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Tobias Diedrich 8520e01af7 Linux also needs the MMCONF area to be reserved either in E820 or
as an ACPI motherboard resource or it will not enable MMCONFIG
and the extended pcie configuration area will be unaccessible:

This patch adds the IORESOURCE_RESERVE flag to the APIC and MMCONF
resource flags to do this.
I also added a new resource for the mapped bios rom area just below 4GB.
I'm not sure if the choice for the index parameter of new_resource()
is correct though.
Note that the bios rom decode is enabled in
src/southbridge/via/vt8237r/vt8237r_early_smbus.c
for the whole 4MB area (even though the comment says 1MB).

Ruik: I extended the flash range to 16MB (This is what VT8237S can decode)
Remove the MMCONFIG region reserve in the mainboard file (this patch makes it obsolete)

Signed-off-by: Tobias Diedrich <ranma+coreboot@tdiedrich.de>
Acked-by: Rudolf Marek <r.marek@assembler.cz> 




git-svn-id: svn://svn.coreboot.org/coreboot/trunk@6083 2b7e53f0-3cfb-0310-b3e9-8179ed1497e1
2010-11-17 11:30:50 +00:00
documentation Whitespace/typo/cosmetic fixes (trivial). 2010-09-23 18:48:27 +00:00
payloads Add an EHCI driver to libpayload's USB stack. 2010-09-25 17:01:13 +00:00
src Linux also needs the MMCONF area to be reserved either in E820 or 2010-11-17 11:30:50 +00:00
util Consensus seems that this is wanted, integrated into the tree somehow. 2010-11-12 09:46:30 +00:00
COPYING update license template. 2006-08-12 22:03:36 +00:00
Makefile fix random breakage 2010-11-15 21:09:57 +00:00
README Whitespace/typo/cosmetic fixes (trivial). 2010-09-23 18:48:27 +00:00

README

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

coreboot is a Free Software project aimed at replacing the proprietary
BIOS you can find in most of today's computers.

It performs just a little bit of hardware initialization and then executes
one of many possible payloads, e.g. a Linux kernel or a bootloader.


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
------------------

 * gcc / g++
 * make

Optional:

 * doxygen (for generating/viewing documentation)
 * iasl (for targets with ACPI support)
 * gdb (for better debugging facilities on some targets)
 * ncurses (for 'make menuconfig')
 * 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.