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I am trying to figure out how to start cores other than core0 for a quad core allwinner h5. the C_RST_CTRL register (a.k.a CPU2 Reset Control Register) has four bits at the bottom that imply they are four reset controls. The lsbit is one the other three zeros implying setting those releases reset on the other cores, but I dont see that happening (nothing is running code I have left at address zero), at the same time zeroing that lsbit does stop core0 implying that it is a reset control. So I assume there are clock gates somewhere but I cannot find them.

The prcm registers which are not documented in the H5 docs but are on a sunxi wiki page for older allwinners do show what seem to be real PLL settings but the cpu enable registers are marked as A31 only and the cpu0 register(s) are not setup so that would imply that is not how you enable any cpu including 0 for this chip.

What am I missing?

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    github.com/OrangePiLibra/OrangePi_H5SDK/tree/master/… it is the user manual that is the real manual with register specs.
    – old_timer
    Jul 13, 2017 at 17:26
  • Great. Thank you very much Jul 13, 2017 at 17:26
  • the typical arm design is for the edge of the core to have individual clock enable and resets which are vendor specific as to how they are implemented. arm generally does not and should not control those, wouldnt make sense.
    – old_timer
    Jul 15, 2017 at 20:39
  • @PeterJ I am reading it right now those look like signal names although they look to be in the arm's domain. But I dont see any register connections with those names so there is an information gap there at the moment.
    – old_timer
    Jul 15, 2017 at 20:46
  • @PeterJ section A.3 in the TRM I am looking at (appendix A signal descriptions) nCORERESET for example are chip vendor supplied, so assume that is the C_RST_CTRL pins above, but bet there is something else....but for example the power management signals dont match the signals or bold type face registers/pins/bits you found. so still a gap as to whom owns those signals you found and then where they are.
    – old_timer
    Jul 15, 2017 at 20:54

2 Answers 2

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+500

For a pure bare metal solution look at sunxi_cpu_ops.c from the plat/sun50iw1p1 directory of https://github.com/apritzel/arm-trusted-firmware.git

You need to deactivate various power clamps as well as clock gates.

Alternatively, include the Arm Trusted Firmware code and enable a core by an SMC call:

ldr x2,=entry_point
mov x1,#corenumber
mov x0,#0x03
movk x0,#0x8400,lsl #16
smc #0

I've now confirmed this works on an H5.

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Does C_CPU_STATUS STANDBY_WFI=0x0E suggest that the secondary cores are sitting in WFI?

Not an answer, I don't have enough rep to comment but I'm just starting the same exercise myself.

As an aside, how did you put code at address 0? Isn't that BROM? I was going to play with the RVBARADDR registers.

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  • I am using u-boot to boot and loading at 0x42000000, have not replaced u-boot yet.
    – old_timer
    Jul 16, 2017 at 11:51
  • I'm just using the SPL from u-boot and loading an executable from there. Did you set up RVBARADDR? Jul 16, 2017 at 12:00
  • 01700030 000E0000 yes STANDBY_WFI=0xE
    – old_timer
    Jul 16, 2017 at 12:03
  • could it be that "simple" though inject an interrupt into a core?
    – old_timer
    Jul 16, 2017 at 12:09
  • 017000A0 00010060 017000A4 00000000
    – old_timer
    Jul 16, 2017 at 12:10

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