Add initial support for cortex-a72 based Armada DB-88F8040-Modular and
DB-88F7040-Modular development boards.
DB-88F8040-Modular specifications:
- Quad-core ARMv8 Cortex A72 CPU (up to 2 GHz)
- DDR4 DIMM - 64 bits + ECC
- 2 x 128 Mb SPI NOR flash memory
- 2 x 1G Ethernet port via RGMII (RJ45)
- 2 x SD card ports (4 bit port on CP, 8 bit port on AP)
- 2 SERDES modules with the following interfaces each:
- 2 x SATA Rev 3.0 port (Port1 via SERDES module CON4 (active port), Port0
via SERDES Module CON2 or CON1 (optional port))
- 3 x PCI Express (PCIe) Gen 3.0 (Port2 via SERDES module CON5 (active port),
Port1 via SERDES module CON7 (optional port), Port0 via SERDES module CON6
(optional port))
- 2 x USB3 (USB 2.0 backward compatible) host (via SERDES module CON9 and
CON10)
- 1 x 10G port over SFP+ connector (via SERDES module CON8)
- 1 x MCI interface by two over USB Type C connector
- 4 x serial COM port driven by the 88F8040 UART interface and converted to
USB via FTDI IC
- I2C Master Interface
- CP I2C 2x EEPROM @ Address 0x50 and 0x57
- 1 x I/O Expander @ Address 0x21
- Sample at Reset (SatR) memory device @ Address 0x4C and 0x4E
- I2C Slave Interface (via SERDES module) - Connection to each device on the
board via an I2C multiplexer
- JTAG interface for CPU emulator
- Board dimensions: 270 mm x 240 mm (main + SERDES module)
- SERDES Module Dimensions: 70 mm x 105 mm
DB-88F7040-Modular specifications:
- Quad-core ARMv8 Cortex A72 CPU
- CPU core operating speed of up to 1.6 GHz for Dual Core, 1.4 GHz for Quad
Core
- DDR4 - 32 bit + ECC on Module - SLM1366-V1 (DB-DDR4-40B-MODULE) 4 GByte
32-bit
- 1 x 128Mb SPI NOR flash memory
- 2 x 1G Ethernet port: 1 over RGMII (RJ45) and 1 over SGMII
- SD card 4 bits port on AP
- eMMc Module on CP
- 1 SERDES Modules with the following interfaces each:
- 1 x SATA Rev 3.0 port (via SERDES module CON4)
- 1 x PCI Express (PCIe) Gen 3.0 (via SERDES module CON5)
- 2 x USB 3.0 (USB 2.0 backward compatible) host (via SERDES module CON9 and
CON10)
- 1 x 10G port over SFP+ connector (via SERDES module CON8)
- 2 x MCi interface by one over USB Type C connector
- 4 x Serial COM port driven by the 88F7040 UA
- RT interface and converted to USB via FTDI IC
- I2C Master Interface
- 2 x EEPROM at address 0x57 and 0x50 in AP and 2 x EEPROM at address 0x57
and 0x50 in CP
- 1 x I/O Expander at address 0x21
- Sample at Reset (SatR) memory device at address 0x4C and 0x4E
- I2C Slave Interface (via SERDES module) - Connection to each device on the
board via an I2C multiplexer
- JTAG interface for CPU emulator
- Board dimensions - 270 mm x 240 mm (main + SERDES module)
- SERDES Module Dimensions - 70 mm x 105 mm
Booting from USB flash drive (dd sdcard image to the flash drive):
1. reset U-Boot environment:
env default -a
saveenv
2. prepare U-Boot manually (make sure to set correct dtb file name):
setenv bootargs_root 'root=/dev/sda2 rw rootdelay=2 ip=dhcp'
setenv fdtfile armada-7040-db.dtb
setenv image_name Image
setenv bootcmd 'usb start; ext4load usb 0:1 $kernel_addr $image_name; ext4load usb 0:1 $fdt_addr $fdtfile; setenv bootargs $console $mtdparts $bootargs_root; booti $kernel_addr - $fdt_addr'
saveenv
boot
Signed-off-by: Damir Samardzic <damir.samardzic@sartura.hr>
Add initial support for Marvell Armada cortex-a53 based
DB-88F3720-DDR3-Modular development board.
Specifications:
- Dual core ARMv8 Cortex-A53 CPU (up to 1.0 GHz)
- 4Gb 16-bit DDR3/3L DRAM memory
- 128Mb SPI NOR flash memory
- 8Gb eMMC NAND flash memory
- 1 x SATA Rev 3.0 port
- 1 x PCI Express (PCIe) Gen 2.0 or 1 x mini PCI Express (PCIe) Gen 2.0
- 1 x 1G Ethernet port via RGMII (RJ45)
- 1 x SD card port
- 1 x USB3 (USB2 backward) host\device port via type C connector
- 1 x USB2 host port via type A connector
- 1 x serial COM port driven by the 88F3720 UART interface and converted to
USB via FTDI IC (option to connect the UART DB9 adapter)
- I2C Master Interface:
- 1 x EEPROM @ address 0x57
- 1 x I/O Expanders @ address 0x22
- Sample at Reset (SatR) memory device @ address 0x4C
- RTC clock generator PT7C4337AWE @ address 0x68
- USB3 switch PI5USB30213XEA @ address 0x0D
- ID component of PHY module @ address 0x24
- 1 x JTAG interface for CPU emulator
- 1 x SETM and JTAG debug interface
- 1 x power connector for HDD supply
- 1 x 12V DC jack power connector
- Board dimensions: 150 mm x 179 mm
- LED interface for system status
Booting from SD card:
1. reset U-Boot environment:
env default -a
saveenv
2. prepare U-Boot with boot script:
setenv bootcmd "load mmc 0:1 0x4d00000 boot.scr; source 0x4d00000"
saveenv
or manually:
setenv fdt_name armada-3720-db.dtb
setenv image_name Image
setenv bootcmd 'mmc dev 0; ext4load mmc 0:1 $kernel_addr $image_name;ext4load mmc 0:1 $fdt_addr $fdt_name;setenv bootargs $console root=/dev/mmcblk1p2 rw rootwait; booti $kernel_addr - $fdt_addr'
saveenv
Signed-off-by: Damir Samardzic <damir.samardzic@sartura.hr>
Support Add spi-nor chip EN25QH32. JEDEC is 1c7016.
Can't boot issue, new revision hardware is EN25QH32 flash chip.
example, MZK-DP150N (ramips).
https://bugs.openwrt.org/index.php?do=details&task_id=1534
Signed-off-by: YuheiOKAWA <tochiro.srchack@gmail.com>
This now matches what was generated locally on my PC and the file on the
mirror server.
Fixes: 349fe46103 ("ath10k-firmware: Update QCA988X firmware to the latest version")
Signed-off-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@hauke-m.de>
* chacha20poly1305: add mips32 implementation
"The OpenWRT Commit" - this significantly speeds up performance on cheap
plastic MIPS routers, and presumably the remaining MIPS32r2 super computers
out there.
* timers: reinitialize state on init
* timers: round up instead of down in slack_time
* timers: remove slack_time
* timers: clear send_keepalive timer on sending handshake response
* timers: no need to clear keepalive in persistent keepalive
Andrew He and I have helped simplify the timers and remove some old warts,
making the whole system a bit easier to analyze.
* tools: fix errno propagation and messages
Error messages are now more coherent.
* device: remove allowedips before individual peers
This avoids an O(n^2) traversal in favor of an O(n) one. Before systems with
many peers would grind when deleting the interface.
Signed-off-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>
Disable CONFIG_EFI_VARS, since it suffers from sysfs limitation (no
support for variable longer than 1024 bytes).
kmod-fs-efivarfs is the replacement of this, which enables mounting
efivarfs file system and doesn't suffer from 1024 bytes limitation.
Signed-off-by: Alif M. Ahmad <alive4ever@live.com>
Use ft_psk_generate_local=1 by default, as it makes everything else fairly
trivial. All of the r0kh/r1kh and key management stuff goes away and hostapd
fairly much does it all for us.
We do need to provide nas_identifier, which can be derived from the BSSID,
and we need to generate a mobility_domain, for which we default to the first
four chars of the md5sum of the SSID.
The complex manual setup should also still work, but the defaults also
now work easily out of the box. Verified by manually running hostapd
(with the autogenerated config) and watching the debug output:
wlan2: STA ac:37:43:a0:a6:ae WPA: FT authentication already completed - do not start 4-way handshake
This was previous submitted to LEDE in
https://github.com/lede-project/source/pull/1382
[dwmw2: Rewrote commit message]
Signed-off-by: Gospod Nassa <devianca@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <dwmw2@infradead.org>
e59f925 hardware: add device ids for QCA9984, 88W8887 and 88W8964 radios
2a82f87 nl80211: back out early when receiving FAIL-BUSY reply
77c32f0 nl80211: fix code calculating average signal and rate
Signed-off-by: John Crispin <john@phrozen.org>
Drop package/network/services/wireguard/patches/100-portability.patch
Instead pass 'PLATFORM=linux' to make since we are always building FOR
linux.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant <ldir@darbyshire-bryant.me.uk>
BOCCO is a communication robot provided by YUKAI Engineering Inc.
SoC: MT7620A
MEM: 256MB
Flash: 8MB
NAND: 512MB (non support)
Include Sound DAC and AMP.
No Wired Ethernet.
Signed-off-by: YuheiOKAWA <tochiro.srchack@gmail.com>
Wifi button for WNDR3700 dual band routers has been renamed to "rfkill"
and its emitted keycode changed to KEY_RFKILL. This allows OpenWrt/LEDE
to support it 'out of the box' without additional tweaking.
Until this patch, button had been sending BTN_2 keycode which was
ignored by default (no action script present). To get expected behaviour
of switching radios on and off, user had to manually rename/link
'rfkill' script to name 'BTN_2' in /etc/rc.button directory.
This patch follows similar changes for other Netgear ar71xx routers,
for example WNR2000v3. It applies cleanly to both latest trunk and 17.01
branch. Tested on WNDR3700v1.
Signed-off-by: Michal Cieslakiewicz <michal.cieslakiewicz@wp.pl>
This patch adds a image with squashfs as the root filesystem.
A rootfs_data partition will be generated on the first boot
and placed inside the rootfs partition (just after the squashfs
image).
advantages:
- it is possible to migrate from an existing -ext4
installation and back via sysupgrade.
- existing partition layout will not be lost.
- slightly smaller image size.
- support for attendedsysupgrade
disadvantages:
- needs f2fs + tools as well. This is because fs-tools decides on the
blocksize of the sdcard. So either f2fs or ext4 can get choosen as
the rootfs_data filesystem (depends on the size of the root partition).
- rootfs_data is placed into the rootfs partition. This makes
it difficult for tools that expect a /dev/mmc0pX device.
It also makes it difficult for data recovery tools since they
might not expect to find a embedded partition or will be
confused.
For people with existing build configurations: make sure to include mkf2fs
and f2fsck package into the image... Otherwise the new -squashfs image will
boot of a ram-overlay and won't keep the configurations after a reboot.
Cc: Álvaro Fernández Rojas <noltari@gmail.com>
Cc: Paul Spooren <spooren@informatik.uni-leipzig.de>
Cc: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Daniel Golle <daniel@makrotopia.org>
There is a new APU-model available, APU3. The device is configured in
the same way as the APU1 and APU2, so the same LED/network setup can be
used.
I considered changing the case to pc-engines-apu*, but I chose to follow
the existing pattern and add the full board name.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Evensen <kristian.evensen@gmail.com>
This patch backports several patches that went upstream into
Herbert Xu's cryptodev-2.6 tree:
crypto: Use zeroing memory allocator instead of allocator/memset
crypto: crypto4xx - performance optimizations
crypto: crypto4xx - convert to skcipher
crypto: crypto4xx - avoid VLA use
crypto: crypto4xx - add aes-ctr support
crypto: crypto4xx - properly set IV after de- and encrypt
crypto: crypto4xx - extend aead fallback checks
crypto: crypto4xx - put temporary dst sg into request ctx
The older, outstanding patches from 120-wxyz series have been
upstreamed as well and therefore they have been reassigned to
fit into the series.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
The swconfig package is part of the DEFAULT_PACKAGES list in
the apm821xx's nand subtarget. It's enabled by default because
the MX60(W) and WNDR4700 need it for their initramfs. However
the package is not necessary for the MR24's sysupgrade image, as
the MR24 does not have a switch.
Signed-off-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@gmail.com>
Refreshed all patches
Added new ARM64 symbol: ARM64_ERRATUM_1024718
Compile-tested on: ar71xx
Runtime-tested on: ar71xx
Signed-off-by: Koen Vandeputte <koen.vandeputte@ncentric.com>
Add needed firmware for newer QCA Rome Bluetooth family.
This enables use of bluetooth with ath3k driver on QCA9377/9378 devices.
Signed-off-by: Robert Marko <robimarko@gmail.com>
- DGND3700v1: fix port numbers, they're in reverse order
- FaST2704n: there is no WAN port identified as such, only 4 LAN
- AD1018: configure the "FIBRE" port as WAN
Signed-off-by: Daniel Gonzalez Cabanelas <dgcbueu@gmail.com>
Mostly whitespace cleanups. Some unneeded code was removed.
MMC init was also moved to the probe function as in
6069bdd
The cleanup commits are over 100, making it hard to do them individually.
Tested on GnuBee PC1 with an SD card being used as swap.
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
v2: Fixed compile issue with mt7620
This patch updates the QCA988X firmware to the latest revision
firmware-5.bin_10.2.4-1.0-00037
found in the ath10k-firmware and linux-firmware repositories.
Tested on TP-Link Archer C7 v2 (ar71xx).
Signed-off-by: Timo Sigurdsson <public_timo.s@silentcreek.de>
Both initramfs and flashed images are built and boot. No Ethernet, no WLAN,
probably further issues, so the image is not added to TARGET_DEVICES for
now.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Schiffer <mschiffer@universe-factory.net>
Add the syscon compatible, otherwise used functions like
syscon_regmap_lookup_by_phandle() will return an error and setting the
ethernet pll data wont work at all.
Fix the pll register width. Writing to registers out of the range via
syscon isn't possible and returns an error. On ar7242 the last pll
register - Current Audio Modulation Logic Output - is at 0x1805003c.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Remove recipes for not yet migrated boards. Drop variables which aren't
required due to the switch to devicetree like boardname.
Drop the legacy image build code. Boards added to this target shouldn't
use the legacy image build code anyway.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
None of these checks are used at the moment and most of them aren't
required if the image metadata validation is used.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
The watchdog kill command was meant for busybox watchdog. Busybox watchdog
was replaced by the procd watchdog mid 2013 with commit df7ce9301a
("busybox: disable the watchdog utility by default"), which makes the kill
command obsolete since quite some time.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Add the SoC compatible to the individual dts files. Rename the dts files
to match the common pattern.
Remove dts files wich aren't used and no image in ar71xx exists.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
It isn't a phy supply, as the phy is still up if the GPIO is low. It
rather is the supply for the vbus. A correct setting/definition will be
relevant as soon as USB peripheral mode is supported.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Backport patch adding support for the vbus-supply devicetree property,
which allows to specific GPIOs (via fixed regulators) to enable
vbus/usb power.
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>
Rename the image and use a compatible string which indicates that only
hardware revision 2 and higher is supported.
It allows to use the wireless LED, as HWRev 1 uses GPIO#39 for the
wireless LED and starting with HWRev 2 GPIO#35 is used for the wireless
LED and GPIO#39 for IFX_GPIO_MODULE_EXTPHY_MDIO.
The HWREV can be checked by connecting to the fritzbox right after power
on via ftp:
ftp> quote GETENV HWSubRevision
Within the same HW revision 5 of the Fritz!Box 3370 different NAND flash
chips are used. Usually it isn't a big deal but depending on the used
NAND flash chip, the ECC calculation is done different (and incompatible
of course).
Boards with a Micron MT29F1G08ABADA NAND flash chip are using the NAND
chip to calculate the ECC (on-die). Boards with a Hynix HY27UF081G2M NAND
flash chip are doing the ECC calculation in software.
Supporting both with a single DTS isn't possible. It might be possible
to add a patch selecting the ECC mode dynamicaly based on the found NAND
flash chip. But such a patch has no chance to get accepted upstream and
most likely need to be touched with every kernel update.
Instead two images are created. One for Micron NAND flash chip and one
for Hynix NAND flash chip. So far no pattern is known to identify the
used flash chip without opening the box.
Add the power off GPIO. At least EVA version 2186 sets/keeps the GPIO as
input, which will cause a reboot 30sec after power on. For boards with
EVA version 2186 the installation is tricky as it has to be finished
within the 30sec time frame.
The EVA version can be checked by connecting to the fritzbox right after
power on via ftp:
ftp> quote GETENV urlader-version
The ath9k eeprom/caldata is at a different and offset and stored in
reverse order (from the last byte to the beginning) on the flash.
Reverse the bits to bring the data into the format expected by the
ath9k driver.
Since the ath9k eeprom is stored in reverse order on flash, we can not
use the mac address from the on flash eeprom. Get the MAC address from
the tffs instead.
Within the same HW revision 5 of the Fritz!Box 3370 both version of the
vr9 SoC are used. During preparation of kernel 4.14 support, all
devicetree source files were changed to load the vr9 v1.1 and vr9 v1.2
gphy firmware, which fixed the embedded phys for boards using the
version 1.2 of the vr9 SoC.
While at it, add a trigger to make use of the LAN LED. Setup the
build-in switch and add a hint for LuCI two show the ports in order
matching the labels on the case
Add support for the second USB port and provide the volatage GPIOs. Use
GPIO#21 as PCIe reset pin. The lan led is connected to GPIO#38.
Name the rootfs partition ubi and remove the mtd/rootfs related kernel
bootargs to use the OpenWrt autoprobing based on the partition name.
Enable sysupgrade support to allow an upgrade from a running system.
Since sysupgrade wasn't supported till now, drop image build code which
was added to allow a sysupgrade from earlier OpenWrt versions.
Build images that allow an (initial) installation via EVA bootloader.
To install OpenWrt via Eva bootloader, within the first seconds after
power on a ftp connection need to be established to the FRITZ!Box at
192.168.178.1 and the the following ftp commands need to be run:
ftp> quote USER adam2
ftp> quote PASS adam2
ftp> binary
ftp> debug
ftp> passive
ftp> quote SETENV linux_fs_start 0
ftp> quote MEDIA FLSH
ftp> put /path/to/openwrt-lantiq-xrx200-FRITZ3370-eva-kernel.bin mtd1
ftp> put /path/to/openwrt-lantiq-xrx200-FRITZ3370-eva-filesystem.bin mtd0
Signed-off-by: Andrea Merello <andrea.merello@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Mathias Kresin <dev@kresin.me>