This define indicates the size of the memory region where it is safe
to place data passed to the Linux kernel (ATAGs, DTB, initrd). The
value needs to be:
a) Less than or equal to RAM size.
b) Small enough that the area is not within the kernel's highmem region,
since the kernel cannot access ATAGs/DTB/initrd from highmem.
c) Large enough to hold the kernel+DTB+initrd.
256M seems large enough for (c) in most circumstances, and small enough
to satisfy (a) and (b) across any possible Tegra board. Note that the
user can override this value via environment variable "bootm_mapsize"
if needed.
The advantage of defining BOOTMAPSZ is that we no longer need to define
variable fdt_high in the default environment. Previously, we defined
this to prevent the DTB from being relocated to the very end of RAM,
which on most Tegra systems is within highmem, and hence which would
cause boot failures. A user can still define this variable themselves
if they want the FDT to be either left in-place wherever loaded, or
copied to some other specific location. Similarly, there should no
longer be a strict requirement for the user to define initrd_high if
using an initrd.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Warren <swarren@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Tom Warren <twarren@nvidia.com>