ARM: 5738/1: Correct TCM documentation

It turns out that the TCM memory can be remap:ed by the MMU just
like any other memory.

Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@stericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
This commit is contained in:
Linus Walleij 2009-10-01 14:31:22 +01:00 committed by Russell King
parent 6176d39471
commit 610ea6c671

View file

@ -29,11 +29,13 @@ TCM location and size. Notice that this is not a MMU table: you
actually move the physical location of the TCM around. At the actually move the physical location of the TCM around. At the
place you put it, it will mask any underlying RAM from the place you put it, it will mask any underlying RAM from the
CPU so it is usually wise not to overlap any physical RAM with CPU so it is usually wise not to overlap any physical RAM with
the TCM. The TCM memory exists totally outside the MMU and will the TCM.
override any MMU mappings.
Code executing inside the ITCM does not "see" any MMU mappings The TCM memory can then be remapped to another address again using
and e.g. register accesses must be made to physical addresses. the MMU, but notice that the TCM if often used in situations where
the MMU is turned off. To avoid confusion the current Linux
implementation will map the TCM 1 to 1 from physical to virtual
memory in the location specified by the machine.
TCM is used for a few things: TCM is used for a few things: