fdt_property_offset() is the only function in the library returning a
direct offset to a property, and no function takes such an offset
(they only take offsets to nodes, not properties). Furthermore the
only client uses for this function I can think of involve immediately
translating the offset into a pointer, effectively duplicating the
internal function _fdt_getprop()
This function abolishes fdt_property_offset(), replacing it with
fdt_get_property(), a renamed and now externally visible version of
_fdt_getprop().
The error encoding for pointers is incorrect on machines where
sizeof(int) != sizeof(void *), which includes most 64-bit platforms
(in particular, AMD64 and powerpc64). This patch fixes it.
This patch fixes a number of embarrasing oversights which meant libfdt
did not work correctly on little endian machines. With this patch the
testsuite now passes on x86. Device trees are always created
big-endian.
v17 of the blob format adds a field for the size of the structure
block, but is backwards compatible with v16. This patch introduces
definitions for the new field, and uses it to improve the bounds
checking in the read-only code. It also cleans up the sequential
write code using it: we no longer need to borrow the version field as
a write pointer.
This patch pulls out the logic for finding a string in the string table
into _fdt_find_string(), from fdt_sw.c's find_add_string(). This function
will be useful for random-access read-write functions. In the process
clean up the search logic a little.
This patch adds exported accessor macros for the various flat device
tree header fields to libfdt.h. This necessitates moving some of the
byte-swapping functions.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
This patch fixes some completely bogus error checking logic from the
nop_property testcase (resulted from a cut-and-paste error).
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
The range sanity checking on the fdt_string_cmp() function causes problems
for the sequential write code (or at least for using RO functions on an
incomplete SW tree). Plus they didn't really fit with the philosphy for
the RO code of working as widely as possible on weirdly constructed trees.
Without this rather odd constrained pattern rule, make attempts to build
dumptrees using the default %: %.c rule instead of the defined %: %.o and
%.o: %.c rules.
The reserve mem regions are screwy if you read a blob on x86. I'm
guessing there may be a few more of these lurking in the code.
Signed-off-by: Michael Neuling <mikey@neuling.org>
dtc always sets the physical boot CPU to 0xfeedbeef. Add a -b option to
set this. Also add warnings when using the wrong property with the
wrong blob version.
Signed-off-by: Michael Neuling <mikey@neuling.org>
even for ASM output. It was inconsistent with the binary
output form, and kernel folks decided to have the early
kernel perform the reservation itself.
it shouldn't be (because the assembler will do the necessary swapping).
The cell values (asm_emit_cell()) are different from the data values
(asm_emit_data()) because the cell values are generated within the
program and don't get swapped like the data values read from the dts file.
They should be left as they are so that the assembler will swap them,
if necessary. For example, when the property length field was 4,
the asm output contained ".long 0x4000000" and sent the kernel prom.c
dt parsing code into the weeds.
Pointed out by Mark Greer.
Add device-type and compatible as required fields for mdio node; add eTSEC
to ethernet model options.
Signed-off-by: Becky Bruce <Becky.bruce@freescale.com>