At present on x86 machines with use cache-as-RAM, the memory goes away just
before board_init_r() is called. This means that serial drivers are
no-longer unavailable, until initr_dm() it called, etc.
Any attempt to use printf() within this period will cause a hang.
To fix this, mark the serial devices as 'unavailable' when it is no-longer
available. Bring it back when serial_initialize() is called. This means that
the debug UART will be used instead for this period.
Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Bin Meng <bmeng.cn@gmail.com>
if (initcall_run_list(init_sequence_f_r))
hang();
+ /*
+ * The pre-relocation drivers may be using memory that has now gone
+ * away. Mark serial as unavailable - this will fall back to the debug
+ * UART if available.
+ */
+ gd->flags &= ~GD_FLG_SERIAL_READY;
+
/*
* U-Boot has been copied into SDRAM, the BSS has been cleared etc.
* Transfer execution from Flash to RAM by calculating the address
/* Called after relocation */
void serial_initialize(void)
{
- serial_find_console_or_panic();
+ serial_init();
}
static void _serial_putc(struct udevice *dev, char ch)