| |
| u-boot for the TI OMAP730 Perseus2 |
| |
| Dave Peverley, MPC-Data Limited |
| http://www.mpc-data.co.uk |
| |
| |
| Overview : |
| |
| As the OMAP730 is similar to the OMAP1610 in many ways, this port was based |
| on the u-boot port to the OMAP1610 Innovator. Supported features are : |
| |
| - Serial terminal support |
| - Onboard NOR Flash |
| - Ethernet via the seperate debug board |
| - Tested on Rev4 and Rev5 boards |
| |
| It has also been tested to work correctly when built with a 'standard' GCC |
| 3.2.1 cross-compiler as well as Montavista Linux CEE 3.1's toolchain. |
| |
| |
| |
| Hardware Configuration : |
| |
| The main dips on the P2 board should be set to 2,3,7 and 9 on with all |
| others off. On the debug board, dips 1 and 7 should be on with the rest off. |
| The serial console has been set up to run from the DB9 connector on the |
| P2 board at 115200 baud, 8 data bits, no stop bits, 1 parity bit. |
| |
| It should be noted that the P2 board has NOR flash that is addressable via |
| either CS0 or CS3. This mode can be changed via DIP9 on the P2 board. |
| |
| |
| |
| Installing u-boot for the P2 : |
| |
| You can simply build u-boot for the Perseus by following the instructions |
| in the main readme file. The target configuration is "omap730p2_config". |
| Once u-boot has been built, you should strip the executable so it can be |
| loaded via CCS (which cant cope with the symbols in the ELF binary) : |
| $ cp u-boot u-boot.out |
| $ arm-linux-strip u-boot.out |
| |
| The method we've used for installing u-boot the first time on a P2 is |
| as follows : |
| |
| 1) Configure TI Code Composer Studio to connect to the P2 board via JTAG |
| as described in the Users Guide. |
| |
| 2) Set up the P2 to boot from CS3, and connect with CCS. Reset the CPU |
| and run the "init_mmu" GEL script. |
| |
| 3) Use the "Load Program" option to send the u-boot.out file to the P2 and |
| run. |
| |
| At this point, u-boot should run and you will see the boot menu on your |
| serial terminal. You can then load the u-boot image to memory : |
| |
| # loadb 0x10000000 |
| |
| Send the "u-boot.bin" binary via the serial using Kermit. Once loaded |
| you can self-flash u-boot : |
| |
| # protect off 1:0 |
| # erase 1:0 |
| # cp.b 0x10000000 0x0 0x20000 |
| |
| You should now be able to reset the board and run u-boot from flash. |
| |
| |
| |
| Alternative flash option : |
| |
| Sometimes, if you've been silly, you can get the board into a state where |
| whats in flash has upset the board so much that you can no longer connect |
| to the P2 via JTAG. However, you can set DIP9 to off to swap the boot mode |
| of the P2 so that you boot from RAM instead of NOR flash. This moves NOR |
| flash up to 0x0C000000. You can build a special version of u-boot to |
| utilise this by the following config : |
| |
| $ make omap730p2_cs0boot_config |
| |
| If you load this up via CCS it will detect flash at its alternate location |
| and allow you to programme your u-boot image (which, remember must be built |
| for CS3 boot!) Once you do this, you can revert to CS3 boot and it will work |
| fine again. |
| |
| |
| |
| Errata : |
| |
| 1) It's been observed that sometimes the tftp transfer of kernels to the |
| board can have checksum errors or stall. This appears to be an issue |
| with the lan91c96.c driver, and can normally be worked around by |
| resetting the board and trying again. |