On 1/9/23 21:31, Simon Glass wrote:
Hi Mark,

On Mon, 9 Jan 2023 at 13:20, Mark Kettenis <mark.kette...@xs4all.nl> wrote:

From: Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org>
Date: Mon, 9 Jan 2023 13:11:01 -0700

Hi Heinrich,


We need to fix how EFI does addresses. It seems to use them as
pointers but store them as u64 ?

That is similar to what you have been doing with physical addresses.


They're defined to a 64-bit unsigned integer by the UEFI
specification, so you can't change it.

I don't mean changing the spec, just changing the internal U-Boot
implementation, which is very confusing. This confusion is spreading
out, too.

Regards,
Simon

The real interesting thing is how memory should be managed in U-Boot:

I would prefer to create a shared global memory management on 4KiB page level used both for EFI and the rest of U-Boot.

What EFI adds to the requirements is that you need more than free (EfiConventionalMemory) and used memory. EFI knows 16 different types of memory usage (see enum efi_memory_type).

When loading a file (e.g. with the "load" command) this should lead to a memory reservation. You should not be able to load a second file into an overlapping memory area without releasing the allocated memory first.

This would replace lmb which currently tries to recalculate available memory ab initio again and again.

With managed memory we should be able to get rid of all those constants like $loadaddr, $fdt_addr_r, $kernel_addr_r, etc. and instead use a register of named loaded files.

Best regards

Heinrich

Reply via email to