doc: minor fixes for the release notes 16.02

This commit is contained in:
Christian Prochaska 2016-02-26 12:46:42 +01:00 committed by Christian Helmuth
parent 37459d833b
commit b4c49a4bf0
1 changed files with 5 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
With version 16.02, we add RISC-V to the Genode's supported CPU architectures,
With version 16.02, we add RISC-V to Genode's supported CPU architectures,
enable the secure pass-through of individual USB devices to virtual machines,
and update the support for the Muen and seL4 kernels.
@ -97,9 +97,9 @@ implement inheritance. This object model is used throughout QEMU. We took the
easy way out and just used a C++ wrapper class that contains all QEMU objects
that are used in the USB subsystem.
The next step was to develop an USB host device model. This model connects a
The next step was to develop a USB host device model. This model connects a
USB device attached to Genode's USB host-controller driver to the xHCI device
model. Lucky for us, QEMU already contains an USB host device model that uses
model. Lucky for us, QEMU already contains a USB host device model that uses
libusb, which we could use as blueprint. We implemented a USB host device that
leverages Genode's custom USB session interface. This host device reacts to a
USB device report coming from another component such as the host-controller
@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ driver. It tries to claim all devices it finds in that report and then creates
a QEMU USB device for each of them that is attached to the xHCI device model.
The xHCI device model needs infrastructure that normally is provided by QEMU
itself such as a timer queue and PCI device handling. We introduced an QEMU
itself such as a timer queue and PCI device handling. We introduced a QEMU
USB controller interface _repos/libports/include/qemu/usb.h_ whose back-end
library interface has to be implemented by a component, i.e. the VMM, that
wants to use the library.
@ -475,7 +475,7 @@ Execution on bare hardware (base-hw)
Within the last months, the initialization code of our custom kernel got
re-arranged to simplify the addition of new architectures, e.g., the RISC-V
port (Section [New support for the RISC-V CPU architecture]) while also make
port (Section [New support for the RISC-V CPU architecture]) while also making
its implementation leaner. A positive side effect of this work was the
generalization of multi-processor and L2-cache support for ARM's Cortex-A9
CPUs. For instance, the Wandboard (Freescale i.MX6 SoC) is now driven with all