> Arrr, my insanity. Wolfgang is correct, of course. > Gee, and I was just going to ask why on earth you liked high-boot :)
I've seen one novel use of high-boot that could make it useful if you're lazy and can't be bothered plugging in your debugger ;) Assuming your board has a toggle switch that sets the state of BMS in the RCW (as most Freescale boards do), you can put a 'good' version of U-Boot at say the high-boot location, and the test version at the low-boot. If the low-boot version doesn't boot, power-down, flip the BMS toggle switch, power-up and boot-high, reflash to the next low-boot test version, and continue. I personally haven't tried the trick, but it sounded like a nice idea. Low-boot is the only sane method for booting, since high-boot sticks the bootloader 8MB into your 32MB/64MB/etc Flash ... I mean who uses 8MB Flash these days ... :) Cheers, Dave ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by the Moblin Your Move Developer's challenge Build the coolest Linux based applications with Moblin SDK & win great prizes Grand prize is a trip for two to an Open Source event anywhere in the world http://moblin-contest.org/redirect.php?banner_id=100&url=/ _______________________________________________ U-Boot-Users mailing list U-Boot-Users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/u-boot-users