If I remember correctly, Disk-on-Chip comprises NAND flash technology which
inherently cannot execute in place, strictly sequential (data) accesses...
So you would still need some sort of rudimentary boot flash(NOR) or other
ROM to execute code to first load the BIOS, then the kernal, into shadow,
then main (DRAM) memory locations, respectively.

In a system I'm architecting we're still going to use a 256Kx8 flash for
LinuxBIOS, from there use JFFS2 and associated utilities to get the kernal
and various applications and data from a bare NAND on board.

This link and its links go into much more detail than I can in this email
about issues you may face:

http://www.linux-mtd.infradead.org/tech/nand.html

Good Luck!


----- Original Message -----
From: "Devi Priya" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2003 10:47 PM
Subject: Linuxbios with Diskonchip?


> Hi,
>
> I shall have my BIOS program, Linux kernel and filesystem in the same
> Diskonchip. I want to use linuxbios (for sc1200).  What is the physical
> memory mapping that should be done? SDRAM mapped to lower order address
and
> Diskonchip to the higher order address. Is it correct?
>
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