OE uses qemumips to simulate a Malta board by default. As upstream qemu introduced: https://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=commit;h=94c2b6aff43cdfcfdfb552773a6b6b973a72ef0b
The Malta board can support up to 2GiB of RAM which should be able to boot a Linux kernel built with CONFIG_HIGHMEM enabled. For mips, the `High Memory Support' only makes sense for the 32-bit kernel. Signed-off-by: Hongxu Jia <hongxu....@windriver.com> --- bsp/mti-malta32/mti-malta32-common.cfg | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) diff --git a/bsp/mti-malta32/mti-malta32-common.cfg b/bsp/mti-malta32/mti-malta32-common.cfg index 104caf2..d30a38d 100644 --- a/bsp/mti-malta32/mti-malta32-common.cfg +++ b/bsp/mti-malta32/mti-malta32-common.cfg @@ -14,6 +14,7 @@ CONFIG_MIPS=y CONFIG_MIPS_MALTA=y CONFIG_CPU_MIPS32_R1=y +CONFIG_HIGHMEM=y CONFIG_MTD=y CONFIG_MTD_BLKDEVS=y -- 2.8.1 -- _______________________________________________ linux-yocto mailing list linux-yocto@yoctoproject.org https://lists.yoctoproject.org/listinfo/linux-yocto