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Tobias Diedrich 6a4d6825ac amd/family14: Add k10temp thermal zone.
The thermal sensor interface exposed in function 3 of the northbridge is
a more convenient and faster way to access the processor-internal
thermal sensor than using the SMBus/SB-TSI interface from the FCH, see
the Family14 BKDG: "Tctl is a processor temperature control value used
for processor thermal management. Tctl is accessible through SB-TSI and
D18F3xA4[CurTmp]. Tctl is a temperature on its own scale aligned to the
processors cooling requirements"

Also on at least some of these boards the existing thermal zone is
broken and always returns 40C (the default value if the SMBus read
failed) because the SMBus muxing register (SmBus0Sel) is not set up
correctly.

Case in point: The fallback "smbus read failed" temperature is 40 C and
the the logs taken from the board status repository for the Asrock
E350M1 board all show: "ACPI: Thermal Zone [TZ00] (40 C)"
e.g.
http://review.coreboot.org/gitweb?p=board-status.git;a=blob;f=asrock/e350m1/4.0-5054-gf584218/2013-12-20T20:56:20Z/kernel_log.txt#l390
and
http://review.coreboot.org/gitweb?p=board-status.git;a=blob;f=asrock/e350m1/4.0-7030-g6d7de4f/2014-10-16T15:34:19Z/kernel_console.txt#l404
and
http://review.coreboot.org/gitweb?p=board-status.git;a=blob;f=asrock/e350m1/4.0-9989-gf2dfef0/2015-06-13T00:22:49Z/kernel_log.txt#l425

Example lm-sensors output with this patch on the pcengines APU1, on
Linux 4.1.0-rc8+ (wiht both CONFIG_ACPI_THERMAL and
CONFIG_SENSORS_K10TEMP enabled):

acpitz-virtual-0
Adapter: Virtual device
temp1:        +54.0 C  (crit = +100.0 C)

k10temp-pci-00c3
Adapter: PCI adapter
temp1:        +54.0 C  (high = +70.0 C)
                       (crit = +100.0 C, hyst = +97.0 C)

Change-Id: Id9c5b783ba424246816677099ec6651814e59f21
Signed-off-by: Tobias Diedrich <ranma+coreboot@tdiedrich.de>
Reviewed-on: http://review.coreboot.org/10940
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins)
Reviewed-by: Paul Menzel <paulepanter@users.sourceforge.net>
Reviewed-by: Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@google.com>
2015-09-30 07:02:41 +00:00
3rdparty 3dparty/blobs: Advance to pull in binary microcode 2015-09-29 04:49:46 +00:00
Documentation documentation: Add documentation for timestamp library 2015-08-07 18:00:07 +02:00
payloads arm64: mmu: Prevent CPU prefetch instructions from device memory 2015-09-28 09:36:32 +00:00
src amd/family14: Add k10temp thermal zone. 2015-09-30 07:02:41 +00:00
util kconfig: Allow KCONFIG_STRICT outside of confdata.c 2015-09-30 06:58:57 +00:00
.gitignore .gitignore: adapt to new buildgcc version 2015-09-28 20:05:14 +00:00
.gitmodules submodules: add arm-trusted-firmware third-party repository 2015-06-23 08:20:24 +02:00
.gitreview add .gitreview 2012-11-01 23:13:39 +01:00
COPYING update license template. 2006-08-12 22:03:36 +00:00
MAINTAINERS MAINTAINERS: grab build system responsibility 2015-05-22 22:47:03 +02:00
Makefile Add cscope/ctags generation for the current project 2015-07-30 05:21:28 +02:00
Makefile.inc cbfs: allow cbfs-files to use compression 2015-09-28 09:33:38 +00:00
README README: improve description of compiler requirements 2015-07-30 05:11:33 +02:00
toolchain.inc linking: add and use LDFLAGS_common 2015-09-09 19:35:54 +00:00

README

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
coreboot README
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

coreboot is a Free Software project aimed at replacing the proprietary BIOS
(firmware) found in most computers.  coreboot performs a little bit of
hardware initialization and then executes additional boot logic, called a
payload.

With the separation of hardware initialization and later boot logic,
coreboot can scale from specialized applications that run directly
firmware, run operating systems in flash, load custom
bootloaders, or implement firmware standards, like PC BIOS services or
UEFI. This allows for systems to only include the features necessary
in the target application, reducing the amount of code and flash space
required.

coreboot was formerly known as LinuxBIOS.


Payloads
--------

After the basic initialization of the hardware has been performed, any
desired "payload" can be started by coreboot.

See http://www.coreboot.org/Payloads for a list of supported payloads.


Supported Hardware
------------------

coreboot supports a wide range of chipsets, devices, and mainboards.

For details please consult:

 * http://www.coreboot.org/Supported_Motherboards
 * http://www.coreboot.org/Supported_Chipsets_and_Devices


Build Requirements
------------------

 * make
 * gcc / g++
   Because Linux distribution compilers tend to use lots of patches. coreboot
   does lots of "unusual" things in its build system, some of which break due
   to those patches, sometimes by gcc aborting, sometimes - and that's worse -
   by generating broken object code.
   Two options: use our toolchain (eg. make crosstools-i386) or enable the
   ANY_TOOLCHAIN Kconfig option if you're feeling lucky (no support in this
   case).
 * iasl (for targets with ACPI support)

Optional:

 * doxygen (for generating/viewing documentation)
 * gdb (for better debugging facilities on some targets)
 * ncurses (for 'make menuconfig' and 'make nconfig')
 * flex and bison (for regenerating parsers)


Building coreboot
-----------------

Please consult http://www.coreboot.org/Build_HOWTO for details.


Testing coreboot Without Modifying Your Hardware
------------------------------------------------

If you want to test coreboot without any risks before you really decide
to use it on your hardware, you can use the QEMU system emulator to run
coreboot virtually in QEMU.

Please see http://www.coreboot.org/QEMU for details.


Website and Mailing List
------------------------

Further details on the project, a FAQ, many HOWTOs, news, development
guidelines and more can be found on the coreboot website:

  http://www.coreboot.org

You can contact us directly on the coreboot mailing list:

  http://www.coreboot.org/Mailinglist


Copyright and License
---------------------

The copyright on coreboot is owned by quite a large number of individual
developers and companies. Please check the individual source files for details.

coreboot is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).
Some files are licensed under the "GPL (version 2, or any later version)",
and some files are licensed under the "GPL, version 2". For some parts, which
were derived from other projects, other (GPL-compatible) licenses may apply.
Please check the individual source files for details.

This makes the resulting coreboot images licensed under the GPL, version 2.