I'm using XUARTLITE with PPC405 and special core. U-Boot hasn't leverage this combo before (AFAICT, U-Boot XUARTLITE is used only with MicroBlaze CPU).
So, I took a Oct. 10 2005 snapshot and integrated the XUARTLITE into U-Boot. That works so far when Xilinx bootloader (via ISOCM/DSOCM) loads the Linux 2.4.20 SREC-formatted file directly from flash into DDR and jumps to 0x100. So, it has been established that a working Linux XUARTLITE output has been had by Xilinx-booting directly from flash-based Linux.SREC. (that was my earlier announcement). But flashing 8MB Linux.SREC, every time I tweak things, isn't my cup of tea. It is not reasonable to wait 45 minutes for a serial download to finish. So, I thought, why not U-Boot it. My next step is to put a uImage (Linux XUARTLITE) into flash using => tftpboot 30000000 uImage => bootm 30000000 bootm confirms that the uImage checksum is good and jumps to 0x100. The calling sequence within Linux in question is: + _start (linux/arch/ppc/kernel/head_4xx.S) + initial_mmu (also in head_4xx.S) + start_here (head_4xx.S) + machine_init ( + MMU_init (arch/ppc/mm/init.c) --> XUARLITE register goes phantom here <-- + start_kernel (init/main.c) Via linux/arch/ppc/mm/init.c ppc_md.progress() debug output, I see that outputs various "MMU:" debug lines and then it falls silent (no further output). id mach(): done MMU:enter MMU:hw init MMU:mapin MMU:setio MMU:exit so, it finished mmu_init() and platform_init() just fine. Using Xilinx XDM, one can repeatedly poke the XUARTLITE transmit register and evoke character outputs just fine while in Linux IDLE (scheduler) mode. So, the XUARTLITE hardware is still working at this point. HW works still. I noticed that in Linux PPC, to get 'early debug output' using CONFIG_SERIAL_TEXT_DEBUG option, PPC4xx TLB Slot 0 is dedicated to mapping of serial hardware registers/memory region. Somehow that TLB remapping fails. At the moment, I'm about to re-review the TLB slot 0 and figure out why poking the XUARTLITE transmit register isn't working from memory-mapped mode. Any insight is greatly appreciated, particularly on how to read PPC405 TLB registers. Steve