Loading arch/riscv/kernel/cpu.c +3 −42 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -46,51 +46,12 @@ int riscv_of_processor_hartid(struct device_node *node) #ifdef CONFIG_PROC_FS static void print_isa(struct seq_file *f, const char *orig_isa) static void print_isa(struct seq_file *f, const char *isa) { static const char *ext = "mafdcsu"; const char *isa = orig_isa; const char *e; /* * Linux doesn't support rv32e or rv128i, and we only support booting * kernels on harts with the same ISA that the kernel is compiled for. */ #if defined(CONFIG_32BIT) if (strncmp(isa, "rv32i", 5) != 0) return; #elif defined(CONFIG_64BIT) if (strncmp(isa, "rv64i", 5) != 0) return; #endif /* Print the base ISA, as we already know it's legal. */ /* Print the entire ISA as it is */ seq_puts(f, "isa\t\t: "); seq_write(f, isa, 5); isa += 5; /* * Check the rest of the ISA string for valid extensions, printing those * we find. RISC-V ISA strings define an order, so we only print the * extension bits when they're in order. Hide the supervisor (S) * extension from userspace as it's not accessible from there. */ for (e = ext; *e != '\0'; ++e) { if (isa[0] == e[0]) { if (isa[0] != 's') seq_write(f, isa, 1); isa++; } } seq_write(f, isa, strlen(isa)); seq_puts(f, "\n"); /* * If we were given an unsupported ISA in the device tree then print * a bit of info describing what went wrong. */ if (isa[0] != '\0') pr_info("unsupported ISA \"%s\" in device tree\n", orig_isa); } static void print_mmu(struct seq_file *f, const char *mmu_type) Loading Loading
arch/riscv/kernel/cpu.c +3 −42 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -46,51 +46,12 @@ int riscv_of_processor_hartid(struct device_node *node) #ifdef CONFIG_PROC_FS static void print_isa(struct seq_file *f, const char *orig_isa) static void print_isa(struct seq_file *f, const char *isa) { static const char *ext = "mafdcsu"; const char *isa = orig_isa; const char *e; /* * Linux doesn't support rv32e or rv128i, and we only support booting * kernels on harts with the same ISA that the kernel is compiled for. */ #if defined(CONFIG_32BIT) if (strncmp(isa, "rv32i", 5) != 0) return; #elif defined(CONFIG_64BIT) if (strncmp(isa, "rv64i", 5) != 0) return; #endif /* Print the base ISA, as we already know it's legal. */ /* Print the entire ISA as it is */ seq_puts(f, "isa\t\t: "); seq_write(f, isa, 5); isa += 5; /* * Check the rest of the ISA string for valid extensions, printing those * we find. RISC-V ISA strings define an order, so we only print the * extension bits when they're in order. Hide the supervisor (S) * extension from userspace as it's not accessible from there. */ for (e = ext; *e != '\0'; ++e) { if (isa[0] == e[0]) { if (isa[0] != 's') seq_write(f, isa, 1); isa++; } } seq_write(f, isa, strlen(isa)); seq_puts(f, "\n"); /* * If we were given an unsupported ISA in the device tree then print * a bit of info describing what went wrong. */ if (isa[0] != '\0') pr_info("unsupported ISA \"%s\" in device tree\n", orig_isa); } static void print_mmu(struct seq_file *f, const char *mmu_type) Loading