This doesn't touch external tools as I see no need for.
Change-Id: Ia69248c4b6a033c3772916525257e3540bddcffa
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/891
Tested: Sebastian Leonhardt <sebastian.leonhardt@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Marcin Bukat <marcin.bukat@gmail.com>
Although both players basically have the same keys, the
differences in the layout is rather big, so I think both
deserve their own keymaps.
(On the yh820 the FFWD/PLAY/REW buttons are located above the
direction keys, on the yh920 at the side of the player.
Furthermore the yh920/925 has a REC switch, whereas
yh820 has a push button.)
Change-Id: I0e62a1b101c387646c0bdb07ea142d9d2430ca15
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/814
Reviewed-by: Szymon Dziok <b0hoon@o2.pl>
After placing the firmware.mi4 file in the root dir of the player in UMS mode of
the OF, Sansa should do stupid blinking with the backlight and buttonlight
alternately. Recovering from this state is possible through the recovery mode
(see Wiki), by putting an original copy of the firmware.mi4.
Change-Id: Ia913442b97e8c405f55c4676b9a2bf0b1b1d05d6
On the ZEN, the LCD is fed continuously by the DMA and this refresh needs to
be stop when the bootloader gives control to the firmware, otherwise the DMA
will source data from invalid region and it might even lock-up if the new
code touches the memory setup. Work around this by properly stopping the LCD
driver: the bootloader assumes that if the target defines HAVE_LCD_ENABLE
in bootloader build (which is unusual) then it needs to stop the LCD. Since
stopping the LCD could produce funny screens, power down backlight
which is expected to power down the LCD too, giving a nice black screen
instead of some random pixels.
Change-Id: I7ce5ba9bfd08e596907c4ff8f80feb189f0576ce
HiFi E.T. MA8 is almost the same as MA9 except
another DAC(pcm1792 in ma8, df1704 in ma9).
MA8 has ILI9342 lcd, MA8C has ILI9342C lcd.
Change-Id: If2ac04f5a3382590b2a392c46286559f54b2ed6a
The only difference between this target and HiFi E.T. MA9
is display driver (ILI9342 in MA9 and ILI9342c in MA9C)
Change-Id: Icc3d2490f850902a653175360f12283f3708bbb7
The bootloader must call disk_init_subsystem() because it is multithread
(because of USB), otherwise strange things might happen. Calling disk_init()
is unnecessary since it is call when mounting partitions.
Change-Id: If7aff3dea0b96144e2a9b0f6179a9a0a632b93ed
Many imx233 targets boot in a very low performance mode, typically cpu and
dram at 24MHz. This results in very slow boots and very unstable USB
bootloader mode. Since cpu frequency scaling is disabled in bootloader in
rockbox, always make the frequency scaling code available and boost at boot
time.
Change-Id: Ie96623c00f7c4cd9a377b84dcb14b772558cfa4d
The idea is to share loading code between bootloaders and rolo().
Change-Id: I1656ed91946d7a05cb7c9fa7a16793c3c862a5cd
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/190
Reviewed-by: Marcin Bukat <marcin.bukat@gmail.com>
What it does:
- removes unnecessary file operations for the OF (one lseek() and one read() per one key),
- simplifies the code and reduces the code size.
Speedup is not noticeable but theoretically some is.
Change-Id: I43a6dd21d3af48ea8d3b27d676c84b2084c0b88c
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/287
Tested-by: Szymon Dziok <b0hoon@o2.pl>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
Reviewed-by: Szymon Dziok <b0hoon@o2.pl>
We know about two different bootroms. First can be found in rk2706A,
the second in rk2706B and rk2705. This two versions are very
similar but memory addresses are different. It seems it is possible
to distinguish bootrom version by reading SCU_ID register.
Change-Id: I01681b5e3a82930ae74a5cce6ab0244d7cd333d2
This change replaces an odd way to increment tea key in a function responsible
for finding the proper key (it doesn't have to be done in a for loop, it's just
adding a 32bit number to a 128bit number). It reduces the time needed to find
the key practically to zero and it gives in the best case 2 seconds of overall
speedup in loading the OF.
Change-Id: I0632526c3dfeb4d0603e77239f298a89076b630b
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/230
Tested-by: Szymon Dziok <b0hoon@o2.pl>
Reviewed-by: Thomas Martitz <kugel@rockbox.org>
Reviewed-by: Szymon Dziok <b0hoon@o2.pl>
The freescale firmware partitions has a lots of quirks that
need to be dealt with, so do it the proper way.
Change-Id: I8a5bd3fb462a4df143bc6c931057f3ffedd4b3d3
* Introduce CONFIG_BATTERY_MEASURE define, to allow targets (application)
to break powermgmt.c's assumption about the ability to read battery voltage.
There's now additionally percentage (android) and remaining time measure
(maemo). No measure at all also works (sdl app). If voltage can't be measured,
then battery_level() is king and it'll be used for power_history and runtime
estimation.
* Implement target's API in the simulator, i.e. _battery_voltage(), so it
doesn't need to implement it's own powermgmt.c and other stubs. Now
the sim behaves much more like a native target, although it still
changes the simulated battery voltage quickly,
* Other changes include include renaming battery_adc_voltage() to
_battery_voltage(), for consistency with the new target functions and
making some of the apps code aware that voltage and runtime estimation
is not always available.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@31548 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
Synchronous cable read is still required because the timing of the receipt of
the cable event cannot be known for sure-- basically it introduced a thread
race between main and pmic. If a keypress is desired instead to enter BL USB
mode a la AS3525, then it's possible to remove that.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@31510 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657