From: Sebastian Hesselbarth <sebastian.hesselbarth@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2014 01:53:33 +0100
On 03/10/2014 01:41 AM, David Miller wrote:
From: Sebastian Hesselbarth <sebastian.hesselbarth@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2014 01:37:32 +0100
The mechanism is manual, no automatic way to determine it.
We recognize BIOS and ACPI bugs and work around them, by looking at
version information and whatnot, so you really can't convince me that
something similar can't be done here perhaps in the platform code.
Hmm, if the is a way to determine the version of that particual u-boot
I'd be happy to exploit that information. But I honestly doubt that.
Compared to u-boot bootloader and kernel interaction, BIOS and ACPI
are well-defined protocols.
I personally, would prefer everybody should update his broken
bootloaders, but that will just not happen.
What you can do is have a test that _perhaps_ covers a "broader than
reality" list of broken bootloader cases.
Then you have something the bootloader can provide which indicates
that it has been fixed.