1menu "SPL / TPL" 2 3config SUPPORT_SPL 4 bool 5 6config SUPPORT_TPL 7 bool 8 9config SPL_DFU_NO_RESET 10 bool 11 12config SPL 13 bool 14 depends on SUPPORT_SPL 15 prompt "Enable SPL" 16 help 17 If you want to build SPL as well as the normal image, say Y. 18 19config SPL_FRAMEWORK 20 bool "Support SPL based upon the common SPL framework" 21 depends on SPL 22 default y 23 help 24 Enable the SPL framework under common/spl/. This framework 25 supports MMC, NAND and YMODEM and other methods loading of U-Boot 26 and the Linux Kernel. If unsure, say Y. 27 28if SPL 29 30config SPL_LDSCRIPT 31 string "Linker script for the SPL stage" 32 default "arch/$(ARCH)/cpu/u-boot-spl.lds" 33 help 34 The SPL stage will usually require a different linker-script 35 (as it runs from a different memory region) than the regular 36 U-Boot stage. Set this to the path of the linker-script to 37 be used for SPL. 38 39config SPL_BOARD_INIT 40 bool "Call board-specific initialization in SPL" 41 help 42 If this option is enabled, U-Boot will call the function 43 spl_board_init() from board_init_r(). This function should be 44 provided by the board. 45 46config SPL_BOOTROM_SUPPORT 47 bool "Support returning to the BOOTROM" 48 help 49 Some platforms (e.g. the Rockchip RK3368) provide support in their 50 ROM for loading the next boot-stage after performing basic setup 51 from the SPL stage. 52 53 Enable this option, to return to the BOOTROM through the 54 BOOT_DEVICE_BOOTROM (or fall-through to the next boot device in the 55 boot device list, if not implemented for a given board) 56 57config SPL_BOOTCOUNT_LIMIT 58 bool "Support bootcount in SPL" 59 depends on SPL_ENV_SUPPORT 60 help 61 On some boards, which use 'falcon' mode, it is necessary to check 62 and increment the number of boot attempts. Such boards do not 63 use proper U-Boot for normal boot flow and hence needs those 64 adjustments to be done in the SPL. 65 66config SPL_RAW_IMAGE_SUPPORT 67 bool "Support SPL loading and booting of RAW images" 68 default n if (ARCH_MX6 && (SPL_MMC_SUPPORT || SPL_SATA_SUPPORT)) 69 default y if !TI_SECURE_DEVICE 70 help 71 SPL will support loading and booting a RAW image when this option 72 is y. If this is not set, SPL will move on to other available 73 boot media to find a suitable image. 74 75config SPL_LEGACY_IMAGE_SUPPORT 76 bool "Support SPL loading and booting of Legacy images" 77 default y if !TI_SECURE_DEVICE 78 help 79 SPL will support loading and booting Legacy images when this option 80 is y. If this is not set, SPL will move on to other available 81 boot media to find a suitable image. 82 83config SPL_SYS_MALLOC_SIMPLE 84 bool 85 prompt "Only use malloc_simple functions in the SPL" 86 help 87 Say Y here to only use the *_simple malloc functions from 88 malloc_simple.c, rather then using the versions from dlmalloc.c; 89 this will make the SPL binary smaller at the cost of more heap 90 usage as the *_simple malloc functions do not re-use free-ed mem. 91 92config TPL_SYS_MALLOC_SIMPLE 93 bool 94 prompt "Only use malloc_simple functions in the TPL" 95 help 96 Say Y here to only use the *_simple malloc functions from 97 malloc_simple.c, rather then using the versions from dlmalloc.c; 98 this will make the TPL binary smaller at the cost of more heap 99 usage as the *_simple malloc functions do not re-use free-ed mem. 100 101config SPL_STACK_R 102 bool "Enable SDRAM location for SPL stack" 103 help 104 SPL starts off execution in SRAM and thus typically has only a small 105 stack available. Since SPL sets up DRAM while in its board_init_f() 106 function, it is possible for the stack to move there before 107 board_init_r() is reached. This option enables a special SDRAM 108 location for the SPL stack. U-Boot SPL switches to this after 109 board_init_f() completes, and before board_init_r() starts. 110 111config SPL_STACK_R_ADDR 112 depends on SPL_STACK_R 113 hex "SDRAM location for SPL stack" 114 default 0x82000000 if ARCH_OMAP2PLUS 115 help 116 Specify the address in SDRAM for the SPL stack. This will be set up 117 before board_init_r() is called. 118 119config SPL_STACK_R_MALLOC_SIMPLE_LEN 120 depends on SPL_STACK_R && SPL_SYS_MALLOC_SIMPLE 121 hex "Size of malloc_simple heap after switching to DRAM SPL stack" 122 default 0x100000 123 help 124 Specify the amount of the stack to use as memory pool for 125 malloc_simple after switching the stack to DRAM. This may be set 126 to give board_init_r() a larger heap then the initial heap in 127 SRAM which is limited to SYS_MALLOC_F_LEN bytes. 128 129config SPL_SEPARATE_BSS 130 bool "BSS section is in a different memory region from text" 131 help 132 Some platforms need a large BSS region in SPL and can provide this 133 because RAM is already set up. In this case BSS can be moved to RAM. 134 This option should then be enabled so that the correct device tree 135 location is used. Normally we put the device tree at the end of BSS 136 but with this option enabled, it goes at _image_binary_end. 137 138config SPL_DISABLE_BANNER_PRINT 139 bool "Disable output of the SPL banner 'U-Boot SPL ...'" 140 help 141 If this option is enabled, SPL will not print the banner with version 142 info. Selecting this option could be useful to reduce SPL boot time 143 (e.g. approx. 6 ms slower, when output on i.MX6 with 115200 baud). 144 145config SPL_DISPLAY_PRINT 146 bool "Display a board-specific message in SPL" 147 help 148 If this option is enabled, U-Boot will call the function 149 spl_display_print() immediately after displaying the SPL console 150 banner ("U-Boot SPL ..."). This function should be provided by 151 the board. 152 153config SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_SECTOR 154 bool "MMC raw mode: by sector" 155 default y if ARCH_SUNXI || ARCH_DAVINCI || ARCH_UNIPHIER || \ 156 ARCH_MX6 || ARCH_MX7 || \ 157 ARCH_ROCKCHIP || ARCH_MVEBU || ARCH_SOCFPGA || \ 158 ARCH_AT91 || ARCH_ZYNQ || ARCH_KEYSTONE || OMAP34XX || \ 159 OMAP44XX || OMAP54XX || AM33XX || AM43XX 160 help 161 Use sector number for specifying U-Boot location on MMC/SD in 162 raw mode. 163 164config SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_SECTOR 165 hex "Address on the MMC to load U-Boot from" 166 depends on SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_SECTOR 167 default 0x50 if ARCH_SUNXI 168 default 0x75 if ARCH_DAVINCI 169 default 0x8a if ARCH_MX6 || ARCH_MX7 170 default 0x100 if ARCH_UNIPHIER 171 default 0x140 if ARCH_MVEBU 172 default 0x200 if ARCH_SOCFPGA || ARCH_AT91 173 default 0x300 if ARCH_ZYNQ || ARCH_KEYSTONE || OMAP34XX || OMAP44XX || \ 174 OMAP54XX || AM33XX || AM43XX 175 default 0x4000 if ARCH_ROCKCHIP 176 help 177 Address on the MMC to load U-Boot from, when the MMC is being used 178 in raw mode. Units: MMC sectors (1 sector = 512 bytes). 179 180config SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_PARTITION 181 bool "MMC Raw mode: by partition" 182 help 183 Use a partition for loading U-Boot when using MMC/SD in raw mode. 184 185config SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_PARTITION 186 hex "Partition to use to load U-Boot from" 187 depends on SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_PARTITION 188 default 1 189 help 190 Partition on the MMC to load U-Boot from when the MMC is being 191 used in raw mode 192 193config SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_PARTITION_TYPE 194 bool "MMC raw mode: by partition type" 195 depends on DOS_PARTITION && SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_PARTITION 196 help 197 Use partition type for specifying U-Boot partition on MMC/SD in 198 raw mode. U-Boot will be loaded from the first partition of this 199 type to be found. 200 201config SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_PARTITION_TYPE 202 hex "Partition Type on the MMC to load U-Boot from" 203 depends on SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_PARTITION_TYPE 204 help 205 Partition Type on the MMC to load U-Boot from, when the MMC is being 206 used in raw mode. 207 208config SPL_CRC32_SUPPORT 209 bool "Support CRC32" 210 depends on SPL_FIT 211 help 212 Enable this to support CRC32 in FIT images within SPL. This is a 213 32-bit checksum value that can be used to verify images. This is 214 the least secure type of checksum, suitable for detected 215 accidental image corruption. For secure applications you should 216 consider SHA1 or SHA256. 217 218config SPL_MD5_SUPPORT 219 bool "Support MD5" 220 depends on SPL_FIT 221 help 222 Enable this to support MD5 in FIT images within SPL. An MD5 223 checksum is a 128-bit hash value used to check that the image 224 contents have not been corrupted. Note that MD5 is not considered 225 secure as it is possible (with a brute-force attack) to adjust the 226 image while still retaining the same MD5 hash value. For secure 227 applications where images may be changed maliciously, you should 228 consider SHA1 or SHA256. 229 230config SPL_SHA1_SUPPORT 231 bool "Support SHA1" 232 depends on SPL_FIT 233 select SHA1 234 help 235 Enable this to support SHA1 in FIT images within SPL. A SHA1 236 checksum is a 160-bit (20-byte) hash value used to check that the 237 image contents have not been corrupted or maliciously altered. 238 While SHA1 is fairly secure it is coming to the end of its life 239 due to the expanding computing power avaiable to brute-force 240 attacks. For more security, consider SHA256. 241 242config SPL_SHA256_SUPPORT 243 bool "Support SHA256" 244 depends on SPL_FIT 245 select SHA256 246 help 247 Enable this to support SHA256 in FIT images within SPL. A SHA256 248 checksum is a 256-bit (32-byte) hash value used to check that the 249 image contents have not been corrupted. SHA256 is recommended for 250 use in secure applications since (as at 2016) there is no known 251 feasible attack that could produce a 'collision' with differing 252 input data. Use this for the highest security. Note that only the 253 SHA256 variant is supported: SHA512 and others are not currently 254 supported in U-Boot. 255 256config SPL_FIT_IMAGE_TINY 257 bool "Remove functionality from SPL FIT loading to reduce size" 258 depends on SPL_FIT 259 default y if MACH_SUN50I || MACH_SUN50I_H5 || MACH_SUN50I_H6 260 help 261 Enable this to reduce the size of the FIT image loading code 262 in SPL, if space for the SPL binary is very tight. 263 264 This removes the detection of image types (which forces the 265 first image to be treated as having a U-Boot style calling 266 convention) and skips the recording of each loaded payload 267 (i.e. loadable) into the FDT (modifying the loaded FDT to 268 ensure this information is available to the next image 269 invoked). 270 271config SPL_CPU_SUPPORT 272 bool "Support CPU drivers" 273 help 274 Enable this to support CPU drivers in SPL. These drivers can set 275 up CPUs and provide information about them such as the model and 276 name. This can be useful in SPL since setting up the CPUs earlier 277 may improve boot performance. Enable this option to build the 278 drivers in drivers/cpu as part of an SPL build. 279 280config SPL_CRYPTO_SUPPORT 281 bool "Support crypto drivers" 282 help 283 Enable crypto drivers in SPL. These drivers can be used to 284 accelerate secure boot processing in secure applications. Enable 285 this option to build the drivers in drivers/crypto as part of an 286 SPL build. 287 288config SPL_HASH_SUPPORT 289 bool "Support hashing drivers" 290 select SHA1 291 select SHA256 292 help 293 Enable hashing drivers in SPL. These drivers can be used to 294 accelerate secure boot processing in secure applications. Enable 295 this option to build system-specific drivers for hash acceleration 296 as part of an SPL build. 297 298config SPL_DMA_SUPPORT 299 bool "Support DMA drivers" 300 help 301 Enable DMA (direct-memory-access) drivers in SPL. These drivers 302 can be used to handle memory-to-peripheral data transfer without 303 the CPU moving the data. Enable this option to build the drivers 304 in drivers/dma as part of an SPL build. 305 306config SPL_DRIVERS_MISC_SUPPORT 307 bool "Support misc drivers" 308 help 309 Enable miscellaneous drivers in SPL. These drivers perform various 310 tasks that don't fall nicely into other categories, Enable this 311 option to build the drivers in drivers/misc as part of an SPL 312 build, for those that support building in SPL (not all drivers do). 313 314config SPL_ENV_SUPPORT 315 bool "Support an environment" 316 help 317 Enable environment support in SPL. The U-Boot environment provides 318 a number of settings (essentially name/value pairs) which can 319 control many aspects of U-Boot's operation. Normally this is not 320 needed in SPL as it has a much simpler task with less 321 configuration. But some boards use this to support 'Falcon' boot 322 on EXT2 and FAT, where SPL boots directly into Linux without 323 starting U-Boot first. Enabling this option will make env_get() 324 and env_set() available in SPL. 325 326config SPL_SAVEENV 327 bool "Support save environment" 328 depends on SPL_ENV_SUPPORT 329 select SPL_MMC_WRITE if ENV_IS_IN_MMC 330 help 331 Enable save environment support in SPL after setenv. By default 332 the saveenv option is not provided in SPL, but some boards need 333 this support in 'Falcon' boot, where SPL need to boot from 334 different images based on environment variable set by OS. For 335 example OS may set "reboot_image" environment variable to 336 "recovery" inorder to boot recovery image by SPL. The SPL read 337 "reboot_image" and act accordingly and change the reboot_image 338 to default mode using setenv and save the environment. 339 340config SPL_ETH_SUPPORT 341 bool "Support Ethernet" 342 depends on SPL_ENV_SUPPORT 343 help 344 Enable access to the network subsystem and associated Ethernet 345 drivers in SPL. This permits SPL to load U-Boot over an Ethernet 346 link rather than from an on-board peripheral. Environment support 347 is required since the network stack uses a number of environment 348 variables. See also SPL_NET_SUPPORT. 349 350config SPL_EXT_SUPPORT 351 bool "Support EXT filesystems" 352 help 353 Enable support for EXT2/3/4 filesystems with SPL. This permits 354 U-Boot (or Linux in Falcon mode) to be loaded from an EXT 355 filesystem from within SPL. Support for the underlying block 356 device (e.g. MMC or USB) must be enabled separately. 357 358config SPL_FAT_SUPPORT 359 bool "Support FAT filesystems" 360 select FS_FAT 361 help 362 Enable support for FAT and VFAT filesystems with SPL. This 363 permits U-Boot (or Linux in Falcon mode) to be loaded from a FAT 364 filesystem from within SPL. Support for the underlying block 365 device (e.g. MMC or USB) must be enabled separately. 366 367config SPL_FPGA_SUPPORT 368 bool "Support FPGAs" 369 help 370 Enable support for FPGAs in SPL. Field-programmable Gate Arrays 371 provide software-configurable hardware which is typically used to 372 implement peripherals (such as UARTs, LCD displays, MMC) or 373 accelerate custom processing functions, such as image processing 374 or machine learning. Sometimes it is useful to program the FPGA 375 as early as possible during boot, and this option can enable that 376 within SPL. 377 378config SPL_GPIO_SUPPORT 379 bool "Support GPIO" 380 help 381 Enable support for GPIOs (General-purpose Input/Output) in SPL. 382 GPIOs allow U-Boot to read the state of an input line (high or 383 low) and set the state of an output line. This can be used to 384 drive LEDs, control power to various system parts and read user 385 input. GPIOs can be useful in SPL to enable a 'sign-of-life' LED, 386 for example. Enable this option to build the drivers in 387 drivers/gpio as part of an SPL build. 388 389config SPL_I2C_SUPPORT 390 bool "Support I2C" 391 help 392 Enable support for the I2C (Inter-Integrated Circuit) bus in SPL. 393 I2C works with a clock and data line which can be driven by a 394 one or more masters or slaves. It is a fairly complex bus but is 395 widely used as it only needs two lines for communication. Speeds of 396 400kbps are typical but up to 3.4Mbps is supported by some 397 hardware. I2C can be useful in SPL to configure power management 398 ICs (PMICs) before raising the CPU clock speed, for example. 399 Enable this option to build the drivers in drivers/i2c as part of 400 an SPL build. 401 402config SPL_LIBCOMMON_SUPPORT 403 bool "Support common libraries" 404 help 405 Enable support for common U-Boot libraries within SPL. These 406 libraries include common code to deal with U-Boot images, 407 environment and USB, for example. This option is enabled on many 408 boards. Enable this option to build the code in common/ as part of 409 an SPL build. 410 411config SPL_LIBDISK_SUPPORT 412 bool "Support disk partitions" 413 help 414 Enable support for disk partitions within SPL. 'Disk' is something 415 of a misnomer as it includes non-spinning media such as flash (as 416 used in MMC and USB sticks). Partitions provide a way for a disk 417 to be split up into separate regions, with a partition table placed 418 at the start or end which describes the location and size of each 419 'partition'. These partitions are typically uses as individual block 420 devices, typically with an EXT2 or FAT filesystem in each. This 421 option enables whatever partition support has been enabled in 422 U-Boot to also be used in SPL. It brings in the code in disk/. 423 424config SPL_LIBGENERIC_SUPPORT 425 bool "Support generic libraries" 426 help 427 Enable support for generic U-Boot libraries within SPL. These 428 libraries include generic code to deal with device tree, hashing, 429 printf(), compression and the like. This option is enabled on many 430 boards. Enable this option to build the code in lib/ as part of an 431 SPL build. 432 433config SPL_MMC_SUPPORT 434 bool "Support MMC" 435 depends on MMC 436 help 437 Enable support for MMC (Multimedia Card) within SPL. This enables 438 the MMC protocol implementation and allows any enabled drivers to 439 be used within SPL. MMC can be used with or without disk partition 440 support depending on the application (SPL_LIBDISK_SUPPORT). Enable 441 this option to build the drivers in drivers/mmc as part of an SPL 442 build. 443 444config SPL_MMC_WRITE 445 bool "MMC/SD/SDIO card support for write operations in SPL" 446 depends on SPL_MMC_SUPPORT 447 default n 448 help 449 Enable write access to MMC and SD Cards in SPL 450 451 452config SPL_MPC8XXX_INIT_DDR_SUPPORT 453 bool "Support MPC8XXX DDR init" 454 help 455 Enable support for DDR-SDRAM (double-data-rate synchronous dynamic 456 random-access memory) on the MPC8XXX family within SPL. This 457 allows DRAM to be set up before loading U-Boot into that DRAM, 458 where it can run. 459 460config SPL_MTD_SUPPORT 461 bool "Support MTD drivers" 462 help 463 Enable support for MTD (Memory Technology Device) within SPL. MTD 464 provides a block interface over raw NAND and can also be used with 465 SPI flash. This allows SPL to load U-Boot from supported MTD 466 devices. See SPL_NAND_SUPPORT and SPL_ONENAND_SUPPORT for how 467 to enable specific MTD drivers. 468 469config SPL_MUSB_NEW_SUPPORT 470 bool "Support new Mentor Graphics USB" 471 help 472 Enable support for Mentor Graphics USB in SPL. This is a new 473 driver used by some boards. Enable this option to build 474 the drivers in drivers/usb/musb-new as part of an SPL build. The 475 old drivers are in drivers/usb/musb. 476 477config SPL_NAND_SUPPORT 478 bool "Support NAND flash" 479 help 480 Enable support for NAND (Negative AND) flash in SPL. NAND flash 481 can be used to allow SPL to load U-Boot from supported devices. 482 This enables the drivers in drivers/mtd/nand as part of an SPL 483 build. 484 485config SPL_NET_SUPPORT 486 bool "Support networking" 487 help 488 Enable support for network devices (such as Ethernet) in SPL. 489 This permits SPL to load U-Boot over a network link rather than 490 from an on-board peripheral. Environment support is required since 491 the network stack uses a number of environment variables. See also 492 SPL_ETH_SUPPORT. 493 494if SPL_NET_SUPPORT 495config SPL_NET_VCI_STRING 496 string "BOOTP Vendor Class Identifier string sent by SPL" 497 help 498 As defined by RFC 2132 the vendor class identifier field can be 499 sent by the client to identify the vendor type and configuration 500 of a client. This is often used in practice to allow for the DHCP 501 server to specify different files to load depending on if the ROM, 502 SPL or U-Boot itself makes the request 503endif # if SPL_NET_SUPPORT 504 505config SPL_NO_CPU_SUPPORT 506 bool "Drop CPU code in SPL" 507 help 508 This is specific to the ARM926EJ-S CPU. It disables the standard 509 start.S start-up code, presumably so that a replacement can be 510 used on that CPU. You should not enable it unless you know what 511 you are doing. 512 513config SPL_NOR_SUPPORT 514 bool "Support NOR flash" 515 help 516 Enable support for loading U-Boot from memory-mapped NOR (Negative 517 OR) flash in SPL. NOR flash is slow to write but fast to read, and 518 a memory-mapped device makes it very easy to access. Loading from 519 NOR is typically achieved with just a memcpy(). 520 521config SPL_XIP_SUPPORT 522 bool "Support XIP" 523 depends on SPL 524 help 525 Enable support for execute in place of U-Boot or kernel image. There 526 is no need to copy image from flash to ram if flash supports execute 527 in place. Its very useful in systems having enough flash but not 528 enough ram to load the image. 529 530config SPL_ONENAND_SUPPORT 531 bool "Support OneNAND flash" 532 help 533 Enable support for OneNAND (Negative AND) flash in SPL. OneNAND is 534 a type of NAND flash and therefore can be used to allow SPL to 535 load U-Boot from supported devices. This enables the drivers in 536 drivers/mtd/onenand as part of an SPL build. 537 538config SPL_OS_BOOT 539 bool "Activate Falcon Mode" 540 depends on !TI_SECURE_DEVICE 541 default n 542 help 543 Enable booting directly to an OS from SPL. 544 for more info read doc/README.falcon 545 546if SPL_OS_BOOT 547config SYS_OS_BASE 548 hex "addr, where OS is found" 549 depends on SPL_NOR_SUPPORT 550 help 551 Specify the address, where the OS image is found, which 552 gets booted. 553 554endif # SPL_OS_BOOT 555 556config SPL_PAYLOAD 557 string "SPL payload" 558 default "tpl/u-boot-with-tpl.bin" if TPL 559 default "u-boot.bin" 560 help 561 Payload for SPL boot. For backward compability, default to 562 u-boot.bin, i.e. RAW image without any header. In case of 563 TPL, tpl/u-boot-with-tpl.bin. For new boards, suggest to 564 use u-boot.img. 565 566config SPL_PCI_SUPPORT 567 bool "Support PCI drivers" 568 help 569 Enable support for PCI in SPL. For platforms that need PCI to boot, 570 or must perform some init using PCI in SPL, this provides the 571 necessary driver support. This enables the drivers in drivers/pci 572 as part of an SPL build. 573 574config SPL_PCH_SUPPORT 575 bool "Support PCH drivers" 576 help 577 Enable support for PCH (Platform Controller Hub) devices in SPL. 578 These are used to set up GPIOs and the SPI peripheral early in 579 boot. This enables the drivers in drivers/pch as part of an SPL 580 build. 581 582config SPL_POST_MEM_SUPPORT 583 bool "Support POST drivers" 584 help 585 Enable support for POST (Power-on Self Test) in SPL. POST is a 586 procedure that checks that the hardware (CPU or board) appears to 587 be functionally correctly. It is a sanity check that can be 588 performed before booting. This enables the drivers in post/drivers 589 as part of an SPL build. 590 591config SPL_DM_RESET 592 bool "Support reset drivers" 593 depends on SPL 594 help 595 Enable support for reset control in SPL. 596 That can be useful in SPL to handle IP reset in driver, as in U-Boot, 597 by using the generic reset API provided by driver model. 598 This enables the drivers in drivers/reset as part of an SPL build. 599 600config SPL_POWER_SUPPORT 601 bool "Support power drivers" 602 help 603 Enable support for power control in SPL. This includes support 604 for PMICs (Power-management Integrated Circuits) and some of the 605 features provided by PMICs. In particular, voltage regulators can 606 be used to enable/disable power and vary its voltage. That can be 607 useful in SPL to turn on boot peripherals and adjust CPU voltage 608 so that the clock speed can be increased. This enables the drivers 609 in drivers/power, drivers/power/pmic and drivers/power/regulator 610 as part of an SPL build. 611 612config SPL_POWER_DOMAIN 613 bool "Support power domain drivers" 614 help 615 Enable support for power domain control in SPL. Many SoCs allow 616 power to be applied to or removed from portions of the SoC (power 617 domains). This may be used to save power. This API provides the 618 means to control such power management hardware. This enables 619 the drivers in drivers/power/domain as part of a SPL build. 620 621config SPL_RAM_SUPPORT 622 bool "Support booting from RAM" 623 default y if MICROBLAZE || ARCH_SOCFPGA || TEGRA || ARCH_ZYNQ 624 help 625 Enable booting of an image in RAM. The image can be preloaded or 626 it can be loaded by SPL directly into RAM (e.g. using USB). 627 628config SPL_RAM_DEVICE 629 bool "Support booting from preloaded image in RAM" 630 depends on SPL_RAM_SUPPORT 631 default y if MICROBLAZE || ARCH_SOCFPGA || TEGRA || ARCH_ZYNQ 632 help 633 Enable booting of an image already loaded in RAM. The image has to 634 be already in memory when SPL takes over, e.g. loaded by the boot 635 ROM. 636 637config SPL_RTC_SUPPORT 638 bool "Support RTC drivers" 639 help 640 Enable RTC (Real-time Clock) support in SPL. This includes support 641 for reading and setting the time. Some RTC devices also have some 642 non-volatile (battery-backed) memory which is accessible if 643 needed. This enables the drivers in drivers/rtc as part of an SPL 644 build. 645 646config SPL_SATA_SUPPORT 647 bool "Support loading from SATA" 648 help 649 Enable support for SATA (Serial AT attachment) in SPL. This allows 650 use of SATA devices such as hard drives and flash drivers for 651 loading U-Boot. SATA is used in higher-end embedded systems and 652 can provide higher performance than MMC , at somewhat higher 653 expense and power consumption. This enables loading from SATA 654 using a configured device. 655 656config SPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT 657 bool "Support serial" 658 select SPL_PRINTF 659 select SPL_STRTO 660 help 661 Enable support for serial in SPL. This allows use of a serial UART 662 for displaying messages while SPL is running. It also brings in 663 printf() and panic() functions. This should normally be enabled 664 unless there are space reasons not to. Even then, consider 665 enabling USE_TINY_PRINTF which is a small printf() version. 666 667config SPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT 668 bool "Support SPI flash drivers" 669 help 670 Enable support for using SPI flash in SPL, and loading U-Boot from 671 SPI flash. SPI flash (Serial Peripheral Bus flash) is named after 672 the SPI bus that is used to connect it to a system. It is a simple 673 but fast bidirectional 4-wire bus (clock, chip select and two data 674 lines). This enables the drivers in drivers/mtd/spi as part of an 675 SPL build. This normally requires SPL_SPI_SUPPORT. 676 677config SPL_SPI_LOAD 678 bool "Support loading from SPI flash" 679 depends on SPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT 680 help 681 Enable support for loading next stage, U-Boot or otherwise, from 682 SPI NOR in U-Boot SPL. 683 684config SPL_SPI_SUPPORT 685 bool "Support SPI drivers" 686 help 687 Enable support for using SPI in SPL. This is used for connecting 688 to SPI flash for loading U-Boot. See SPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT for 689 more details on that. The SPI driver provides the transport for 690 data between the SPI flash and the CPU. This option can be used to 691 enable SPI drivers that are needed for other purposes also, such 692 as a SPI PMIC. 693 694config SPL_THERMAL 695 bool "Driver support for thermal devices" 696 help 697 Enable support for temperature-sensing devices. Some SoCs have on-chip 698 temperature sensors to permit warnings, speed throttling or even 699 automatic power-off when the temperature gets too high or low. Other 700 devices may be discrete but connected on a suitable bus. 701 702config SPL_USB_HOST_SUPPORT 703 bool "Support USB host drivers" 704 help 705 Enable access to USB (Universal Serial Bus) host devices so that 706 SPL can load U-Boot from a connected USB peripheral, such as a USB 707 flash stick. While USB takes a little longer to start up than most 708 buses, it is very flexible since many different types of storage 709 device can be attached. This option enables the drivers in 710 drivers/usb/host as part of an SPL build. 711 712config SPL_USB_SUPPORT 713 bool "Support loading from USB" 714 depends on SPL_USB_HOST_SUPPORT 715 help 716 Enable support for USB devices in SPL. This allows use of USB 717 devices such as hard drives and flash drivers for loading U-Boot. 718 The actual drivers are enabled separately using the normal U-Boot 719 config options. This enables loading from USB using a configured 720 device. 721 722config SPL_USB_GADGET_SUPPORT 723 bool "Suppport USB Gadget drivers" 724 help 725 Enable USB Gadget API which allows to enable USB device functions 726 in SPL. 727 728if SPL_USB_GADGET_SUPPORT 729 730config SPL_USB_ETHER 731 bool "Support USB Ethernet drivers" 732 help 733 Enable access to the USB network subsystem and associated 734 drivers in SPL. This permits SPL to load U-Boot over a 735 USB-connected Ethernet link (such as a USB Ethernet dongle) rather 736 than from an onboard peripheral. Environment support is required 737 since the network stack uses a number of environment variables. 738 See also SPL_NET_SUPPORT and SPL_ETH_SUPPORT. 739 740config SPL_DFU_SUPPORT 741 bool "Support DFU (Device Firmware Upgarde)" 742 select SPL_HASH_SUPPORT 743 select SPL_DFU_NO_RESET 744 depends on SPL_RAM_SUPPORT 745 help 746 This feature enables the DFU (Device Firmware Upgarde) in SPL with 747 RAM memory device support. The ROM code will load and execute 748 the SPL built with dfu. The user can load binaries (u-boot/kernel) to 749 selected device partition from host-pc using dfu-utils. 750 This feature is useful to flash the binaries to factory or bare-metal 751 boards using USB interface. 752 753choice 754 bool "DFU device selection" 755 depends on SPL_DFU_SUPPORT 756 757config SPL_DFU_RAM 758 bool "RAM device" 759 depends on SPL_DFU_SUPPORT && SPL_RAM_SUPPORT 760 help 761 select RAM/DDR memory device for loading binary images 762 (u-boot/kernel) to the selected device partition using 763 DFU and execute the u-boot/kernel from RAM. 764 765endchoice 766 767config SPL_USB_SDP_SUPPORT 768 bool "Support SDP (Serial Download Protocol)" 769 help 770 Enable Serial Download Protocol (SDP) device support in SPL. This 771 allows to download images into memory and execute (jump to) them 772 using the same protocol as implemented by the i.MX family's boot ROM. 773endif 774 775config SPL_WATCHDOG_SUPPORT 776 bool "Support watchdog drivers" 777 help 778 Enable support for watchdog drivers in SPL. A watchdog is 779 typically a hardware peripheral which can reset the system when it 780 detects no activity for a while (such as a software crash). This 781 enables the drivers in drivers/watchdog as part of an SPL build. 782 783config SPL_YMODEM_SUPPORT 784 bool "Support loading using Ymodem" 785 depends on SPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT 786 help 787 While loading from serial is slow it can be a useful backup when 788 there is no other option. The Ymodem protocol provides a reliable 789 means of transmitting U-Boot over a serial line for using in SPL, 790 with a checksum to ensure correctness. 791 792config SPL_ATF 793 bool "Support ARM Trusted Firmware" 794 depends on ARM64 795 help 796 ATF(ARM Trusted Firmware) is a component for ARM AArch64 which 797 is loaded by SPL (which is considered as BL2 in ATF terminology). 798 More detail at: https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware 799 800config SPL_ATF_NO_PLATFORM_PARAM 801 bool "Pass no platform parameter" 802 depends on SPL_ATF 803 help 804 While we expect to call a pointer to a valid FDT (or NULL) 805 as the platform parameter to an ATF, some ATF versions are 806 not U-Boot aware and have an insufficiently robust parameter 807 validation to gracefully reject a FDT being passed. 808 809 If this option is enabled, the spl_atf os-type handler will 810 always pass NULL for the platform parameter. 811 812 If your ATF is affected, say Y. 813 814config SPL_AM33XX_ENABLE_RTC32K_OSC 815 bool "Enable the RTC32K OSC on AM33xx based platforms" 816 default y if AM33XX 817 help 818 Enable access to the AM33xx RTC and select the external 32kHz clock 819 source. 820 821config TPL 822 bool 823 depends on SUPPORT_TPL 824 prompt "Enable TPL" 825 help 826 If you want to build TPL as well as the normal image and SPL, say Y. 827 828if TPL 829 830config TPL_BOARD_INIT 831 bool "Call board-specific initialization in TPL" 832 help 833 If this option is enabled, U-Boot will call the function 834 spl_board_init() from board_init_r(). This function should be 835 provided by the board. 836 837config TPL_LDSCRIPT 838 string "Linker script for the TPL stage" 839 depends on TPL 840 help 841 The TPL stage will usually require a different linker-script 842 (as it runs from a different memory region) than the regular 843 U-Boot stage. Set this to the path of the linker-script to 844 be used for TPL. 845 846 May be left empty to trigger the Makefile infrastructure to 847 fall back to the linker-script used for the SPL stage. 848 849config TPL_NEEDS_SEPARATE_TEXT_BASE 850 bool "TPL needs a separate text-base" 851 default n 852 depends on TPL 853 help 854 Enable, if the TPL stage should not inherit its text-base 855 from the SPL stage. When enabled, a base address for the 856 .text sections of the TPL stage has to be set below. 857 858config TPL_NEEDS_SEPARATE_STACK 859 bool "TPL needs a separate initial stack-pointer" 860 default n 861 depends on TPL 862 help 863 Enable, if the TPL stage should not inherit its initial 864 stack-pointer from the settings for the SPL stage. 865 866config TPL_TEXT_BASE 867 hex "Base address for the .text section of the TPL stage" 868 depends on TPL_NEEDS_SEPARATE_TEXT_BASE 869 help 870 The base address for the .text section of the TPL stage. 871 872config TPL_MAX_SIZE 873 int "Maximum size (in bytes) for the TPL stage" 874 default 0 875 depends on TPL 876 help 877 The maximum size (in bytes) of the TPL stage. 878 879config TPL_STACK 880 hex "Address of the initial stack-pointer for the TPL stage" 881 depends on TPL_NEEDS_SEPARATE_STACK 882 help 883 The address of the initial stack-pointer for the TPL stage. 884 Usually this will be the (aligned) top-of-stack. 885 886config TPL_BOOTROM_SUPPORT 887 bool "Support returning to the BOOTROM (from TPL)" 888 help 889 Some platforms (e.g. the Rockchip RK3368) provide support in their 890 ROM for loading the next boot-stage after performing basic setup 891 from the TPL stage. 892 893 Enable this option, to return to the BOOTROM through the 894 BOOT_DEVICE_BOOTROM (or fall-through to the next boot device in the 895 boot device list, if not implemented for a given board) 896 897config TPL_DRIVERS_MISC_SUPPORT 898 bool "Support misc drivers in TPL" 899 help 900 Enable miscellaneous drivers in TPL. These drivers perform various 901 tasks that don't fall nicely into other categories, Enable this 902 option to build the drivers in drivers/misc as part of an TPL 903 build, for those that support building in TPL (not all drivers do). 904 905config TPL_ENV_SUPPORT 906 bool "Support an environment" 907 help 908 Enable environment support in TPL. See SPL_ENV_SUPPORT for details. 909 910config TPL_I2C_SUPPORT 911 bool "Support I2C" 912 help 913 Enable support for the I2C bus in TPL. See SPL_I2C_SUPPORT for 914 details. 915 916config TPL_LIBCOMMON_SUPPORT 917 bool "Support common libraries" 918 help 919 Enable support for common U-Boot libraries within TPL. See 920 SPL_LIBCOMMON_SUPPORT for details. 921 922config TPL_LIBGENERIC_SUPPORT 923 bool "Support generic libraries" 924 help 925 Enable support for generic U-Boot libraries within TPL. See 926 SPL_LIBGENERIC_SUPPORT for details. 927 928config TPL_MPC8XXX_INIT_DDR_SUPPORT 929 bool "Support MPC8XXX DDR init" 930 help 931 Enable support for DDR-SDRAM on the MPC8XXX family within TPL. See 932 SPL_MPC8XXX_INIT_DDR_SUPPORT for details. 933 934config TPL_MMC_SUPPORT 935 bool "Support MMC" 936 depends on MMC 937 help 938 Enable support for MMC within TPL. See SPL_MMC_SUPPORT for details. 939 940config TPL_NAND_SUPPORT 941 bool "Support NAND flash" 942 help 943 Enable support for NAND in TPL. See SPL_NAND_SUPPORT for details. 944 945config TPL_RAM_SUPPORT 946 bool "Support booting from RAM" 947 help 948 Enable booting of an image in RAM. The image can be preloaded or 949 it can be loaded by TPL directly into RAM (e.g. using USB). 950 951config TPL_RAM_DEVICE 952 bool "Support booting from preloaded image in RAM" 953 depends on TPL_RAM_SUPPORT 954 help 955 Enable booting of an image already loaded in RAM. The image has to 956 be already in memory when TPL takes over, e.g. loaded by the boot 957 ROM. 958 959config TPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT 960 bool "Support serial" 961 select TPL_PRINTF 962 select TPL_STRTO 963 help 964 Enable support for serial in TPL. See SPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT for 965 details. 966 967config TPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT 968 bool "Support SPI flash drivers" 969 help 970 Enable support for using SPI flash in TPL. See SPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT 971 for details. 972 973config TPL_SPI_LOAD 974 bool "Support loading from SPI flash" 975 depends on TPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT 976 help 977 Enable support for loading next stage, U-Boot or otherwise, from 978 SPI NOR in U-Boot TPL. 979 980config TPL_SPI_SUPPORT 981 bool "Support SPI drivers" 982 help 983 Enable support for using SPI in TPL. See SPL_SPI_SUPPORT for 984 details. 985 986config TPL_YMODEM_SUPPORT 987 bool "Support loading using Ymodem" 988 depends on TPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT 989 help 990 While loading from serial is slow it can be a useful backup when 991 there is no other option. The Ymodem protocol provides a reliable 992 means of transmitting U-Boot over a serial line for using in TPL, 993 with a checksum to ensure correctness. 994 995endif # TPL 996 997endif # SPL 998endmenu 999