Michael Ellerman m...@ellerman.id.au writes:
The only current place I could think this could be remotely possible
would be in simulator... and we should instead make the OPAL calls work
properly in the simulator for all the RTAS functionality (that we care
about).
If you mean mambo, I tested
On Fri, 2015-03-27 at 18:24 +0530, Aneesh Kumar K.V wrote:
Michael Ellerman m...@ellerman.id.au writes:
The powernv code has some conditional support for running on bare metal
machines that have no OPAL firmware, but provide RTAS.
No released machines ever supported that, and even in
Michael Ellerman m...@ellerman.id.au writes:
The powernv code has some conditional support for running on bare metal
machines that have no OPAL firmware, but provide RTAS.
No released machines ever supported that, and even in the lab it was
just a transitional hack in the days when OPAL was
Michael Ellerman m...@ellerman.id.au writes:
The powernv code has some conditional support for running on bare metal
machines that have no OPAL firmware, but provide RTAS.
No released machines ever supported that, and even in the lab it was
just a transitional hack in the days when OPAL was
On Wed, 2015-03-25 at 16:46 +1100, Stewart Smith wrote:
Michael Ellerman m...@ellerman.id.au writes:
The powernv code has some conditional support for running on bare metal
machines that have no OPAL firmware, but provide RTAS.
No released machines ever supported that, and even in the
On Thu, 2015-03-12 at 17:27 +1100, Michael Ellerman wrote:
The powernv code has some conditional support for running on bare metal
machines that have no OPAL firmware, but provide RTAS.
No released machines ever supported that, and even in the lab it was
just a transitional hack in the days
The powernv code has some conditional support for running on bare metal
machines that have no OPAL firmware, but provide RTAS.
No released machines ever supported that, and even in the lab it was
just a transitional hack in the days when OPAL was still being
developed.
So remove the code.