Wonjoon Lee 0a166c0467 Adding waiting function when battery boot-up
Some battery uses clock stretching feature, and this could disturb
PMU communication before battery going stable.
AP does not know and will attempt PMU setting, and could get fail
For various battery indicates usually 1s for stable
(even if it is much less in real world 200ms~700ms)
Let's checking 'battery is ready' when first pump-up power.

BRANCH=ToT
BUG=chrome-os-partner:28289
TEST=Going battery shipmode and plug-in AC, See booting and EC log
Disconnect battery, and plug-in and see booting and EC log

Change-Id: Idd8ae2ab4ec164b11fe67413bbf647cad18bc481
Signed-off-by: Wonjoon Lee <woojoo.lee@samsung.com>
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/197990
Reviewed-by: Randall Spangler <rspangler@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Doug Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
Tested-by: Doug Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
2014-05-07 21:43:04 +00:00
2014-05-07 03:39:24 +00:00
2014-03-31 22:45:09 +00:00
2012-05-11 09:11:52 -07:00
2013-12-19 00:12:24 +00:00
2014-04-02 19:58:53 +00:00

In the most general case, the flash layout looks something like this:

  +---------------------+
  | Reserved for EC use |
  +---------------------+

  +---------------------+
  |     Vblock B        |
  +---------------------+
  |  RW firmware B      |
  +---------------------+

  +---------------------+
  |     Vblock A        |
  +---------------------+
  |  RW firmware A      |
  +---------------------+

  +---------------------+
  |       FMAP          |
  +---------------------+
  |   Public root key   |
  +---------------------+
  |  Read-only firmware |
  +---------------------+


BIOS firmware (and kernel) put the vblock info at the start of each image
where it's easy to find. The Blizzard EC expects the firmware vector table
to come first, so we have to put the vblock at the end. This means we have
to know where to look for it, but that's built into the FMAP and the RO
firmware anyway, so that's not an issue.

The RO firmware doesn't need a vblock of course, but it does need some
reserved space for vboot-related things.

Using SHA256/RSA4096, the vblock is 2468 bytes (0x9a4), while the public
root key is 1064 bytes (0x428) and the current FMAP is 644 bytes (0x284). If
we reserve 4K at the top of each FW image, that should give us plenty of
room for vboot-related stuff.
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