@ -19,12 +19,12 @@ Design Notes on Exporting U-Boot Functions to Standalone Applications:
thus the compiler cannot perform type checks on these assignments.
2. The pointer to the jump table is passed to the application in a
machine-dependent way. PowerPC, ARM, MIPS and Blackfin architectures
use a dedicated register to hold the pointer to the 'global_data'
structure: r2 on PowerPC, r8 on ARM, k0 on MIPS, and P3 on Blackfin.
The x86 architecture does not use such a register; instead, the
pointer to the 'global_data' structure is passed as 'argv[-1]'
pointer.
machine-dependent way. PowerPC, ARM, MIPS, Blackfin and Nios II
architectures use a dedicated register to hold the pointer to the
'global_data' structure: r2 on PowerPC, r8 on ARM, k0 on MIPS,
P3 on Blackfin and gp on Nios II. The x86 architecture does not
use such a register; instead, the pointer to the 'global_data'
structure is passed as 'argv[-1]' pointer.
The application can access the 'global_data' structure in the same
way as U-Boot does:
@ -56,6 +56,7 @@ Design Notes on Exporting U-Boot Functions to Standalone Applications:
ARM 0x0c100000 0x0c100000
MIPS 0x80200000 0x80200000
Blackfin 0x00001000 0x00001000
Nios II 0x02000000 0x02000000
For example, the "hello world" application may be loaded and
executed on a PowerPC board with the following commands: