doc/en/platforms/arm.sgml
Hiroki Sato cfd9e12239 www cleanup mega commit:
- Move includes.nav*.sgml to share/sgml/navibar.ent and
   <lang>/share/sgml/nabibar.l10n.ent.

 - Move includes.sgml and includes.xsl to
   share/sgml/common.ent, share/sgml/header.ent, <lang>/share/sgml/l10n.ent,
   and <lang>?share/sgml/header.l10n.ent.

 - Move most of XSLT libraries to share/sgml/*.xsl and
   <lang>/share/sgml/*.xsl.

 - Move news.xml and other *.xml files for the similar purpose
   to share/sgml/*.xml and <lang>/share/sgml/*.xml.

 - Switch to use a custom DTD for HTML document.  Now we use
   "-//FreeBSD//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional-Based Extension", which is
   HTML 4.01 + some entities previously pulled via
   "<!ENTITY % includes SYSTEM "includes.sgml"> %includes;" line.
   The location of entity file will be resolved by using catalog file.

 - Add DOCTYPE declearation to XML documents.  This makes the followings
   possible:

   * Use of &foo; entities for SGML in an XML file instead of defining
     {$foo} as the same content.

   * &symbolic; entities for Latin characters.

 - Duplicated information between SGML and XML, or English and
   translated doc, has been removed as much as possible.
2006-08-19 21:20:54 +00:00

62 lines
2.3 KiB
Text

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional-Based Extension//EN" [
<!ENTITY base CDATA "..">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/platforms/arm.sgml,v 1.8 2006/04/03 15:10:54 blackend Exp $">
<!ENTITY title "FreeBSD/ARM Project">
<!ENTITY email 'freebsd-arm'>
<!ENTITY % navinclude.developers "INCLUDE">
<!ENTITY % developers SYSTEM "../developers.sgml"> %developers;
]>
<html>
&header;
<p>FreeBSD/ARM is a port of FreeBSD which aims to run
on the ARM architecture and hardware.
The project's goal is to provide support for the
architecture and hardware surrounding it.</p>
<h3>FreeBSD/ARM Hardware Notes</h3>
<p>Currently FreeBSD should work on the i80321 based Intel
devboards, which includes the IQ31244 and IQ80321 boards.
Support is still minimal, covering only the CPU, PCI-X bus,
em(4) Ethernet adapters, the UART and timer devices.</p>
<p>Minimal support for the StrongARM 1100 CPU is provided, but
only within the limits of what Simics emulate: CPU, UART and
clock. It is theoretically possible to boot on the Assabet board,
the one Simics emulates; no attempts, successful or unsuccessful,
have been reported.</p>
<h3>What Needs To Be Done</h3>
<ul>
<li>SATA support needs to be added.</li>
<li>Other devices, such as watchdog, i2c and bus should be merged
from NetBSD.</li>
</ul>
<h3>FreeBSD/ARM Related Links</h3>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://tisu.mit.jyu.fi/embedded/TIE345/luentokalvot/Embedded_3_ARM.pdf">
Brief history of ARM</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/arm32/">NetBSD Arm/32 project</a></li>
</ul>
<h3>Mini-Install guide</h3>
<p>&a.cognet; (cognet@FreeBSD.org) has written a mini-install guide for the
current FreeBSD source. It is
<a href="http://people.freebsd.org/~cognet/freebsd_arm.txt">available here</a>.</p>
<h3><a name="list">FreeBSD/ARM mailing list</a></h3>
<p>To subscribe to this list, send mail to <tt class="
EMAIL">&#60;<a href="mailto:freebsd-arm-subscribe@FreeBSD.org">freebsd-arm-subscribe@FreeBSD.org</a>&#62;</tt>
or visit <a href="http://lists.FreeBSD.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-arm">mailman interface</a>.</p>
&footer;
</html>