Lines Matching refs:Open
1 Booting the Linux/ppc kernel without Open Firmware
138 the presence of a device-tree whose format is defined after Open
202 a) Boot from Open Firmware. If your firmware is compatible
203 with Open Firmware (IEEE 1275) or provides an OF compatible
224 called directly by a bootloader that does not support the Open
228 details in this document, as method a) is simply standard Open
340 which will generate a flattened device-tree from the Open Firmware
430 way to avoid overriding critical things like, on Open Firmware
532 the Open Firmware IEEE 1275 device-tree. It's basically a tree of
542 format definition (as it is in Open Firmware). Version 16 makes it
579 property. Real Open Firmware implementations provide a unique
705 implementation of Open Firmware or an implementation compatible with
706 the Open Firmware client interface, those properties will be created
717 The general rule is documented in the various Open Firmware
808 While earlier users of Open Firmware like OldWorld macintoshes tended
829 While Open Firmware provides more flexible usage of 8859-1, this
849 PCI binding to Open Firmware, and your interrupt tree as documented
986 This node is a bit "special". Normally, that's where Open Firmware
1264 representation defined as part of the Open Firmware specifications,
1266 booted using Open Firmware. Binding documentation for new devices
1283 document "Open Firmware Recommended Practice: Interrupt