration
that exists with it.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
(23.05/5.15 version of commit 214e94cddf)
Enable SATA support, which is used by the Server Base
System Architecture reference board[1].
Signed-off-by: Anton Antonov <Anton.Antonov@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
[1] - https://qemu.readthedocs.io/en/latest/system/arm/sbsa.html
(23.05/5.15 version of 26905c9612)
Also includes Advantech RSB-3720 (iMX8 Plus) support.
Signed-off-by: Anton Antonov <Anton.Antonov@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
[Re-sort into kernel config, move network into modules]
(23.05/5.15 version of commit 3efb3b801b)
These changes are to support other vendors that have SystemReady/EFI
support, including:
* Marvell Armada
** (This is speculative as I don't have a machine of my own to test)
* Amazon Graviton (tested bare-metal and virtualized instances)
* VMware (Fusion for ARM Mac preview)
* NXP/Freescale (Layerscape series not already selected)
* HiSilicon
* Allwinner/sunxi
* Rockchip (untested, options taken from arm64 defconfig)
To give an idea of the hardware certified for SystemReady,
see
https://www.arm.com/architecture/system-architectures/systemready-certification-program/ir
and
https://www.arm.com/architecture/system-architectures/systemready-certification-program/es
Other vendors that _should_ work include Marvell Octeon 10
and Ampere. I understand these systems should work
"out of the box" in ACPI mode but may require other drivers
(e.g PCIe NICs and storage controllers).
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
(23.05/5.15 version of c3151b6f04)
Tested with a Traverse Technologies Ten64 (LS1088A) board.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
(23.05/5.15 version of commit 54bb95f879)
ACPI support is required for Arm 'SystemReady' server and workstation
systems (and as an option on embedded platforms).
These config changes allow OpenWrt to boot in a QEMU virtual machine
with a UEFI/EDKII 'BIOS', but with no other hardware enabled yet.
Signed-off-by: Mathew McBride <matt@traverse.com.au>
(23.05/5.15 version of cb3bbbf00c)
This allows loading modules with large memory requirements, recently needed
while testing on armvirt/32. Past forum discussions [1] and bug reports [2]
also raised this and the ipq806x target already set it in response [3].
Given this increases kernel image size by only ~1KB, is generally useful on
multi-platform kernels, and enabled by default on upstream arm32 Linux, add
it to the generic config.
The setting has similar utility on arm64, is a requirement for KASLR, and
already enabled on most OpenWrt aarch64 targets, so pull this into the
top-level generic config.
[1]: https://forum.openwrt.org/t/vmap-allocation-for-size-442368-failed-use-vmalloc-size-to-increase-size/34545/7
[2]: https://github.com/openwrt/openwrt/issues/8282
[3]: f81e148eb6 ("ipq806x: update 4.19 kernel config").
Signed-off-by: Tony Ambardar <itugrok@yahoo.com>
(cherry picked from commit c2d194a34e)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Endianness depends on CPU architecture. CONFIG_CPU_(BIG/LITTLE)_ENDIAN should
be enabled on target or subtarget based on SoC architecture.
Fixes warning:
$ make kernel_oldconfig CONFIG_TARGET=subtarget
...
.config:1008:warning: override: CPU_LITTLE_ENDIAN changes choice state
....
Summary:
- ARC - only the CONFIG_CPU_BIG_ENDIAN symbol is defined for this architeture.
If it is disabled then the processor operates in LITTLE_ENDIAN mode (default),
- ARM32 - CONFIG_CPU_LITTLE_ENDIAN symbol available since kernel 5.19. This
option should be enabled after OpenWRT moves to kernel 6.x. After refreshing
the kernel, the symbol disappears,
- ARM64 - enabled CONFIG_CPU_LITTLE_ENDIAN,
- MIPS - enabled relevant symbols,
- POWERPC - enabled CONFIG_CPU_BIG_ENDIAN,
- UML - Symbols are not defined for this architecture,
- X86 - always little endian. Symbols are not defined for this architecture.
Signed-off-by: Aleksander Jan Bajkowski <olek2@wp.pl>
This is now built-in, enable so it won't propagate on target configs.
Link: https://lkml.org/lkml/2022/1/3/168
Fixes: 79e7a2552e ("kernel: bump 5.15 to 5.15.44")
Fixes: 0ca9367069 ("kernel: bump 5.10 to 5.10.119")
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Maciej Nowak <tmn505@gmail.com>
(Link to Kernel's commit taht made it built-in,
CRYPTO_LIB_BLAKE2S[_ARM|_X86] as it's selectable, 5.10 backport)
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
QEMU can emulate several watchdogs:
aspeed SoC, i6300esb, ib700wdt, imx2, cmsdk-apb and sbsa_gwdt.
Out of these, the ARM SBSA Generic Watchdog (sbsa_gwdt)
makes the most sense for the armvirt' 64 target. Both imx2 and
aspeed are guarded by special vendor specific CONFIG_ in the
upstream kernel.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
This was done by executing these commands:
$ make kernel_oldconfig CONFIG_TARGET=subtarget
$ make kernel_oldconfig CONFIG_TARGET=subtarget_platform
Signed-off-by: Aleksander Jan Bajkowski <olek2@wp.pl>