Tags give the ability to mark specific points in history as being important
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arm-fixes-6.1-1
bd60aafc · ·ARM: fixes for 6.1 These are three fixes for build warnings that came in during the merge window.
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arm-soc-6.1
ef2fb84c · ·ARM: SoC code changes for 6.1 The main changes this time are for the organization of the Kconfig files, introducing per-vendor top-level options on arm64 to match those on arm32, and making the platform selection on arm32 more uniform, in particular for the remaining StrongARM platforms that still have a couple of special cases compared to the more recent ones. I also did a cleanup of the old Footbridge platform, which was the last holdout for the phys_to_dma()/dma_to_phys() interface that is now completely gone from arm32, completing work started by Christoph Hellwig.
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arm-drivers-6.1
44137949 · ·ARM: driver updates for 6.1 The drivers branch for 6.1 is a bit larger than for most releases. Most of the changes come from SoC maintainers for the drivers/soc subsystem: - A new driver for error handling on the NVIDIA Tegra 'control backbone' bus. - A new driver for Qualcomm LLCC/DDR bandwidth measurement - New Rockchip rv1126 and rk3588 power domain drivers - DT binding updates for memory controllers, older Rockchip SoCs, various Mediatek devices, Qualcomm SCM firmware - Minor updates to Hisilicon LPC bus, the Allwinner SRAM driver, the Apple rtkit firmware driver, Tegra firmware - Minor updates for SoC drivers (Samsung, Mediatek, Renesas, Tegra, Qualcomm, Broadcom, NXP, ...) There are also some separate subsystem with downstream maintainers that merge updates this way: - Various updates and new drivers in the memory controller subsystem for Mediatek and Broadcom SoCs - Small set of changes in preparation to add support for FF-A v1.1 specification later, in the Arm FF-A firmware subsystem - debugfs support in the PSCI firmware subsystem
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arm-defconfig-6.1
25631f1f · ·ARM: defconfig updates for 6.1 As usual, we enable newly added device drivers in the various defconfig files. This time, there is also a larger cleanup series that just reorders symbols according to what 'make savedefconfig' outputs and then tracks down the most common removed or renamed symbols on top.
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arm-dt-6.1
114b9da7 · ·ARM: devicetree updates for 6.1 Most of the changes fall into one of three categories: adding support for additional devices on existing machines, cleaning up issues found by the ongoing conversion to machine-readable bindings, and addressing minor mistakes in the existing DT data. Across SoC vendors, Qualcomm and Freescale stick out as getting the most updates, which corresponds to their dominance in the mobile phone and embedded industrial markets, respectively. There are 636 non-merge changeset in this branch, which is a little lower than most times, but more importantly we only add 36 machine files, which is about half of what we had the past few releases. Eight new SoCs are added, but all of them are variations of already supported SoC families, and most of them come with one reference board design from the SoC vendor: - Mediatek MT8186 is a Chromebook/Tablet type SoC, similar to the MT65xx series of phone SoCs, with two Cortex-A76 and six Cortex-A55 cores. - TI AM62A is another member of the K3 family with Cortex-A53 cores, this one is targetted at Video/Vision processing for industrial and automotive applications. - NXP i.MX8DXL is another chip for this market in the ever-growing i.MX8 family, this one again with two Cortex-A35 cores. - Renesas R-Car H3Ne-1.7G (R8A779MB) and R-Car V3H2 (R8A77980A) are minor updates of R8A77951 and R8A77980, respectively. - Qualcomm IPQ8064-v2.0, IPQ8062 and IPQ8065 are all variants of the IPQ8064 chip, with minimally different features. The AMD Pensando Elba and Apple M1 Ultra SoC support was getting close this time, but in the end did not make the cut. The new machines based on existing SoC support are fairly uneventful: - Sony Xperia 1 IV is a fairly recent phone based on Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1. - Three Samsung phones based on Snapdragon 410: Galaxy E5, E7 and Grand Max. These are added for both 32-bit and 64-bit kernels, as they originally shipped running 32-bit code. - Two new servers using AST2600 BMCs: AMD DaytonaX and Ampere Mt. Mitchell - Three new machines based on Rockchips RK3399 and RK3566: Anberic RG353P and RG503, Pine64 Pinephone Pro, Open AI Lab - Multiple NXP i.MX6/i.MX8 based boards: Kontron SL/BL i.MX8MM OSM-S, i.MX8MM Gateworks GW7904, MSC SM2S-IMX8PLUS SoM and carrier board - Two development boards in the Microchip AT91 family: SAMA5D3-EDS and lan966x-pcb8290. - Minor variants of existing boards using Amlogic, Broadcom, Marvell, Rockchips, Freescale Layerscape and Socionext Uniphier SoCs.
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asm-generic-6.1
e19d4ebc · ·asm-generic updates for v6.1 This contains a series from Linus Walleij to unify the linux/io.h interface by making the ia64, alpha, parisc and sparc include asm-generic/io.h. All functions provided by the generic header are now available to all drivers, but the architectures can still override this. For the moment, mips and sh still don't include asm-generic/io.h but provide a full set of functions themselves. There are also a few minor cleanups unrelated to this.
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