Annotation of wikisrc/ports/evbarm.mdwn, revision 1.51
1.1 mspo 1: [[!template id=port
2: port="evbarm"
1.6 mspo 3: port_alt="arm"
1.49 leot 4: port_var1="earm"
5: port_var2="earmeb"
6: port_var3="earmv6hf"
7: port_var4="earmv7hf"
8: port_var5="earmv7hfeb"
9: port_var_install_notes="evbarm-earm"
1.48 martin 10: cur_rel="8.0"
11: future_rel="9.0"
12: changes_cur="8.0"
13: changes_future="9.0"
1.1 mspo 14: thumbnail="http://www.netbsd.org/images/ports/evbarm/adi_brh.gif"
15: about="""
16: NetBSD/evbarm is the port of NetBSD to various evaluation and prototyping
17: boards based on CPUs implementing the ARM architecture. NetBSD/evbarm also
18: supports some specific embedded system products based on prototype board
19: designs.
20:
1.7 mspo 21: Matt Thomas is the maintainer of NetBSD/evbarm.
1.27 wiki 22:
1.42 gdt 23: ### CPU types
24:
25: The evbarm port can be built with a variety of CPU options. There are
26: three main variables: the instruction set, the endianness, and whether
1.43 gdt 27: there is hardware floating point. By default the CPU type is "earm",
28: and this implies little endian (el when explicitly stated), and soft
29: (emulated) floating point. Another example, suitable for Raspberry PI
1.44 gdt 30: 2, is earmv7hf, which is the v7 instruction set, little endian,
1.43 gdt 31: and hardware floating point.
1.42 gdt 32:
33: Typically, various boards are best compiled with a CPU type that
34: matches the board's CPU and floating point support, but generally a
35: lower CPU instruction set version is workable on a newer board. See
36: build.sh and look for aliases for the evbarm port.
37:
1.50 gdt 38: Some processors can operate as arm or the 64-bit ARM variant, aarch64, which is supported by
39: [[NetBSD/aarch64|aarch64]].
40:
1.43 gdt 41: ### Kernels and userland
42:
43: The evbarm userland can be used on any system that can run code of the
44: CPU type used for the build. Typically, a particular board requires a
45: kernel for that board.
46:
1.51 ! gdt 47: ### anita and qemu
! 48:
! 49: anita can be used to test builds. evbarm-earmv7hf uses "qemu -M
! 50: vexpress-a15" and evbarm-aarch64 uses "qemu -M virt". (Information on
! 51: how to test emulated versions of other specific hardware is welcome.)
! 52:
1.27 wiki 53: ### Board specific information
1.38 wiki 54: - [[Allwinner sunxi family SoCs|Allwinner]]
1.27 wiki 55: - [[BeagleBone and BeagleBone Black|BeagleBone]]
1.41 wiki 56: - [[NVIDIA Tegra|Tegra]]
1.27 wiki 57: - [[ODROID C1 and C1+|ODROID-C1]]
1.40 gdt 58: - [[Raspberry Pi 1, 2 and 3|Raspberry Pi]]
1.27 wiki 59:
1.1 mspo 60: """
1.27 wiki 61:
1.1 mspo 62: supported_hardware="""
1.11 wiki 63:
1.18 wiki 64: **NOTE**: This list is incomplete. For a full list of configurations, please see the [evbarm kernel configs](http://cvsweb.netbsd.org/bsdweb.cgi/src/sys/arch/evbarm/conf/) directory in CVS.
65:
1.11 wiki 66: [[!toc startlevel=3]]
67:
1.36 sevan 68: ### ADI Engineering **BRH** ("Big Red Head")
1.12 wiki 69:
70: The BRH is an evaluation and development platform for the Intel **i80200**
71: XScale processor. The BRH is based on ADI's **BECC** ("Big Endian Companion
72: Chip"). The BRH is capable of both big- and little-endian operation, although
1.21 snj 73: NetBSD currently only supports little-endian operation.
1.12 wiki 74:
75: Support for the BRH was written by Jason Thorpe, and contributed by Wasabi
76: Systems, Inc.
77:
78: * On-board NS16550-compatible serial ports (_com_)
79: * On-board Intel i82559 Ethernet on the PCI bus (_fxp_)
80: * On-chip timer on the BECC (used as system clock)
81: * Other devices inserted into the PCI slot
1.5 wiki 82:
1.12 wiki 83: The BRH comes with 128M of SDRAM. Systems with BECC revision 7 or less are
84: limited to 64M due to the layout of the PCI DMA windows. Users of these
85: systems should obtain an FPGA upgrade from ADI to revision 8 or later of the
86: BECC.
1.5 wiki 87:
1.39 wiki 88: ### Allwinner Technology
1.15 wiki 89: Various boards based on [[Allwinner]] SoCs are supported, including the BananaPi, Cubieboard 2, Cubietruck, Cubieboard 4, and Merrii Hummingbird A31.
1.10 wiki 90:
1.12 wiki 91: ### Arcom **Viper**
1.1 mspo 92:
1.12 wiki 93: The Arcom Viper is a single board computer based on the PXA255 XScale
94: processor.
1.1 mspo 95:
1.12 wiki 96: Support for the Arcom Viper was written by Antti Kantee.
1.1 mspo 97:
1.12 wiki 98: * On-chip timers (_saost_ used as system clock)
99: * On-chip serial ports (_com_)
1.36 sevan 100: * On-board SMC91C111 ethernet (_sm_)
1.1 mspo 101:
1.3 wiki 102: ### ARM, Ltd. **Integrator**
1.1 mspo 103:
104: The Integrator/AP is an ATX form-factor board that is used for development of
105: ARM processor-based designs. It supports up to four processors on plug-in core
106: modules, and provides clocks, a bus interface, and interrupt support. The
107: Integrator/AP also supports logic modules which provide additional
108: peripherals, and can accommodate up to three PCI expansion cards. The
109: Integrator/AP can also be inserted into a CompactPCI backplane.
110:
111: Support for the Integrator was written by Richard Earnshaw, and contributed by
112: ARM, Ltd.
113:
1.2 mspo 114: * PrimeCell PL010 UARTs in the System Controller FPGA (_plcom_)
115: * PrimeCell PL030 Real-time Clock in the System Controller FPGA (_plrtc_)
1.23 ryoon 116: * PrimeCell PL181 MultiMedia Card Interface
1.2 mspo 117: * Other devices inserted into the PCI expansion slots
1.1 mspo 118:
1.12 wiki 119: ### Atmark Techno **Armadillo-9**
120:
121: The Armadillo-9 is a single board computer based on the EP9315 processor.
122:
123: Support for the Armadillo-9 was written by Katsuomi Hamajima.
124:
125: * On-CPU RS232 UARTs (2) (_epcom_)
126: * On-CPU 10/100 Ethernet MAC (_epe_)
127: * system clock from on-CPU timers (_epclk_)
128: * CompactFlash socket (_eppcic_)
129: * USB 1.1 ports (_ohci_)
130:
1.19 wiki 131: ### BeagleBoard.org **BeagleBoard** and **BeagleBoard-xM**
132: The [[BeagleBoard]] is a low-power open-source hardware single-board computer from BeagleBoard.org.
133:
134: ### BeagleBoard.org **BeagleBone** and **BeagleBone Black**
135: The [[BeagleBone]] is a low-cost credit-card-sized computer from BeagleBoard.org.
1.12 wiki 136:
137: ### Gumstix, Inc. **gumstix**
138:
139: The [gumstix](http://www.gumstix.com/) is a small form-factor motherboard
140: based on the PXA255 and PXA270 XScale processor. Supports only PXA255 now.
141:
142: Support for the gumstix was written by KIYOHARA Takashi.
143:
144: * basix
145: * cfstix
146: * etherstix
147: * netCF
148: * netDUO
149: * netDUO-mmc
1.36 sevan 150: * netMMC
1.12 wiki 151:
152: When booting, it is necessary to set these with u-boot dynamically.
153:
154: <pre> > go 0xa0200000 busheader=basix</pre>
155:
156: * audiostix
157: * console-st (waysmall - STUART)
158: * console-hw (waysmall)
159: * GPSstix (GPS not test)
160: * tweener
161:
1.26 wiki 162: ### Hardkernel ODROID-C1 and ODROID-C1+
1.16 wiki 163:
164: The [[ODROID-C1]] is a quad core Cortex-A5 small form-factor board from Hardkernel co., Ltd.
165:
1.36 sevan 166: ### Intel **DBPXA250** ("Lubbock")
1.12 wiki 167:
168: DBPXA250 (a.k.a. Lubbock) is an evaluation and development platform for the
169: Intel **PXA250** XScale Core application processor. More information about the **DBPXA250** can be found at [Intel website](http://www.intel.com/design/pca/applicationsprocessors/swsup/index.htm).
170:
171: Support for the **DBPXA250** was written by Hiroyuki Bessho, and contributed
172: by Genetec Corp.
173:
174: * On-chip timers (_saost_ used as system clock)
175: * On-chip 2 serial port (_com_)
176: * On-board SMC91C96 ethernet (_sm_)
177: * On-board SA-1111 StrongArm companion chip (_sacc_)
178: * PS/2 keyboard (_pckbd_)
179: * 640x480 LCD (_lcd_)
180: * PCMCIA and CF card slots
181:
1.3 wiki 182: ### Intel **IQ31244**
1.1 mspo 183:
184: The IQ31244 is a development platform for the Intel **IOP321** I/O Processor
185: chipset and the Intel **i31244** SATA controller.
186:
187: Initial support for the IQ31244 was written by Jason Thorpe, and contributed
188: by Wasabi Systems, Inc.
189:
1.2 mspo 190: * Quad on-board Intel i31244 SATA controllers on the PCI-X bus (_artsata_)
191: * On-board Intel i82546EB Gigabit Ethernet on the PCI-X bus (_wm_)
192: * On-board NS16550-compatible serial port (_com_)
193: * On-chip timers (TMR0 used as system clock)
194: * On-chip Application Accelerator Unit (_iopaau_)
195: * On-chip watchdog timer (_iopwdog_)
196: * On-board compact flash reader (_wdc_)
197: * Other devices inserted into the PCI-X expansion slot
1.1 mspo 198:
1.3 wiki 199: ### Intel **IQ80310**
1.1 mspo 200:
201: The IQ80310 is the reference platform for the Intel **IOP310** I/O Processor
202: chipset, which is comprised of the i80200 XScale processor and the i80312 I/O
203: Companion chip.
204:
205: Support for the IQ80310 was written by Jason Thorpe and Allen Briggs, and
206: contributed by Wasabi Systems, Inc.
207:
1.2 mspo 208: * On-board Intel i82559 Ethernet on the PCI bus (_fxp_)
209: * On-board timer in the CPLD (used as system clock)
210: * On-board NS16550-compatible serial ports (_com_)
211: * Other devices inserted into the PCI expansion slots
1.1 mspo 212:
1.3 wiki 213: ### Intel **IQ80321**
1.1 mspo 214:
215: The IQ80321 is the reference platform for the Intel **IOP321** I/O Processor
216: (i80321 XScale processor).
217:
218: Support for the IQ80321 was written by Jason Thorpe, and contributed by Wasabi
219: Systems, Inc.
220:
1.2 mspo 221: * On-board Intel i82544EI Gigabit Ethernet on the PCI-X bus (_wm_)
222: * On-board NS16550-compatible serial port (_com_)
223: * On-chip timers (TMR0 used as system clock)
224: * On-chip Application Accelerator Unit (_iopaau_)
225: * On-chip watchdog timer (_iopwdog_)
226: * Other devices inserted into the PCI-X expansion slots
1.1 mspo 227:
1.3 wiki 228: ### Intel **IXM1200**
1.1 mspo 229:
230: The IXM1200 is the reference platform for the Intel **IXP1200** Network
231: Processor.
232:
233: Support for the IXM1200 was written by Ichiro FUKUHARA and Naoto Shimazaki.
234:
1.2 mspo 235: * On-board Intel i82559 Ethernet on the PCI bus (_fxp_)
236: * On-board Intel i21555 Non-Transparent PCI-PCI Bridge (_nppb_)
237: * On-chip timers (ixpclk0 used as system clock)
238: * On-chip serial port (_ixpcom_)
1.1 mspo 239:
1.36 sevan 240: ### NOVATEC **NTNP425B** ("ZAO425")
1.12 wiki 241:
242: NTNP425B is an evaluation and development platform for the Intel **IXP425**
243: XScale Core NetworkProcessor. NTNP425B is based on the reference board of
244: Intel **IXDP425**. The **NTNP425B** is capable of only big-endian operation.
245: Since the library for micro-engine(NPE) offered from Intel Corp. is big-
246: endian. More information about the **NTNP425B** can be found on [product
247: catalogue of **NTNP425B**(2.5MB,PDF
248: file)](http://www.novatec.co.jp/NTNP425BBrochureE.pdf).
249:
250: Support for the NTNP425B was written by Ichiro FUKUHARA.
251:
252: * On-chip timers (_ixpclk0_ used as system clock)
253: * On-chip 2 serial port (_ixpcom0_ and _ixpcom1_)
254: * Other devices inserted into the PCI/mPCI slot
255: * On-chip watchdog timer (_ixpwdog_)
256:
1.20 wiki 257: ### NVIDIA Tegra K1
1.37 snj 258: Support for NVIDIA [[Tegra]] K1 SoCs is present in NetBSD-current and
259: 8.0_BETA. The Jetson TK1 board is currently supported.
1.20 wiki 260:
1.40 gdt 261: ### Raspberry Pi Foundation **Raspberry Pi**/**Raspberry Pi 2**/**Raspberry Pi 3**
262: The [[Raspberry Pi]] is a low-cost credit-card-sized computer from the Raspberry Pi Foundation. The Raspberry Pi, Pi 2, and Pi 3 are supported.
1.12 wiki 263:
1.3 wiki 264: ### Samsung **SMDK2410**
1.1 mspo 265:
266: The SMDK2410 is the reference platform for the Samsung **S3C2410** processor,
267: which has an ARM920T core.
268:
269: More information on the S3C2410 can be found at [Samsung Electronics web page]
270: (http://www.samsung.com/Products/Semiconductor/MobileSoC/ApplicationProcessor/
271: ARM9Series/S3C2410/S3C2410.htm).
272:
273: Support for the SMDK2410 was written by Hiroyuki Bessho, and contributed by
274: Genetec Corp.
275:
1.2 mspo 276: * On-chip serial ports (_sscom_)
277: * On-chip USB host controller (_ohc_)
278: * On-chip timers (used as system clock)
279: * On-chip SPI (_ssspi_, used for other on-board devices)
280: * 240x320 TFT LCD (_lcd_)
281: * keyboard. (_sskbd_)
1.1 mspo 282:
1.3 wiki 283: ### Samsung **SMDK2800**
1.1 mspo 284:
285: The SMDK2800 is the reference platform for the **Samsung S3C2800** processor,
286: which has an ARM920T core.
287:
288: S3C2800 has built-in PCI controller, and SMDK2800 has three PCI slots.
289:
290: Support for the SMDK2800 was written by Hiroyuki Bessho, and contributed by
291: Fujitsu Component Ltd., and Genetec Corp.
292:
1.2 mspo 293: * On-chip serial ports (_sscom_)
294: * On-chip Host-PCI bridge (_sspci_)
295: * On-chip timers (used as system clock)
1.36 sevan 296: * Other devices inserted into the PCI slots
1.1 mspo 297:
1.12 wiki 298: ### Team ASA, Inc. **Npwr**
1.1 mspo 299:
1.12 wiki 300: The Npwr is an IOP310-based design targeted at the network-attached storage
301: space. The Npwr comes in several configurations (single or dual Gigabit
302: Ethernet, single or dual Ultra160 SCSI), and can be purchased as a bare board
303: or as a small server appliance. More information on the Npwr can be found at
304: the [Team ASA web page](http://www.teamasa.com/).
1.1 mspo 305:
1.12 wiki 306: Support for the Npwr was written by Jason Thorpe and Allen Briggs, and
307: contributed by Wasabi Systems, Inc.
1.1 mspo 308:
1.12 wiki 309: * On-board Intel i82544 Gigabit Ethernet on the PCI bus (_wm_)
310: * On-board LSI Logic 53c1010 Ultra160 SCSI on the PCI bus (_siop_)
311: * On-board timer in the CPLD (used as system clock)
312: * On-board NS16550-compatible serial port (_com_)
1.1 mspo 313:
1.12 wiki 314: ### Technologic Systems **TS-7200**
1.1 mspo 315:
1.12 wiki 316: The TS-7200 is a low-cost mass-produced PC/104 embedded single board computer
317: intended as a general purpose core for real embedded applications. The TS-7200
318: uses the Cirrus Logic EP9302 ARM9 system-on-chip and comes with a PC/104 (isa)
319: bus and can either boot to CompactFlash or onboard flash. The board also has
320: general purpose digital IO and optional multichannel analog-to-digital
321: converters. More information on the TS-7200 can be found at [Technologic
322: Systems](http://www.embeddedarm.com/epc/ts7200-spec-h.html).
1.1 mspo 323:
1.12 wiki 324: Support for the TS-7200 was written by Jesse Off
1.1 mspo 325:
1.12 wiki 326: * On-CPU RS232 UARTs (2) (_epcom_)
327: * On-CPU 10/100 Ethernet MAC (_epe_)
328: * CompactFlash socket (_wdc_)
329: * USB 1.1 ports (2) (_ohci_)
330: * Watchdog timer on CPLD (_tspld_)
331: * TMP124 high precision temperature sensor via sysctl
332: * 64Hz system clock from on-CPU timers (_epclk_)
333: * HD44780 2x24 text mode LCD (_tslcd_)
334: * 4x4 16 button matrix keypad (_wskbd_)
335: * TS-5620 battery backed RTC daughter-card (_tsrtc_)
336: * 1,2,4 port serial TS-SER daughter cards (_com_)
337: * Up to 4 10Mb TS-ETH10 daughter cards (_tscs_)
338: * Other devices inserted into the PC/104 (_isa_) expansion slot
1.1 mspo 339:
340: """
1.13 wiki 341: additional="""
1.22 wiki 342: * The [NetBSD Diskless HOWTO](http://www.netbsd.org/docs/network/netboot/)
1.36 sevan 343: * [ Porting NetBSD/evbarm to the Arcom Viper](http://www.cs.hut.fi/~pooka/pubs/EuroBSDCon2005/viper.pdf), presented at EuroBSDCon 2005.
1.1 mspo 344: """
345: ]]
346: [[!tag tier1port]]
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