Files
rtems/bsps/lm32/lm32_evr
Sebastian Huber 511dc4b2be Rework initialization and interrupt stack support
Statically initialize the interrupt stack area
(_Configuration_Interrupt_stack_area_begin,
_Configuration_Interrupt_stack_area_end, and
_Configuration_Interrupt_stack_size) via <rtems/confdefs.h>.  Place the
interrupt stack area in a special section ".rtemsstack.interrupt".  Let
BSPs define the optimal placement of this section in their linker
command files (e.g. in a fast on-chip memory).

This change makes makes the CPU_HAS_SOFTWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK and
CPU_HAS_HARDWARE_INTERRUPT_STACK CPU port defines superfluous, since the
low level initialization code has all information available via global
symbols.

This change makes the CPU_ALLOCATE_INTERRUPT_STACK CPU port define
superfluous, since the interrupt stacks are allocated by confdefs.h for
all architectures.  There is no need for BSP-specific linker command
file magic (except the section placement), see previous ARM linker
command file as a bad example.

Remove _CPU_Install_interrupt_stack().  Initialize the hardware
interrupt stack in _CPU_Initialize() if necessary (e.g.
m68k_install_interrupt_stack()).

The optional _CPU_Interrupt_stack_setup() is still useful to customize
the registration of the interrupt stack area in the per-CPU information.

The initialization stack can reuse the interrupt stack, since

  * interrupts are disabled during the sequential system initialization,
    and

  * the boot_card() function does not return.

This stack resuse saves memory.

Changes per architecture:

arm:

  * Mostly replace the linker symbol based configuration of stacks with
    the standard <rtems/confdefs.h> configuration via
    CONFIGURE_INTERRUPT_STACK_SIZE.  The size of the FIQ, ABT and UND
    mode stack is still defined via linker symbols.  These modes are
    rarely used in applications and the default values provided by the
    BSP should be sufficient in most cases.

  * Remove the bsp_processor_count linker symbol hack used for the SMP
    support. This is possible since the interrupt stack area is now
    allocated by the linker and not allocated from the heap.  This makes
    some configure.ac stuff obsolete.  Remove the now superfluous BSP
    variants altcycv_devkit_smp and realview_pbx_a9_qemu_smp.

bfin:

  * Remove unused magic linker command file allocation of initialization
    stack.  Maybe a previous linker command file copy and paste problem?
    In the start.S the initialization stack is set to a hard coded value.

lm32, m32c, mips, nios2, riscv, sh, v850:

  * Remove magic linker command file allocation of initialization stack.
    Reuse interrupt stack for initialization stack.

m68k:

  * Remove magic linker command file allocation of initialization stack.
    Reuse interrupt stack for initialization stack.

powerpc:

  * Remove magic linker command file allocation of initialization stack.
    Reuse interrupt stack for initialization stack.

  * Used dedicated memory region (REGION_RTEMSSTACK) for the interrupt
    stack on BSPs using the shared linkcmds.base (replacement for
    REGION_RWEXTRA).

sparc:

  * Remove the hard coded initialization stack.  Use the interrupt stack
    for the initialization stack on the boot processor.  This saves
    16KiB of RAM.

Update #3459.
2018-06-27 08:58:16 +02:00
..

#  The Lattice Mico32 port uses the system_config.h generated by the Mico
#  System Builder to retrieve the properties of the peripherals.
#
#   Implemented (in shared/ subdirectory)
#     Polled console driver (uart)
#     Clock interrupt with 10 ms tick
#     Networking using Lattice tri-speed ethernet MAC
#
#   Todo
#     Support more peripherals:
#       - uart driver using interrupts
#
#  jukka.pietarinen@mrf.fi, 3.12.2008
#    

BSP NAME:           lm32_evr
BOARD:              cRIO-EVR, Micro-Research Finland Oy
BUS:                wishbone
CPU FAMILY:         lm32 (Lattice Mico32)
CPU:                small
COPROCESSORS:       none
MODE:               32 bit mode

DEBUG MONITOR:      none

PERIPHERALS
===========
TIMERS:             clock
  RESOLUTION:       10 ms
SERIAL PORTS:       uart
REAL-TIME CLOCK:    none
DMA:                none
VIDEO:              none
SCSI:               none
NETWORKING:         tsmac

To on the simulator included in lm32-gdb use these commands:

tar sim --hw-device lm32cpu \
  --hw-device "lm32uart/reg 0x80006000 0x100" \
  --hw-device "/lm32uart > int int0 /lm32cpu" \
  --hw-device "lm32timer/reg 0x80002000 0x80" \
  --hw-device "/lm32timer > int int1 /lm32cpu" \
  --memory-region 0x08000000,0x4000000
load

The simulator is VERY VERY slow when RTEMS is idle.
To speed this up, add SIMULATOR_FAST_IDLE=1 to the
configure command.