1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ 2 3ARM64 4===== 5 6Summary 7------- 8The initial arm64 U-Boot port was developed before hardware was available, 9so the first supported platforms were the Foundation and Fast Model for ARMv8. 10These days U-Boot runs on a variety of 64-bit capable ARM hardware, from 11embedded development boards to servers. 12 13Notes 14----- 15 161. U-Boot can run at any exception level it is entered in, it is 17 recommened to enter it in EL3 if U-Boot takes some responsibilities of a 18 classical firmware (like initial hardware setup, CPU errata workarounds 19 or SMP bringup). U-Boot can be entered in EL2 when its main purpose is 20 that of a boot loader. It can drop to lower exception levels before 21 entering the OS. 22 232. U-Boot for arm64 is compiled with AArch64-gcc. AArch64-gcc 24 use rela relocation format, a tool(tools/relocate-rela) by Scott Wood 25 is used to encode the initial addend of rela to u-boot.bin. After running, 26 the U-Boot will be relocated to destination again. 27 283. Earlier Linux kernel versions required the FDT to be placed at a 29 2 MB boundary and within the same 512 MB section as the kernel image, 30 resulting in fdt_high to be defined specially. 31 Since kernel version 4.2 Linux is more relaxed about the DT location, so it 32 can be placed anywhere in memory. 33 Please reference linux/Documentation/arm64/booting.txt for detail. 34 354. Spin-table is used to wake up secondary processors. One location 36 (or per processor location) is defined to hold the kernel entry point 37 for secondary processors. It must be ensured that the location is 38 accessible and zero immediately after secondary processor 39 enter slave_cpu branch execution in start.S. The location address 40 is encoded in cpu node of DTS. Linux kernel store the entry point 41 of secondary processors to it and send event to wakeup secondary 42 processors. 43 Please reference linux/Documentation/arm64/booting.txt for detail. 44 455. Generic board is supported. 46 476. CONFIG_ARM64 instead of CONFIG_ARMV8 is used to distinguish aarch64 and 48 aarch32 specific codes. 49 50 51Contributors 52------------ 53 * Tom Rini <trini@ti.com> 54 * Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com> 55 * York Sun <yorksun@freescale.com> 56 * Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> 57 * Sharma Bhupesh <bhupesh.sharma@freescale.com> 58 * Rob Herring <robherring2@gmail.com> 59 * Sergey Temerkhanov <s.temerkhanov@gmail.com> 60