This website requires JavaScript.
Explore
Help
Register
Sign in
Techwizz
/
kernel-fxtec-pro1x
Watch
1
Star
0
Fork
You've already forked kernel-fxtec-pro1x
0
Code
Issues
Pull requests
Projects
Releases
Packages
Wiki
Activity
2b8318881d
kernel-fxtec-pro1x
/
arch
/
blackfin
/
mm
/
Makefile
6 lines
87 B
Makefile
Raw
Normal View
History
Unescape
Escape
blackfin architecture This adds support for the Analog Devices Blackfin processor architecture, and currently supports the BF533, BF532, BF531, BF537, BF536, BF534, and BF561 (Dual Core) devices, with a variety of development platforms including those avaliable from Analog Devices (BF533-EZKit, BF533-STAMP, BF537-STAMP, BF561-EZKIT), and Bluetechnix! Tinyboards. The Blackfin architecture was jointly developed by Intel and Analog Devices Inc. (ADI) as the Micro Signal Architecture (MSA) core and introduced it in December of 2000. Since then ADI has put this core into its Blackfin processor family of devices. The Blackfin core has the advantages of a clean, orthogonal,RISC-like microprocessor instruction set. It combines a dual-MAC (Multiply/Accumulate), state-of-the-art signal processing engine and single-instruction, multiple-data (SIMD) multimedia capabilities into a single instruction-set architecture. The Blackfin architecture, including the instruction set, is described by the ADSP-BF53x/BF56x Blackfin Processor Programming Reference http://blackfin.uclinux.org/gf/download/frsrelease/29/2549/Blackfin_PRM.pdf The Blackfin processor is already supported by major releases of gcc, and there are binary and source rpms/tarballs for many architectures at: http://blackfin.uclinux.org/gf/project/toolchain/frs There is complete documentation, including "getting started" guides available at: http://docs.blackfin.uclinux.org/ which provides links to the sources and patches you will need in order to set up a cross-compiling environment for bfin-linux-uclibc This patch, as well as the other patches (toolchain, distribution, uClibc) are actively supported by Analog Devices Inc, at: http://blackfin.uclinux.org/ We have tested this on LTP, and our test plan (including pass/fails) can be found at: http://docs.blackfin.uclinux.org/doku.php?id=testing_the_linux_kernel [m.kozlowski@tuxland.pl: balance parenthesis in blackfin header files] Signed-off-by: Bryan Wu <bryan.wu@analog.com> Signed-off-by: Mariusz Kozlowski <m.kozlowski@tuxland.pl> Signed-off-by: Aubrey Li <aubrey.li@analog.com> Signed-off-by: Jie Zhang <jie.zhang@analog.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-05-06 15:50:22 -06:00
#
# arch/blackfin/mm/Makefile
#
blackfin,kgdb,probe_kernel: Cleanup probe_kernel_read/write Blackfin needs it own arch specific probe_kernel_read() and probe_kernel_write(). This was moved out of the kgdb code and into the arch/blackfin/maccess.c, because it is a generic kernel api. The arch specific kgdb.c for blackfin was cleaned of all functions which exist in the kgdb core that do the same thing after resolving the probe_kernel_read() and probe_kernel_write(). This also eliminated the need for most of the #include's. CC: Sonic Zhang <sonic.adi@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jason Wessel <jason.wessel@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
2010-01-07 10:58:36 -07:00
obj-y
:=
sram-alloc.o isram-driver.o init.o maccess.o
Reference in a new issue
Copy permalink