Merge pull request 'README: populate with initial DC-SCM implementation details and instructions' (#1) from jk/librebmc:dev/dcscm-openbmc into master

Reviewed-on: librebmc/librebmc#1
remotes/1721785260320202728/master
Todd Rosedahl 2 years ago
commit db9158c94f

@ -1,38 +1,578 @@
# libreBMC README # # libreBMC


This repository will contain the high level documentaion for libreBMC This repository contains the high-level documentation for libreBMC - an

open source hardware, gateware and software project to implement a fully
**The overall goal of the project.** We want to boot an AC922 using an FPGA (not the AST2500 ASIC) on a DC-SCM card. We want to prove that the FPGA can boot a high power, modern server. open Baseboard Management Controller to boot a high power, modern server.


To do this, we need the following pieces: This work was conducted as a collaboration between the OpenPOWER foundation
1. A DC-SCM card that has an FPGA on it to replace the AST2500 ASIC and [Code Construct](https://codeconstruct.com.au); this documentation
* Antmicro built some of these that use Xylinx A7s. They power on, but no bring-up has been done to show they will boot the system. is based on the
* Antmicro is building some that have ECP5s on them, but they are still missing some parts [original article](https://codeconstruct.com.au/docs/dcscm-openbmc) on the
2. An interposer that will plug into the DC-SCM card and the AC922. https://git.openpower.foundation/librebmc/ac922interposer.git Code Construct docs site.
* I have 6 of these built
3. A Root of Trust bypass jumper https://github.com/antmicro/dc-scm-rot-jumper-card We are building on a lot of prior work from IBM and Antmicro, mainly:
* Plans for these are available and they are easy to build
4. A softcore (microwatt) running on the FPGA * The [Antmicro Artix DC-SCM](https://github.com/antmicro/artix-dc-scm)
* **This works, but it needs to be better incorporated with Lite-x** hardware - an open hardware implementation of the Open Compute DC-SCM
5. **Full gateware in Lite-x for that FPGA such that the entire OpenBMC stack can run** module, using an Artix FPGA as the core
* Some modules are done. Some not. https://git.openpower.foundation/librebmc/gateware.git
* **Need build instructions for the full FPGA image** * The "[AC922
6. **Kernel Driver updates** Interposer](https://git.openpower.foundation/librebmc/ac922interposer)" -
* IPMI-BT done but needs merging. an adapter between the AC922's baseboard and a DC-SCI connector.
* LPC-CTRL. Set up the address window. Needs to be written from scratch.
7. **Need the full OpenBMC code running** * Anton Blanchard's
* We currently power on our prototype with scripts. OpenBMC is not running. [Microwatt](https://github.com/antonblanchard/microwatt) project,
* https://git.openpower.foundation/librebmc/openbmc_for_AC922.git implementing a fully open powerpc core, as gateware suitable for the Artix.
8. **Bring-up of the AC922 with the DC-SCM card running OpenBMC on the FPGA**
* Create build instructions for pulling the entire FPGA image together * System-on-Chip peripherals using gateware from the
* Boot the AC922 [LiteX](https://github.com/enjoy-digital/) project - `litesdcard`, `liteeth`,
* Verify all functions and `litedram`.
* Prove there are no performance/timing issues
* Need tests defined * [LPC controller
* Video the bringup/running system for display at conferences gateware](https://git.openpower.foundation/librebmc/lpcperipheral), from

Michael Neuling and Anton Blanchard, as part of the OpenPOWER Foundation's
So far we did a prototype where we used the xylinx A7 FPGA on a custom breadboard and ran microwatt and a very stripped down FPGA. We proved it could boot the AC922, but again it was very low function. We need to have it fully functional to really prove it. We did not run OpenBMC on this prototype LibreBMC project.


Educational Documentation: * A [Linux kernel](https://kernel.org) with a few extra drivers and platform
1. See the files in this repo configuration for Microwatt and the DC-SCM board.
2. Video from OPF 2021: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6VRuKf4Bcs
* An [OpenBMC](https://github.com/openbmc/) userspace, ported from the existing
witherspoon platform definition.

Our work here was mainly to integrate these parts; a few fixes here and there,
plus a few new features at various places in the stack.

There are a few other projects implementing a similar platform:

* The original "boxarty" project from Joel Stanley, Paul Mackerras and Michael
Neuling from IBM, an original prototype replacing the AC922's AST2500-based
BMC board (codenamed "boxelder") with an Arty A7 FPGA prototyping board with
Microwatt gateware. This was running a set of scripts to boot the AC922 host.

* The [Axiado](https://axiado.com/) / [Antmicro](https://antmicro.com)
boxarty updates, which built the original boxarty into a more reproducible
embedded system using a
[buildroot port](https://github.com/Axiado/boxarty-buildroot/tree/antmicro).

However, this is the first implementation (that we're aware of!) that runs
a close-to-production OpenBMC stack, and uses a DC-SCM module.

Finally, this document provides an early snapshot of the project; we will
keep things up-to-date as things progress, and/or as issues are fixed or
the source code is updated.

# Hardware

The hardware components for this are:

* The Antmicro DC-SCM module
* An Antmicro Root of Trust (RoT) [bypass board](https://github.com/antmicro/dc-scm-rot-jumper-card) (we're not using a RoT on
this platform).
* The AC922 interposer module
* The AC922 server itself

If you're following along at home, you'll also need:

* Some industrial hearing protection

\- because we're working on pre-fan-control firmware, and the AC922 fans running
at full speed are, well, _industrial_.

We needed a few reworks to the hardware to fix a few bugs and incompatibilities.
Those are, in roughly-decreasing order of complexity:

## Rework 1: LPC connectivity

The version of the DC-SCM board that we're using does not connect the DC-SCI's
ESPI channel to the FPGA, due to an intentionally non-populated component: a
voltage translator between the 3.3V signals of the FPGA, and the 1.8V signals
of the ESPI bus.

We have documented this at
[issue #2](https://github.com/antmicro/artix-dc-scm/issues/2) of the DC-SCM
repo. If/when that issue is fixed, this rework will not be necessary.

On the POWER9 platform, we use LPC rather than ESPI, and re-use those ESPI pins
for the LPC connection to the host. In its current state, we can't interface the
Artix FPGA to the LPC bus due to the unpopulated voltage translator.

Fortunately, we don't actually need voltage translation here, and can connect
the 3.3V FPGA IOs to the DC-SCI directly.

This does require a rework though, bypassing the missing translator (refdes U21
in the design):

![DCSCM U21 rework detail](images/dc-scm-rework-1-detail.png)

We have a printable version of the rework instructions at
[dc-scm-rework-1.v1.pdf](resources/dc-scm-rework-1.v1.pdf) if you want to
replicate these modifications, and/or take to a fabricator.

## Rework 2: DC-SCM i2c5 routing

There's an off-by-two error in the DC-SCM board, where pins for I2C bus 5 are
out-of-place, and are instead connected to PCIe signals on the Artix.

We have documented this at
[issue #1](https://github.com/antmicro/artix-dc-scm/issues/1) of the DC-SCM
project, which is now fixed in the design.

In the meantime, we have cut the two traces for the A11 and A12 lines on the
DC-SCM board, just inboard of the DC-SCI connector.

![DC-SCM i2c5 rework detail](images/dc-scm-rework-2.png)

Note that these traces are on the back side of the board; the board diagram
is flipped to show the traces as they appear on this side.

Since we still need the i2c5 bus connected, we have used some spare IO pins on
the TPM header, and routed those to the i2c5 SDA and SCL signals. There are
corresponding gateware and device tree updates to use those TPM pins as GPIOs
(for i2c5), covered below.

## Rework 3: Interposer FSI mux signal routing

The AC922 interposer connects the baseboard's FSI mux input to pin B51 of the
DC-SCI connector, which is a USB signal, and so not routed to the FPGA.

We have filed [an
issue](https://git.openpower.foundation/librebmc/ac922interposer/issues/2) on
the interposer design for this.

To work around the issue, we have connected pin E4 of the molex connector to
another FPGA IO on the TPM header.

However, the USB controller still drives this signal, so we need to isolate
the USB controller device from the trace. There are a couple of options here:
masking the pins on the DC-SCI connector, or isolating a single trace on
the DC-SCM board.

We went for the former, as it's less intrusive, and the issue is with the
interposer rather than the DC-SCM. Since none of the signals in that same
section of the DC-SCI edge connector are used, we can just mask the entire
section with ESD-safe insulating tape:

![DCSCM FSI connector masking](images/dc-scm-rework-4.jpg)

Alternatively, you may isolate this one signal by cutting the USB trace on the
DC-SCM board, near U18.

![DCSCM FSI mux rework detail](images/dc-scm-rework-3.png)

This is quite close to the `USB_DP` trace, but that is unused on the AC922
hardware - so any "collateral damage" from cutting both traces is likely to be
fine - provided you're not planning to use the DC-SCM board with other hardware.

## Replacement IO

In implementing the workaround above, we're replacing some existing (incorrect)
connections with other FPGA IO lines. Since the TPM header is available, and
connected directly to the FPIO IO banks, this gives us a convenient spot for our
four replacement IO signals: two for i2c SDA/SCL, and two for the FSI mux/trans
signals.

We have used the following pins on the board:

![DCSCM IOs on TPM header](images/tpm-ios.png)

These can either be routed to corresponding pins on the back of the interposer's
pin grid, or directly to the AC922 baseboard.

## Other reworks

We had a couple of issues with missing pins on the AC922 interposer board,
which we have worked-around by using other spare FPGA IO pins (also on the
DC-SCM TPM header), routed directly to the AC922 baseboard.

These should be contained to our particular hardware, but do check your
own interposer for full pins on the 20x12 connector grid before going too
far with debugging!

# Gateware

Microwatt gateware for the FPGA on the DC-SCM board can be found
in the
[`dev/dcscm`](https://github.com/CodeConstruct/microwatt/commits/dev/dcscm)
branch of the Code Construct microwatt repo on github.

Building microwatt for the Artix FPGA is mainly described in Microwatt's
[README](https://github.com/antonblanchard/microwatt#synthesis-on-xilinx-fpgas-using-vivado).
In short, you'll need to set up `fusesoc`, and install Xilinx Vivado. In our
case, we used Vivado Free Edition 2022.1, but older versions should also work.

Build with:

```sh
$ fusesoc run --target=antmicro-artix-dc-scm microwatt --no_bram --memory_size=0
```

The build will take around 10 minutes, and the resultant bitstream will
`build/microwatt_0/antmicro-artix-dc-scm-vivado/microwatt_0.bit`, ready to
load on the board. Alternatively, try our pre-built
bitstream:
[`microwatt-dcscm-405c16a924.bit`](https://codeconstruct.com.au/docs/dcscm-openbmc/microwatt-dcscm-405c16a924.bit).

The micro-USB connector on the DC-SCM board provides JTAG access to the FPGA,
and a Microwatt serial console. Connect this to your development machine
to upload the bitstream to your DC-SCM board.

One of the board's 4MB NOR SPI flash chips is used to store the FPGA bitstream
and early software - this can be flashed using OpenOCD for JTAG, wrapped in the
`flash-arty` script to handle configuration. Behind the scenes `flash-arty`
loads a small
[JTAG-SPI proxy bitstream](https://github.com/quartiq/bscan_spi_bitstreams)
on the FPGA, to write to the flash chip.

```sh
$ ./openocd/flash-arty -c antmicro-artix-dc-scm -f a100 -t bin \
build/microwatt_0/antmicro-artix-dc-scm-vivado/microwatt_0.bit
```

If you specify the `-l` argument, the bitstream will be loaded directly to
the FPGA (rather than to flash), for a one-time boot. Use `-x` for a FPGA reset.

A serial console will show Microwatt's first stage loader running:
```
$ screen /dev/serial/by-id/usb-FTDI_Quad_RS232-HS-if02-port0 115200

Welcome to Microwatt !

Soc signature: f00daa5500010001
HDL Git SHA1: 405c16a924694a
Soc features: UART DRAM SPIFLASH ETHERNET SDCARD
DRAM: 512 MB
...
Trying flash...
Doesn't look like an elf64
HDR: ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff
Copying payload to DRAM...
Booting from DRAM...
```

In this case, microwatt is up and running, but can't yet find software to load
from flash - that needs `u-boot`, which we'll add in the later [u-boot
section](#u-boot).

The changes implemented in our microwatt port are:

## LiteEth

We have regenerated the [LiteEth](https://github.com/enjoy-digital/liteeth/)
ethernet with a hardware reset to fix intermittent startup. This also
required patching newer LiteEth to have stable register bank offsets (these are
both ready pull requests).

The RGMII PHY chip on the DC-SCM also needs a zero delay, so a separate
Microwatt config.

## Extra GPIOs

The BMC uses several I2C busses from the host for monitoring and control. We use
the Linux GPIO bitbanging I2C driver for this, taking a SDA and SCL GPIO line
per I2C bus.

Since there are 32 pins per GPIO bank, we added a second (`GPIOB`) bank at
`0xc0008000` on the wishbone MMIO bus.

In future, the I2C functionality could be moved to gateware to avoid inefficient
polling of GPIO by the kernel driver.

The interposer only connects a subset of the platform GPIO signals to the DC-SCI
connector, so there are some input signals that OpenBMC expects and are not
implemented in hardware. To work around this, we have added a few special GPIO
lines with fixed `0` or `1` values, so that certain missing hardware presence
lines can be emulated.

## LPC gateware

A LPC bus between host and BMC provides low-level interactions between these
two components, including host firmware load, host serial console, and an
IPMI channel.

The BMC LPC client is implemented through [LPC
gateware](https://github.com/OpenPOWERFoundation/lpcperipheral), originally
provided by Michael Neuling and Anton Blanchard.

Amaranth was used to generate the verilog, no changes were required.

## GPIO interrupts

OpenBMC monitors GPIO interrupts, so we added support to Microwatt's
GPIO implementation to trigger interrupts on input edges/levels,
configurable by hardware registers.

## SoC reset

We have connected the SoC reset signal in Microwatt, triggerable by a syscon
register.

## LiteSDCard 1-bit data

SD and MMC cards normally start in 1-bit data width mode and transition to wider
modes after MMC host initialisation.
[LiteSDCard](https://github.com/enjoy-digital/litesdcard)
previously only supported 4 bit mode, so required driver workarounds to send an
early "switch to 4 bit" command.

We have added support to LiteSDCard for 1-bit mode and switching at runtime, so
the normal SD/MMC infrastructure can be used in u-boot and Linux. This should
also support the 8-bit data width on the DC-SCM's eMMC, pending further testing.

# Software

The software architecture for the DC-SCM + OpenBMC setup is based on an
fairly plain OpenBMC image, using the "witherspoon" platform. This is the
production AC922 stack, using an AST2500 BMC. We have modified this for the
Microwatt environment, plus hardware definitions for the DC-SCM board.

There are a couple of areas of storage available:

* A small amount of SPI flash; we use this for the FPGA bitstream and the
u-boot binary

* A larger eMMC device; we use this for the OpenBMC image, including kernel
and PNOR (host firmware) storage

The boot flow for the device is:

* The FPGA bitstream is read from the on-board SPI flash

* The bitstream contains a tiny loader implemented in BRAM (block RAM in the FPGA). This loader
initialises the DRAM code, reads the u-boot image (also from SPI flash) into
DRAM, and jumps to the `u-boot` entry point

* The `u-boot` binary has a driver for the eMMC device, plus support for reading
a kernel from the `ext4` filesystem

* `u-boot` loads the Linux kernel `dtbImage` from a pre-defined path on an eMMC
partition, and executes the kernel

* The Linux kernel has drivers for the eMMC device, which contains the
OpenBMC root filesystem.

* AC922 host firmware is kept on a separate partition on the eMMC device,
as a simple 64MB flat file. This is loaded during the host power-on
procedure.

All of the components for this project are available on github:

| Component | Repository & Branch |
|-----------|--------|
| u-boot | [u-boot `dev/dcscm`](https://github.com/CodeConstruct/u-boot/tree/dev/dcscm) |
| Linux | [linux `dev/dcscm`](https://github.com/CodeConstruct/linux/tree/dev/dcscm) |
| OpenBMC | [openbmc `dev/dcscm`](https://github.com/CodeConstruct/openbmc/tree/dev/dcscm) |

Note that these branches are still in-development, and may be updated and
rebased. The general trend will be for patches to go upstream, and we will
update this document to correspond to any changes as they happen.

## u-boot

The u-boot port for the DC-SCM hardware is based on the general `microwatt`
port, by Paul Mackerras and Joel Stanley. This gives a base microwatt port,
including support for ethernet and SPI peripherals.

On top of this base, we have added support for the on-board eMMC device (to
allow booting the kernel), added a general platform definition (a device tree
and defconfig), and added some small features to make development easier.

The code is up at the [`dev/dcscm`
branch](https://github.com/CodeConstruct/u-boot/tree/dev/dcscm) of the
Code Construct `u-boot` tree on github.

Building should just be a matter of:

```sh
$ make CROSS_COMPILE=powerpc64le-linux-gnu- O=obj.microwatt \
microwatt_antmicro_artix_dcscm_defconfig
$ make CROSS_COMPILE=powerpc64le-linux-gnu- O=obj.microwatt -j$(nproc)
```

the resulting image will be an ELF binary in `obj.microwatt/u-boot`; the
gateware can load and execute this directly from SPI flash.

To write this to flash, use the `flash-arty` script in the microwatt repository,
at the base address of `0x300000`

```
$ ./openocd/flash-arty -c antmicro-artix-dc-scm -f a100 -a 0x300000 -t bin \
../u-boot/obj.microwatt/u-boot
```

## Linux kernel

The kernel port for the DC-SCM board is based on the general microwatt bringup
work, plus a few OpenBMC-specific patches.

We have published our changes, based on a v6.0 upstream kernel, at the
[`dev/dcscm` branch](https://github.com/CodeConstruct/linux/tree/dev/dcscm) of
the Code Construct `linux` tree on github.

The kernel `.config` is available here too:
[`linux-v6.0-dcscm.config`](resources/linux-v6.0-dcscm.config). This also includes support
for a NFS root, which can be handy for initial development work - particularly
setting up the initial filesystem on the MMC device.

To build:

```sh
$ mkdir obj.microwatt
$ cp linux-v6.0-dcscm.config obj.microwatt/.config
$ make ARCH=powerpc CROSS_COMPILE=powerpc64le-linux-gnu- O=obj.microwatt oldconfig
$ make ARCH=powerpc CROSS_COMPILE=powerpc64le-linux-gnu- O=obj.microwatt -j$(nproc)
```

The DC-SCM kernel will build into a combined zImage + device-tree blob (a
`dtbImage`), located at
`obj.microwatt/arch/powerpc/boot/dtbImage.microwatt-dcscm.elf`.

If you need to alter the boot arguments, they are located in the
`/chosen/bootargs` property of the device tree source file, at
`arch/powerpc/boot/dts/microwatt-dcscm.dts`:

```dts
chosen {
bootargs = "root=/dev/mmcblk0p1";
ibm,architecture-vec-5 = [19 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 40 00 40];
stdout-path = &UART0;
};
```

for NFS booting, try something like:
```dts
bootargs = "root=/dev/nfs nfsroot=192.168.0.1:/srv/nfs/dcscm ip=dhcp";
```

\- substituting IP and paths for your own environment, of course.

## OpenBMC

In order to get OpenBMC running on the DC-SCM board, we've added a new
`witherspoon-microwatt` platform definition, based on the original `witherspoon`
(ie., production AC922) platform. Anton Blanchard had created the base
support, and we have added further porting work to make a usable BMC image.

However: our main goal here was to prove the DC-SCM + microwatt components; this
is still a long way from an upstreamable OpenBMC implementation. There are
changes that are not suitable for the general repo, as they alter existing
(working) components. So: treat this as reference code, rather than production!

The OpenBMC implementation is available from the
[`dev/dcscm` branch](https://github.com/CodeConstruct/openbmc/tree/dev/dcscm) of
the Code Construct `openbmc` tree on github.

The build process is standard for an OpenBMC tree, just using the
`witherspoon-microwat` configuration:

```sh
$ . setup witherspoon-microwatt
$ bitbake obmc-phosphor-image
```

The build infrastructure will download and build the OpenBMC components, and
assemble into an `ext4` filesystem image, at:

```
tmp/deploy/images/witherspoon-microwatt/obmc-phosphor-image-witherspoon-microwatt.ext4
```

# Deploying

From here, we have a few components:

* The gateware, already flashed to the SPI device on the DC-SCM
* A u-boot build, also flashed to SPI
* A kernel, as a `dtbImage.elf`
* An OpenBMC image, as an `ext4` filesystem image

The easiest way to assemble this into a full BMC will be to netboot the kernel,
using an embedded initramfs or small NFS root filesystem, and use that to set up
the MMC device. I would suggest a buildroot image for this; Joel Stanley has a
suitable tree in his [`microwatt` branch of
buildroot](https://github.com/shenki/buildroot/tree/microwatt).

From there, you can:

* Create two partitions on the eMMC device (`/dev/mmcblk0`):
* One large one for the OpenBMC root filesystem
* One small (say, 200MB) for the host firmware

* Write the OpenBMC `.ext4` file to the first MMC partition

* Mount the new OpenBMC partition (`/dev/mmcblk0p1`)

* Add the new kernel to the new partition: say, as `/boot/dtbImage.elf`

* Create a new filesystem for host firmware on the second partition:
```
mkfs.ext4 -m 0 /dev/mmcblk0p1
```

* Add a recent witherspoon PNOR to that new filesystem

* Create a symlink from the OpenBMC `/var/pnor.img` to the PNOR image
on the second partition

Using the two partitions will save time should you want to re-write the OpenBMC
filesystem after a rebuild.

Then, set up `u-boot` to boot automatically:

```
=> setenv mmcboot 'ext4load mmc 0 0xc000000 /boot/dtbImage.elf; bootelf 0xc000000'
=> setenv bootcmd 'run mmcboot'
=> saveenv
```

And you should be good to go!

Of course, if you have any issues or queries, please get in touch with the
LibreBMC SIG, and/or Jeremy Kerr <jk@codeconstruct.com.au>.

# Future work

This project was originally intended as a proof-of-concept of a full BMC
running on the open source microwatt core, on the open DC-SCM hardware. We've
reached that goal, but there are still a few components that would get us
closer to a production-suitable BMC implementation.

## General cleanups and upstreaming

As this is mainly a proof-of-concept, some of the changes are a little
rough-around-the-edges, so could benefit from a review and rework. There are
also areas that can be optimised - both in the new code and the underlying
codebases.

The main components of this work would be suitable for submitting upstream. We
have a number of pull requests pending already, which will reduce the amount
DC-SCM specific code needed.

## Software optimisation

In working through the stack for this implementation, we have identified a few
areas that may benefit from some performance optimisation work. Parts of the
OpenBMC stack are certainly designed for a higher-performance machine than
the (current) microwatt core on the Artix FPGA, and there are definitely areas
that would be fairly straightforward to start an optimisation effort on.

## Gateware additions

Currently, the FSI and I2C interfaces are implemented in software, so can be
taxing on the CPU when there is traffic over those busses. With the system
running, the full fan control implementation may use around 60%-80% of CPU just
in FSI and I2C code.

The next step here would be to add hardware/gateware implementations of the FSI
and I2C controllers; that would go a long way to reducing system load.

## Easier deployment

The current process requires a lot of manual setup to get an OpenBMC image
constructed on the on-board storage. There could certainly be improvements to
this flow; for example, implementing a small bootable image that automates
flashing and initialising the OpenBMC system, or allowing easier access to the
eMMC device for initial image loads.

If there's any area of development you would be interested in seeing, or
participating in, please let us know!

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# CONFIG_CROSS_MEMORY_ATTACH is not set
CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS=y
CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL=y
CONFIG_PREEMPT_VOLUNTARY=y
CONFIG_TICK_CPU_ACCOUNTING=y
CONFIG_IKCONFIG=y
CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC=y
CONFIG_LOG_BUF_SHIFT=16
CONFIG_PRINTK_SAFE_LOG_BUF_SHIFT=12
CONFIG_CGROUPS=y
CONFIG_CGROUP_BPF=y
CONFIG_NAMESPACES=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD=y
CONFIG_CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_SIZE=y
CONFIG_KALLSYMS_ALL=y
CONFIG_EMBEDDED=y
CONFIG_PERF_EVENTS=y
CONFIG_PPC64=y
# CONFIG_PPC_KUEP is not set
# CONFIG_PPC_KUAP is not set
CONFIG_CPU_LITTLE_ENDIAN=y
CONFIG_NR_IRQS=64
CONFIG_PANIC_TIMEOUT=10
# CONFIG_PPC_POWERNV is not set
# CONFIG_PPC_PSERIES is not set
CONFIG_PPC_MICROWATT=y
# CONFIG_PPC_OF_BOOT_TRAMPOLINE is not set
CONFIG_CPU_FREQ=y
CONFIG_HZ_100=y
CONFIG_KEXEC=y
CONFIG_KEXEC_FILE=y
CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=y
CONFIG_PPC_4K_PAGES=y
# CONFIG_PPC_MEM_KEYS is not set
CONFIG_JUMP_LABEL=y
# CONFIG_SECCOMP is not set
# CONFIG_MQ_IOSCHED_KYBER is not set
# CONFIG_COREDUMP is not set
# CONFIG_SWAP is not set
# CONFIG_SLAB_MERGE_DEFAULT is not set
# CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK is not set
CONFIG_FLATMEM_MANUAL=y
# CONFIG_VM_EVENT_COUNTERS is not set
CONFIG_NET=y
CONFIG_PACKET=y
CONFIG_PACKET_DIAG=y
CONFIG_UNIX=y
CONFIG_UNIX_DIAG=y
CONFIG_INET=y
CONFIG_IP_PNP=y
CONFIG_IP_PNP_DHCP=y
CONFIG_IP_PNP_BOOTP=y
CONFIG_INET_UDP_DIAG=y
CONFIG_INET_RAW_DIAG=y
# CONFIG_IPV6 is not set
CONFIG_BPFILTER=y
# CONFIG_WIRELESS is not set
CONFIG_DEVTMPFS=y
CONFIG_DEVTMPFS_MOUNT=y
# CONFIG_STANDALONE is not set
# CONFIG_PREVENT_FIRMWARE_BUILD is not set
# CONFIG_FW_LOADER is not set
# CONFIG_ALLOW_DEV_COREDUMP is not set
CONFIG_MTD=y
CONFIG_MTD_BLOCK=y
CONFIG_MTD_PARTITIONED_MASTER=y
CONFIG_MTD_SPI_NOR=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_LOOP=y
CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM=y
CONFIG_EEPROM_AT24=y
CONFIG_NETDEVICES=y
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ALACRITECH is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_AMAZON is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_AQUANTIA is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ARC is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ASIX is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_BROADCOM is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_CADENCE is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_CAVIUM is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_CORTINA is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_DAVICOM is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ENGLEDER is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_EZCHIP is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_FUNGIBLE is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_GOOGLE is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_HUAWEI is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_INTEL is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_WANGXUN is not set
CONFIG_LITEX_LITEETH=y
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MARVELL is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MELLANOX is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MICREL is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MICROCHIP is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MICROSEMI is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_MICROSOFT is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_NI is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_NATSEMI is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_NETRONOME is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_PENSANDO is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_QUALCOMM is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_RENESAS is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_ROCKER is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SAMSUNG is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SEEQ is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SOLARFLARE is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SOCIONEXT is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_STMICRO is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_SYNOPSYS is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_VERTEXCOM is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_VIA is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_WIZNET is not set
# CONFIG_NET_VENDOR_XILINX is not set
# CONFIG_WLAN is not set
CONFIG_INPUT_EVDEV=y
# CONFIG_KEYBOARD_ATKBD is not set
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_GPIO=y
CONFIG_KEYBOARD_GPIO_POLLED=y
# CONFIG_INPUT_MOUSE is not set
# CONFIG_SERIO is not set
# CONFIG_VT is not set
# CONFIG_LEGACY_PTYS is not set
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250=y
# CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DEPRECATED_OPTIONS is not set
CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_CONSOLE=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_OF_PLATFORM=y
CONFIG_SERIAL_NONSTANDARD=y
CONFIG_BT_IPMI_BMC=y
# CONFIG_NVRAM is not set
# CONFIG_RANDOM_TRUST_BOOTLOADER is not set
CONFIG_I2C=y
CONFIG_I2C_CHARDEV=y
CONFIG_I2C_GPIO=y
CONFIG_I2C_FSI=y
CONFIG_SPI=y
CONFIG_SPI_DEBUG=y
CONFIG_SPI_BITBANG=y
CONFIG_SPI_MICROWATT=y
CONFIG_SPI_SPIDEV=y
CONFIG_GPIOLIB=y
CONFIG_GPIO_SYSFS=y
CONFIG_GPIO_FTGPIO010=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_IIO_HWMON=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_LM75=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_OCC_P9_SBE=y
CONFIG_PMBUS=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_IBM_CFFPS=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_IR35221=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_MAX31785=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_UCD9000=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_TMP421=y
CONFIG_MFD_SYSCON=y
# CONFIG_USB_SUPPORT is not set
CONFIG_MMC=y
CONFIG_MMC_CQHCI=y
CONFIG_MMC_HSQ=y
CONFIG_MMC_LITEX=y
CONFIG_NEW_LEDS=y
CONFIG_LEDS_CLASS=y
CONFIG_LEDS_PCA955X=y
CONFIG_LEDS_PCA955X_GPIO=y
CONFIG_RTC_CLASS=y
# CONFIG_VIRTIO_MENU is not set
CONFIG_COMMON_CLK=y
# CONFIG_IOMMU_SUPPORT is not set
CONFIG_LITEX_SOC_CONTROLLER=y
CONFIG_IIO=y
CONFIG_BMP280=y
CONFIG_DPS310=y
CONFIG_FSI=y
CONFIG_FSI_MASTER_GPIO=y
CONFIG_FSI_MASTER_HUB=y
CONFIG_FSI_SCOM=y
CONFIG_FSI_SBEFIFO=y
CONFIG_FSI_OCC=y
CONFIG_EXT4_FS=y
# CONFIG_DNOTIFY is not set
CONFIG_AUTOFS_FS=y
CONFIG_TMPFS=y
# CONFIG_MISC_FILESYSTEMS is not set
CONFIG_NFS_FS=y
# CONFIG_NFS_V2 is not set
CONFIG_NFS_V4=y
CONFIG_ROOT_NFS=y
CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256=y
# CONFIG_CRYPTO_HW is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_X86 is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_IA64 is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_ARM is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_ARMTHUMB is not set
# CONFIG_XZ_DEC_SPARC is not set
CONFIG_PRINTK_TIME=y
CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG=y
# CONFIG_SYMBOLIC_ERRNAME is not set
# CONFIG_DEBUG_MISC is not set
CONFIG_DEBUG_FS=y
# CONFIG_SLUB_DEBUG is not set
# CONFIG_SCHED_DEBUG is not set
CONFIG_SCHEDSTATS=y
CONFIG_FUNCTION_TRACER=y
# CONFIG_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER is not set
# CONFIG_STRICT_DEVMEM is not set
CONFIG_PPC_DISABLE_WERROR=y
CONFIG_XMON=y
CONFIG_XMON_DEFAULT=y
# CONFIG_XMON_DISASSEMBLY is not set
# CONFIG_XMON_DEFAULT_RO_MODE is not set
# CONFIG_RUNTIME_TESTING_MENU is not set
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