This driver was still using CONFIG_* values to determine its address,
IRQ, etc. Add a binding for an "intel,hpet" device and migrate this
driver to devicetree.
Fixes: #18657
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
XIP support in x86 was something of a mess. This
patch does the following:
- Generic ia32 SOC no longer defines a "flash" region
as generic X86 devices don't have a microcontroller-
like concept of flash. The same has been done for apollo_lake.
- Generic ia32 and apollo_lake SOCs starts memory at 1MB.
- Generic ia32 SOC may optionally have CONFIG_XIP enabled.
The board definition must provide a flash region definition
that gets exposed as DT_PHYS_LOAD_ADDR.
- Fixed definitions for RAM/ROM source addresses in ia32's
linker.ld when XIP is turned off.
- Support for enabling XIP on apollo_lake SOC removed, there's
no use-case.
- acrn and gpmrb boards have flash and XIP related definitions
removed.
- qemu_x86 has a fake flash region added, immediately after system
RAM, for use when XIP is enabled. This used to be in the ia32 SOC.
However, the default for qemu_x86 is to now have XIP disabled.
- Fixed tests/kernel/xip to run by default on boards that enable
XIP by default, plus an additional test to exercise XIP on
qemu_x86 (which supports it but has XIP switched off by default)
The overall effect of this patch is to:
- Remove XIP configuration for SOC/boards where it does not make
any sense to have it
- Support testing XIP on qemu_x86 via tests/kernel/xip, but leave
it off by default for other tests, to ensure it doesn't bit-rot
and that the system works in both scenarios.
- XIP remains an available feature for boards that need it.
Fixes: #18956
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Removes very complex boot-time generation of page tables
with a much simpler runtime generation of them at bootup.
For those x86 boards that enable the MMU in the defconfig,
set the number of page pool pages appropriately.
The MMU_RUNTIME_* flags have been removed. They were an
artifact of the old page table generation and did not
correspond to any hardware state.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Builds with coverage enabled are in a continuous state
of bit-rot as no CI job enables it. Introduce a dedicated
x86 target that builds with coverage enabled.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>