u-boot/arch/arm/mach-tegra/Kconfig
Simon Glass 3077026ea1 tegra: Don't enable binman on ARMv8 SoCs
At present only the ARMv7 tegra SoCs actually use binman to create an
image. Change the config to reflect this, since otherwise running binman
will produce an error.

Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
2020-07-28 19:30:39 -06:00

191 lines
4.2 KiB
Plaintext

if ARCH_TEGRA
config SPL_GPIO_SUPPORT
default y
config SPL_LIBCOMMON_SUPPORT
default y
config SPL_LIBGENERIC_SUPPORT
default y
config SPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT
default y
config TEGRA_CLKRST
bool
config TEGRA_GP_PADCTRL
bool
config TEGRA_IVC
bool "Tegra IVC protocol"
help
IVC (Inter-VM Communication) protocol is a Tegra-specific IPC
(Inter Processor Communication) framework. Within the context of
U-Boot, it is typically used for communication between the main CPU
and various auxiliary processors.
config TEGRA_MC
bool
config TEGRA_PINCTRL
bool
config TEGRA_PMC
bool
config TEGRA_PMC_SECURE
bool
depends on TEGRA_PMC
config TEGRA_COMMON
bool "Tegra common options"
select BOARD_EARLY_INIT_F
select CLK
select DM
select DM_ETH
select DM_GPIO
select DM_I2C
select DM_KEYBOARD
select DM_MMC
select DM_PWM
select DM_RESET
select DM_SERIAL
select DM_SPI
select DM_SPI_FLASH
select MISC
select OF_CONTROL
select SPI
imply CMD_DM
imply CRC32_VERIFY
config TEGRA_NO_BPMP
bool "Tegra common options for SoCs without BPMP"
select TEGRA_CAR
select TEGRA_CAR_CLOCK
select TEGRA_CAR_RESET
config TEGRA_ARMV7_COMMON
bool "Tegra 32-bit common options"
select BINMAN
select CPU_V7A
select SPL
select SPL_BOARD_INIT if SPL
select SUPPORT_SPL
select TEGRA_CLKRST
select TEGRA_COMMON
select TEGRA_GPIO
select TEGRA_GP_PADCTRL
select TEGRA_MC
select TEGRA_NO_BPMP
select TEGRA_PINCTRL
select TEGRA_PMC
config TEGRA_ARMV8_COMMON
bool "Tegra 64-bit common options"
select ARM64
select INIT_SP_RELATIVE
select LINUX_KERNEL_IMAGE_HEADER
select POSITION_INDEPENDENT
select TEGRA_COMMON
if TEGRA_ARMV8_COMMON
config LNX_KRNL_IMG_TEXT_OFFSET_BASE
default 0x80000000
endif
choice
prompt "Tegra SoC select"
optional
config TEGRA20
bool "Tegra20 family"
select ARM_ERRATA_716044
select ARM_ERRATA_742230
select ARM_ERRATA_751472
select TEGRA_ARMV7_COMMON
config TEGRA30
bool "Tegra30 family"
select ARM_ERRATA_743622
select ARM_ERRATA_751472
select TEGRA_ARMV7_COMMON
config TEGRA114
bool "Tegra114 family"
select TEGRA_ARMV7_COMMON
config TEGRA124
bool "Tegra124 family"
select TEGRA_ARMV7_COMMON
imply REGMAP
imply SYSCON
config TEGRA210
bool "Tegra210 family"
select TEGRA_ARMV8_COMMON
select TEGRA_CLKRST
select TEGRA_GPIO
select TEGRA_GP_PADCTRL
select TEGRA_MC
select TEGRA_NO_BPMP
select TEGRA_PINCTRL
select TEGRA_PMC
select TEGRA_PMC_SECURE
config TEGRA186
bool "Tegra186 family"
select DM_MAILBOX
select TEGRA186_BPMP
select TEGRA186_CLOCK
select TEGRA186_GPIO
select TEGRA186_RESET
select TEGRA_ARMV8_COMMON
select TEGRA_HSP
select TEGRA_IVC
endchoice
config TEGRA_DISCONNECT_UDC_ON_BOOT
bool "Disconnect USB device mode controller on boot"
depends on CI_UDC
default y
help
When loading U-Boot into RAM over USB protocols using tools such as
tegrarcm or L4T's exec-uboot.sh/tegraflash.py, Tegra's USB device
mode controller is initialized and enumerated by the host PC running
the tool. Unfortunately, these tools do not shut down the USB
controller before executing the downloaded code, and so the host PC
does not "de-enumerate" the USB device. This option shuts down the
USB controller when U-Boot boots to avoid leaving a stale USB device
present.
config SYS_MALLOC_F_LEN
default 0x1800
source "arch/arm/mach-tegra/tegra20/Kconfig"
source "arch/arm/mach-tegra/tegra30/Kconfig"
source "arch/arm/mach-tegra/tegra114/Kconfig"
source "arch/arm/mach-tegra/tegra124/Kconfig"
source "arch/arm/mach-tegra/tegra210/Kconfig"
source "arch/arm/mach-tegra/tegra186/Kconfig"
config CMD_ENTERRCM
bool "Enable 'enterrcm' command"
default y
help
Tegra's boot ROM supports a mode whereby code may be downloaded and
flash-programmed over a USB connection. On dev boards, this is
typically entered by holding down a "force recovery" button and
resetting the CPU. However, not all boards have such a button (one
example is the Compulab Trimslice), so a method to enter RCM from
software is useful.
Even on boards other than Trimslice, controlling this over a UART
may be useful, e.g. to allow simple remote control without the need
for mechanical button actuators, or hooking up relays/... to the
button.
endif