Up till now we have been installing arm-gcc using apt from the team-gcc-arm-embedded ppa.
As discussed in #1453 and implemented in #1504, we have decided to lock travis to use the specific version of the toolchain that is documented in the READMEs of relevant platforms. However, the PPA no longer hosts this version, apt fails to install arm-gcc and as a result the job fails too.
This commit changes the travis job to wget an installation tarball for the desired version, instead of trying to install via apt.
If the setup of socket 0 to 3 with 4+2+1+1KB is detected then the W5100 is _not_ initialized, otherwise it does set up socket 0 and 1 with 4KB each. Either way socket 0 is used - now with 4KB instead of 8KB as before.
Now that the CBM PFS supports file removal (and a file seek stub) it is possible to have the Telnet server leverage the IDE64 support of the CBM PFS.
Note: Using the CBM PFS for the Telnet server does _not_ reduce the code size since the POSIX I/O functions are additionally still linked in because the POSIX directory functions internally use the POSIX I/O functions. And that's the very reason why the CBM PFS is _not_ activated for the C128 Telnet server: The CBM PFS for the C128 doesn't bring IDE64 support but is supposed to be used to reduce code size - but this isn't possible for the Telnet server.
This is a fix for Contiki RPL so that it fully supports DAO ACK in
an end-to-end fashion. When DAO is sent it will be forwarded upwards
as before. DAO ACK will be forwarded downwards until it reach the node
that initiated the DAO ACK and unlike before it is not a single-hop
DAO ACK but it is fully reaching the RPL ROOT before any DAO ACK is
sent back. DAO ACK also now fully support different status messages
(success / fail).
This patch configures Isolated Memory Regions (IMRs) to block DMA to
code and data regions that do not contain any data that needs to be
DMA-accessible.
This patch adds an example program to print out information about the
configuration of the Intel Quark X1000 SoC Isolated Memory Regions
(IMRs), the Host System Management Mode Controls register, and the
Host Memory I/O Boundary register.
The Intel Quark X1000 SoC includes support for Isolated Memory Regions
(IMRs), which are specified using range registers and associated
control registers that are accessible via the message bus. This patch
adds a driver for accessing those registers.