Re: [U-Boot] Current u-boot memory mapping

2012-10-31 Thread RgC
Hi,

Thanks for the comments Tom.

On 2012.10/29, Tom Rini wrote:
 On Sat, Oct 27, 2012 at 08:17:00PM +0900, RgC wrote:
 
 [snip]
  My understanding is that after relocation no area between the bottom
  and the top of RAM is reserved. We can use it freely. Is this correct?
 
 Basically, yes.  You can use 'bdinfo' to see what / where things are
 being used at run-time.

Yep I've been using the bdinfo output as reference to support my understanding.

 
  If writing to the the free area in RAM results in crashing u-boot
  then there is problem in the relocation procedure or a possible linker
  script problem.
 
 Well, it depends on how you trigger that crash.  If you're writing near
 where U-Boot is running you can overwrite yourself pretty easily.  If
 you aren't, then are you sure you've configured your memory controller
 correctly?

I think the memory controller has been configured correct if it wasn't a
HW based auto-mem check will fail. The mem check goes through all the
whole mem and performs a write/readback check.

I'm using the memory area very well above the interrupt vectors and very well
below the malloc arena/stack area of u-boot. Crash gets triggerred only when
doing large memory writes (i.e. 16Mb fatload to mem buffer), which ends up 
writting
over a magical area. 'mw' to the area results in the same crash.

Since the relocation code looks bogus and proprietary (not sure why the original
person who created the code made it that way) it is what I am suspecting. It
was supposed to be based on the Versatile relocation code but it doesn't look
anything like it.

I don't handle that part so I have very little say in the possible problem. I
can only suggest for them to fix it :-)

 
 -- 
 Tom

All the best,
Rommel



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Re: [U-Boot] Current u-boot memory mapping

2012-10-29 Thread Tom Rini
On Sat, Oct 27, 2012 at 08:17:00PM +0900, RgC wrote:

[snip]
 My understanding is that after relocation no area between the bottom
 and the top of RAM is reserved. We can use it freely. Is this correct?

Basically, yes.  You can use 'bdinfo' to see what / where things are
being used at run-time.

 If writing to the the free area in RAM results in crashing u-boot
 then there is problem in the relocation procedure or a possible linker
 script problem.

Well, it depends on how you trigger that crash.  If you're writing near
where U-Boot is running you can overwrite yourself pretty easily.  If
you aren't, then are you sure you've configured your memory controller
correctly?

-- 
Tom


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[U-Boot] Current u-boot memory mapping

2012-10-27 Thread RgC
Hi All,

Last week I got a weird problem on an ARM platfrom.
It is using an old version of u-boot because of our design/implementation 
cycle, but
let's not talk about upgrading the u-boot version that I use please.


My understanding of the u-boot memory mapping is in question :-)
I've dealt with the early versions (v1.x.x) on PowerPC and ARM. I'm now dealing 
with
newer u-boot versions but mostly on the PowerPC arch.  So I'm not sure if 
everything I
know applies to the ARM arch.

In the PowerPC arch, after relocation the actual memory mapping follows the 
Memory 
Management section in the u-boot README. Bottom of RAM for exception handlers, 
then
free space until we reach near the top of RAM. This is populated by the stack, 
global
data, malloc-area, and the u-boot code. My understanding is that this design was
never altered and was implemented across all platforms.

My understanding is that after relocation no area between the bottom and the 
top of
RAM is reserved. We can use it freely. Is this correct?

If writing to the the free area in RAM results in crashing u-boot then there 
is
problem in the relocation procedure or a possible linker script problem.

All the best,
RgC



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