Chris Jones wrote: > Wookey wrote: > >>So on a 2.052 board one can have samosa simply by wiring up to the pads of >>the Smartmedia socket? So in fact it should be fine to leave samosa compiled >>in by default? If that is true we need to find out why the kernels we have >>been building don't appear to boot if samosa is configured. Are there >>corresponding CPLD changes? I had been under the mistaken impression that >>samosa implied hardware changes. > > > Yes, you can indeed implement an 8-bit Samosa bus by soldering lots of > little bits of wire to the SmartMedia pads on a 2.052 board. The only > changes in the CPLD (that I can remember at the moment) are an update to > allow it access both 8- and 16-bit NAND Flash. That really shouldn't > affect booting. > Yes, that was when we were considering exploring yaffs2 on 16 bit wide NAND until the industry dropped 16-bit NAND. > A thought occurs: Samosa-aware software tends to assume that if > SM_ABSENT is asserted (ie, there's no SmartMedia card in the slot) it's > safe to do Samosa-type things. I can't quite see why the boot loader has > anything to do with Samosa, though, since no-one's ever built any Samosa > peripherals which are useful before the Kernel's booted - Nick? > All true. Nick > Chris