use memcmp in mem size detection as suggested by blogic

SVN-Revision: 33619
lede-17.01
Hauke Mehrtens 2012-10-04 15:42:12 +00:00
parent 5e0df9582b
commit 2819890839
1 changed files with 3 additions and 7 deletions

View File

@ -12,19 +12,16 @@
{
unsigned long mem;
unsigned long max;
+ unsigned long off, data, off1, data1;
+ unsigned long off;
struct cpuinfo_mips *c = &current_cpu_data;
/* Figure out memory size by finding aliases.
@@ -77,15 +79,19 @@ static __init void prom_init_mem(void)
@@ -77,15 +79,15 @@ static __init void prom_init_mem(void)
* max contains the biggest possible address supported by the platform.
* If the method wants to try something above we assume 128MB ram.
*/
- max = ((unsigned long)(prom_init) | ((128 << 20) - 1));
+ off = (unsigned long)prom_init;
+ data = *(unsigned long *)prom_init;
+ off1 = off + 4;
+ data1 = *(unsigned long *)off1;
+ max = off | ((128 << 20) - 1);
for (mem = (1 << 20); mem < (128 << 20); mem += (1 << 20)) {
- if (((unsigned long)(prom_init) + mem) > max) {
@ -35,8 +32,7 @@
}
- if (*(unsigned long *)((unsigned long)(prom_init) + mem) ==
- *(unsigned long *)(prom_init))
+ if ((*(unsigned long *)(off + mem) == data) &&
+ (*(unsigned long *)(off1 + mem) == data1))
+ if (!memcmp(prom_init, prom_init + mem, 32))
break;
}