[PATCH v3 3/5] soc: rockchip: add reboot notifier driver
From: Thierry Reding <hidden>
Date: 2015-12-15 17:42:48
Also in:
linux-devicetree, linux-rockchip, lkml
On Tue, Dec 15, 2015 at 05:34:00PM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
On Tuesday 15 December 2015 17:31:22 Thierry Reding wrote:quoted
On Mon, Dec 14, 2015 at 12:39:44PM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote:quoted
On Wednesday 18 November 2015 17:56:22 Andy Yan wrote:quoted
rockchip platform have a protocol to pass the kernel reboot mode to bootloader by some special registers when system reboot. By this way the bootloader can take different action according to the different kernel reboot mode, for example, command "reboot loader" will reboot the board to rockusb mode, this is a very convenient way to get the board enter download mode. Signed-off-by: Andy Yan <andy.yan@rock-chips.com>Adding John Stultz to Cc I just saw this thread pop up again, and had to think of John's recent patch to unify this across platforms. John, can you have a look at this driver too, and see how it fits in? I think this is yet another variant, using an MMIO register rather than RAM (as HTC / NVIDIA does) or SRAM (as Qualcomm does), but otherwise it conceptually fits in with what you had.FWIW, Tegra typically does use an MMIO register as well. See drivers/soc/tegra/pmc.c:tegra_pmc_restart_notify(). I don't know what HTC does, but if it's writing somewhere in RAM it isn't using the standard way of resetting the SoC. There's early boot ROM code which I think evaluates the PMC_SCRATCH0 register on Tegra to determine which mode to boot into. That's before even any firmware gets the chance of doing anything.HTC apparently uses a separate RAM area to pass the reboot reason, and they have a driver to store that, which is separate from the driver that they use for actually rebooting the machine.
I wasn't very clear, but the PMC_SCRATCH0 register is used to store the reset reason. It supports the recovery mode, which I think is really an Android thing, "bootloader" will typically cause the bootloader not to boot anything, and "forced-recovery" will go into a recovery mode that is used to bootstrap the device (usually by uploading a "miniloader" that initializes RAM, downloads a bootloader for booting or flashing an operating system, ...). The write that resets the SoC is to a different register. Thierry -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 819 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-arm-kernel/attachments/20151215/2ba25cc6/attachment-0001.sig>