There are two set of code supporting x86_64: x86_64 using x32 ABI,
and x86 long mode, and this consolidates both into one x86_64
architecture and SoC supporting truly 64-bit mode.
() Removes the x86_64:x32 architecture and SoC, and replaces
them with the existing x86 long mode arch and SoC.
() Replace qemu_x86_64 with qemu_x86_long as qemu_x86_64.
() Updates samples and tests to remove reference to
qemu_x86_long.
() Renames CONFIG_X86_LONGMODE to CONFIG_X86_64.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
Add duplicate per-CPU data structures (x86_cpuboot, tss, stacks, etc.)
for up to 4 total CPUs, add code in locore and z_arch_start_cpu().
The test board, qemu_x86_long, now defaults to 2 CPUs.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
And set qemu_x86_long board to build with CONFIG_SMP=y by default.
Apparently two benchmark tests - latency_measure and sys_kernel -
do not work with the SMP scheduler, so those tests are disabled.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Simple naming change, since MULTIBOOT is clear enough by itself and
"namespacing" it to X86 is unnecessary and/or inappropriate.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Implement a simple ACPI parser with enough functionality to
enumerate CPU cores and determine their local APIC IDs.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
The QEMU x86 .dts files were re-arranged before long mode was
merged. We don't need this reference to the flash region anymore.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
This driver was still using CONFIG_* values to determine its address,
IRQ, etc. Add a binding for an "intel,hpet" device and migrate this
driver to devicetree.
Fixes: #18657
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Add qemu_x86_long board (with CONFIG_X86_LONGMODE=y) for testing.
This requires adding support to soc/ia32 for long mode (trivial),
and adding a quick 64- to 32-bit ELF conversion before invoking
QEMU, which apparently doesn't like 64-bit kernel files.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
From the Jailhouse days, this has been a function call. That's silly.
We now inline the EOI in the ISR when in x2APIC mode. Also clean up
z_irq_controller_eoi(), so it now uses the inline macros.
Also, we now enable x2APIC on up_squared by default.
Fixes: #17133
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
XIP support in x86 was something of a mess. This
patch does the following:
- Generic ia32 SOC no longer defines a "flash" region
as generic X86 devices don't have a microcontroller-
like concept of flash. The same has been done for apollo_lake.
- Generic ia32 and apollo_lake SOCs starts memory at 1MB.
- Generic ia32 SOC may optionally have CONFIG_XIP enabled.
The board definition must provide a flash region definition
that gets exposed as DT_PHYS_LOAD_ADDR.
- Fixed definitions for RAM/ROM source addresses in ia32's
linker.ld when XIP is turned off.
- Support for enabling XIP on apollo_lake SOC removed, there's
no use-case.
- acrn and gpmrb boards have flash and XIP related definitions
removed.
- qemu_x86 has a fake flash region added, immediately after system
RAM, for use when XIP is enabled. This used to be in the ia32 SOC.
However, the default for qemu_x86 is to now have XIP disabled.
- Fixed tests/kernel/xip to run by default on boards that enable
XIP by default, plus an additional test to exercise XIP on
qemu_x86 (which supports it but has XIP switched off by default)
The overall effect of this patch is to:
- Remove XIP configuration for SOC/boards where it does not make
any sense to have it
- Support testing XIP on qemu_x86 via tests/kernel/xip, but leave
it off by default for other tests, to ensure it doesn't bit-rot
and that the system works in both scenarios.
- XIP remains an available feature for boards that need it.
Fixes: #18956
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The documentation for the GPMRB incorrectly made reference to the
up_squared board in its high-speed UART configuration section. We
consolidate the related documentation for all boards based on the
Apollo Lake SoC and adjust the language to be more generic.
Fixes: #18808
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
While trying out the hello_world sample built for QEMU, I was expecting
the sample app to exit and I'd return to a command prompt. Nope. You
need to exit QEMU manually, so add that step to the sample instructions.
Looking around, there are more uses of QEMU like this that could use
this added step after running the sample app.
Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
Instead of having a mix of west and CMake/ninja instructions for
building and flashing, document it using only west. This will help
clarify that west is the default build tool in Zephyr and should also
reduce confusion over what tool to use.
Note that the biggest change is changing the default in
doc/extensions/zephyr/application.py for :tool:, from all to west.
Signed-off-by: Carles Cufi <carles.cufi@nordicsemi.no>
After witnessing some strange errors with memory not being
what it should be, lifiting everything above 1MB has solved
it. The Zephyr binary was being loaded into memory containing
reserved regions, resulting in data corruption.
We still simulate XIP for testing purposes by setting up the
memory map as follows:
0x000000 - 0x0FFFFF : Non-present
0x100000 - 0x4FFFFF : "Flash" ROM region
0x500000 - 0x8FFFFF : "SRAM" RAM region
For a total of 9 megabytes of physical RAM used.
Fixes problems observed in some large tests when code coverage
is enabled (which increases the amount of RAM used even more).
Fixes: #17782
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Removes very complex boot-time generation of page tables
with a much simpler runtime generation of them at bootup.
For those x86 boards that enable the MMU in the defconfig,
set the number of page pool pages appropriately.
The MMU_RUNTIME_* flags have been removed. They were an
artifact of the old page table generation and did not
correspond to any hardware state.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Adapted from similar code in the x86_64 port.
Useful when debugging boot problems on actual x86
hardware if a JTAG isn't handy or feasible.
Turn this on for qemu_x86.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This board and SoC was discontinued some time ago and is currently not
maintained in the zephyr tree.
Remove all associated configurations and variants from the tree.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
This board and SoC was discontinued some time ago and is currently not
maintained in the zephyr tree.
Remove all associated configurations and variants from the tree.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
This board and SoC was discontinued some time ago and is currently not
maintained in the zephyr tree.
Remove all associated configurations and variants from the tree.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
As we now have PPP support, use more generic "serial-net" string instead
of "slip" when setting what kind of networking the board supports.
Signed-off-by: Jukka Rissanen <jukka.rissanen@linux.intel.com>
The property is required on all SPI clients, but was missing from
several devicetree nodes. Set it, using the capitalized version of the
node alias when present, with "jedec,spi-nor#0" as the fallback.
Closes#17662
Signed-off-by: Peter A. Bigot <pab@pabigot.com>
Qemu_x86 didn't reflect emulated program memory size.
It was because chosen zephyr,flash was assigned to flash_simulator
which was helping to generate DT_FLASH properties for sim_flash node.
This change revert choice of flash0 which solve problem with
program memory size. Flash simulator have to use
DT_SOC_NV_FLASH_xxx labels for fetch its property since that.
fixes#15832
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
The desired memory map is to have the 0 - 4K page non-present
to catch NULL pointer dereferences,
from 4K - 4MB for the program text (RO, Execute),
ROM (RO, No Execute), and 4MB-8MB for system RAM.
This patch cut text size by 4 KB which allow to meet above
requirements.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
move uart.h to drivers/uart.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move pwm.h to drivers/pwm.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move pinmux.h to drivers/pinmux.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move i2c.h to drivers/i2c.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move gpio.h to drivers/gpio.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move sys_io.h to sys/sys_io.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
This is the "flagship" platform for the new local APIC timer driver.
The opportunity is taken clean up the configuration as well, so the
choice of local APIC vs HPET timer requires changing only one Kconfig.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Fix misspellings and doc issues missed during regular reviews (including
some files without a trailing newline)
Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
The DT spec. only has "okay" and not "ok". The Linux kernel has around
12k "okay"s and 300 "ok"s.
The scripts/dts scripts only check for "disabled", so should be safe re.
those at least.
The replacement was done with
git ls-files | xargs sed -i 's/status\s*=\s*"ok"/status = "okay"/'
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Change code from using now deprecated DT_<COMPAT>_<INSTANCE>_<PROP>
defines to using DT_INST_<INSTANCE>_<COMPAT>_<PROP>.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Simple renaming and Kconfig reorganization. Choice of local APIC
access method isn't specific to the Jailhouse hypervisor.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Convert all board_set_xxer(foo) calls to board_set_xxer_ifndef(foo),
which allows the user to make their own decision at CMake time.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <marti.bolivar@nordicsemi.no>
This helps by letting us add checks for when the runner has already
been set. There is documentation saying you can set
-DBOARD_DEBUG_RUNNER at the command line and have it take effect,
which turns out not to be true for a large number of boards.
A status message helps the user debug.
(We'll address the existing in-tree boards in the next patch.)
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <marti.bolivar@nordicsemi.no>
Builds with coverage enabled are in a continuous state
of bit-rot as no CI job enables it. Introduce a dedicated
x86 target that builds with coverage enabled.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Newer versions of GCC (e.g. gcc 9.1.1) fail to compile the version of
Grub that is used by the Zephyr build_grub.sh script. This patch updates
the version of Grub to the latest (as of June 4 2019) which includes a
number of fixes that solve the problem.
Fixes: #16624
Signed-off-by: Geoffroy Van Cutsem <geoffroy.vancutsem@intel.com>
Add board support (and documentation) for the Intel Gordon Peak
Module Reference Board, a dev board based on the Apollo Lake SoC.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
While enabling specific I2C ports does indeed belong at the board
level Kconfig, the selection of driver (I2C_DW) is an SoC-level
choice, so it is moved accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Which UARTs are broken out from the SoC on a particular board is
board-specific; don't enable UARTs blindly in the SoC Kconfig.
Also, the default UART options are specified in the driver Kconfig, so
the same defaults specified in the SoC Kconfig are redundant. Removed.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Since Kconfig is responsible for enabling/disabling devices at build,
the devices in dt are defaulted to status="ok" to keep the output in
generated_dts_board.conf the same across configurations and simplify
the board-level dts files.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
The UART references in dts_fixup.h are actually SoC-specific, not
board-specific, so they are moved. Since this leaves the board fixups
empty, the file is removed.
The SoC fixups are expanded to include the additional two ports that
are present on some revisions of the Apollo Lake.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
I2C support has been added back into the up_squared, leveraging the
new PCIe support in the DesignWare I2C driver.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
The legacy PCI support in the DesignWare I2C driver is replaced with
the new PCIe support. The Intel Quark X1000 SoC and the galileo board
configurations are updated accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
The SBL configuration no longer differs in any detail (except its name)
from the "standard" UpSquared configuration, so it is removed.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
This needs to be pushed down to the SoC level, as it's an Apollo Lake
feature, not a feature of the UpSquared. Remove the Apollo Lake
references to the PCI devices because these will not be used when I2C
support is restored.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
This option is no longer used in the dts_fixup.h file since there
are no SBL-specific fixups.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
The ACRN board configuration is not suitable for production use,
but many people are mistakenly using it as a starting point for
real-time applications. I've added a note to clarify.
Signed-off-by: Charles Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Increase ram size as flash simulator need it for
emulated storage. The qemu_x86 flash size is puted back to
its original value of 4092K
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
The UARTs are on the SoC, not the board, so move their descriptors
to the SoC-level. Also turn on auto IRQ detection as these are PCI-
attached and their IRQs are subject to change depending upon firmware
settings.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
The '#if XIP' in the DTS file never worked properly,
causing the QEMU build to think it has much more RAM
then it actually has. If RAM overflowed, this would not
be caught by the build, instead there would be strange
crashes when the data copy takes place.
The QEMU targets themselves are not XIP, everything
is actually RAM, but the first 4 megabytes are
considered to be a memory-mapped flash region. This
is done to ensure that the XIP data copying infrastructure
doesn't bit-rot on x86. We are at the point where
a lot of things depend on this, so just select it in
the board Kconfig instead of enabling in the
defconfigs.
Fixes: #15835
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
A new function pcie_irq_enable() is added to be used in lieu of
irq_enable() when the target device is PCI(e)-attached. The function
attempts to use MSI, when configured in the kernel and supported by
the endpoint; failing that, it will verify that IRQ requested is in
fact routed to the device by the boot firmware before enabling it.
The NS16550 UART driver is updated to use pcie_irq_enable().
The PCI(e) shell is extended to dump information about wired IRQs.
The up_squared devicetree is fixed (reverted?) to IRQ5 for UART1.
The galileo enables MSI by default.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Reduced flash size for QEMU x86 so it does not consume a lot of RAM
memory where it is simulated.
Signed-off-by: Kamil Piszczek <Kamil.Piszczek@nordicsemi.no>
This commit adds a flash driver implementation that writes to RAM and
exports statistics through stats.h. It can be used to simulate flash
memory for testing purposes.
Signed-off-by: Emanuele Di Santo <emdi@nordicsemi.no>
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
Signed-off-by: Kamil Piszczek <Kamil.Piszczek@nordicsemi.no>
We already select HAS_DTS at the arch level for X86 so we don't need to
duplicate it at the board level.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
In order to generalize the currently specialized nRF51 IC setup hook,
make the following changes:
- Generalize the hook to bt_ic_setup()
- Use a weak NOP version by default
- Move the currently existing one to the board folder
Signed-off-by: Carles Cufi <carles.cufi@nordicsemi.no>
A parallel PCI implementation ("pcie") is added with features for PCIe.
In particular, message-signaled interrupts (MSI) are supported, which
are essential to the use of any non-trivial PCIe device.
The NS16550 UART driver is modified to use pcie.
pcie is a complete replacement for the old PCI support ("pci"). It is
smaller, by an order of magnitude, and cleaner. Both pci and pcie can
(and do) coexist in the same builds, but the intent is to rework any
existing drivers that depend on pci and ultimately remove pci entirely.
This patch is large, but things in mirror are smaller than they appear.
Most of the modified files are configuration-related, and are changed
only slightly to accommodate the modified UART driver.
Deficiencies:
64-bit support is minimal. The code works fine with 64-bit capable
devices, but will not cooperate with MMIO regions (or MSI targets) that
have high bits set. This is not needed on any current boards, and is
unlikely to be needed in the future. Only superficial changes would
be required if we change our minds.
The method specifying PCI endpoints in devicetree is somewhat kludgey.
The "right" way would be to hang PCI devices off a topological tree;
while this would be more aesthetically pleasing, I don't think it's
worth the effort, given our non-standard use of devicetree.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
Fixes broken CC2520 on quark_se_c1000_devboard configuration after
commit 25d17db.
Fixes#15070
Signed-off-by: Andrei Emeltchenko <andrei.emeltchenko@intel.com>
Update the files which contain no license information with the
'Apache-2.0' SPDX license identifier. Many source files in the tree are
missing licensing information, which makes it harder for compliance
tools to determine the correct license.
By default all files without license information are under the default
license of Zephyr, which is Apache version 2.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
For some reason we dropped the simulation keyword and this platform is
not running any tests, we are just building the tests.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
On Clear Linux, the CFLAGS is set and defines a number of aggressive
checks and optimizations. This causes a build failure when generating a
GRUB2 boot loader image using the 'build_grub.sh' script.
Unsetting it within the script allows it to proceed and successfully
build a functional GRUB2 boot loader image to be used with Zephyr.
Fixes: #14289
Signed-off-by: Geoffroy Van Cutsem <geoffroy.vancutsem@intel.com>
One of the bullet list items didn't get rendered properly because
continuation line wasn't indented.
Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
Move the original documentation in the arduino_101 board to a common
section in the Bluetooth documentation and document the use of `btmon`
in general.
Signed-off-by: Carles Cufi <carles.cufi@nordicsemi.no>
Based on prior work by @dcpleung. It's suboptimal, but it provides a
working starting point for ACRN work. The x86 board/SoC abstractions
really need to be refactored to make this "board" (and other x86-based
"boards", both extant and future) cleaner and easier to maintain. Punt.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
It is also possible to use 'west' to build the 'hello_world' sample
application for the UP2 (up_squared) board. This patch makes it
explicit in the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Geoffroy Van Cutsem <geoffroy.vancutsem@intel.com>
Linking to API material requires knowing the pecularities of how
doxygen, sphinx, and breathe work. In an attempt to hide some of this
we're preparing the current docs to allow use of configuration defaults
that will let us more simply use a default role that will hunt for a
reference target in the various domains that are available by using a
default "role" of "all". This will let us use the simple notation
`functionname` or `typename` without fully specifying the reference as
:c:func:`functionname`.
This patch cleans up exising docs that were (incorrectly) using single
backtics where double backtics should have been used, and also found
some typos (such as a space between the role name and the reference,
such as :file: `filename`, and a missing colon such as
c:func:`functionname`)
This is a start to address issue #14313
Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
The build_grub.sh script cherry-picks 3 commits from the master branch
of grub because more recent build tools fail to build the latest stable
release (which is 2.02). This solves the problem on Fedora 29 for
example, but is not sufficient for Clear Linux.
This patch modifies the build_grub.sh script to use
grub-2.02-285-g5bc41db75 (latest from master as of 13 of March 2019).
That version compiles 'out-of-the-box' in the latest Ubuntu, Fedora and
Clear Linux.
There are additional tools required on the host system and the
documentation has been updated accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Geoffroy Van Cutsem <geoffroy.vancutsem@intel.com>
Maybe this is some "just in case" thing that got copied around. There's
no need to have a blank line at the beginning or end of Kconfig files.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
This build target is intended to verify that enabling the
IAMCU ABI doesn't have any bit-rot since we can easily
run this under emulation.
However, the QEMU boards all derive from the generic IA32
SOC definition, which is any pc-like hardware. We need
to disable these mitigations for this target since the
IAMCU compiler doesn't even recognize instructions like
'lfence'.
Fixes: #14315
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Fedora 29 (and possibly other disctributions) are nowadays coming with
very recent versions of gcc (8.x) and binutils. These will cause some
compilation error when running the 'grub_build.sh' script to create a
GRUB2 boot loader image.
Fortunately, both issues have been fixed and merged in the upstream
project. This patch modifies the build script to cherry-pick those to
the local cloned version of grub before building it.
Signed-off-by: Geoffroy Van Cutsem <geoffroy.vancutsem@intel.com>
A new role :zephyr_file: is available that renders to a link to the file
or folder in GitHub. Find appropriate references using :file: and
convert to :zephyr_file: to take advantage of its linking capability.
Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
Most of these are from source'ing a file within an 'if PINMUX', and then
adding another 'depends on PINMUX' within it.
'if FOO' is just shorthand for adding 'depends on FOO' to each item
within the 'if'. There are no "conditional includes" in Kconfig, so
'if FOO' has no special meaning around a 'source'. Conditional includes
wouldn't be possible, because an 'if' condition could include (directly
or indirectly) forward references to symbols not defined yet.
Tip: When adding a symbol, check its dependencies in the menuconfig
('ninja menuconfig', then / to jump to the symbol). The menuconfig also
shows how the file with the symbol got included, so if you see
duplicated dependencies, it's easy to hunt down where they come from.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
According with MISRA-C every switch-clause must terminate with an
unconditional break.
MISRA-C rules 16.1 and 16.3
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
UART_QMSI_0_BAUDRATE was removed by commit 17c6456678 ("drivers/uart:
Use dts to set uart priorities for QMSI driver").
There's a reference to CONFIG_UART_QMSI_1_BAUDRATE as well, but getting
rid of it requires documentation updates.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
The MMIO addresses for peripherals are being assigned by BIOS
at boot. Different BIOS versions and number of enabled peripherals
affect how those addresses are assigned. This invalidates
the addresses for UART defined in DTS. Turn on PCI enumeration
so UART addresses are probed at boot to avoid non-usable
UART and black console.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
Previous rename from CONFIG_* to DT_* left a few remaining
CONFIG_*. So rename them manually now.
Fix#13753
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
Recent versions of GCC won't build grub-2.02 because they're more
pedantic about warnings. This has been fixed upstream but is not
yet part of any release. The build script is modified to apply the
relevant commits before building.
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>