ARM: uniphier: change load addresses for bigger kernel image

The kernel size is getting bigger and bigger.  Because the Android
common kernel is even bigger than the vanilla one, so images overlap
in the current memory layout.

Adjust the load address for a bigger kernel image.

Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
diff --git a/include/configs/uniphier.h b/include/configs/uniphier.h
index 6a25dbd..a5ce52d 100644
--- a/include/configs/uniphier.h
+++ b/include/configs/uniphier.h
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@
 #define CONFIG_GATEWAYIP		192.168.11.1
 #define CONFIG_NETMASK			255.255.255.0
 
-#define CONFIG_LOADADDR			0x84000000
+#define CONFIG_LOADADDR			0x85000000
 #define CONFIG_SYS_LOAD_ADDR		CONFIG_LOADADDR
 #define CONFIG_SYS_BOOTM_LEN		(32 << 20)
 
@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@
 #define CONFIG_BOOTFILE			"fitImage"
 #define LINUXBOOT_ENV_SETTINGS \
 	"fit_addr=0x00100000\0" \
-	"fit_addr_r=0x84100000\0" \
+	"fit_addr_r=0x85100000\0" \
 	"fit_size=0x00f00000\0" \
 	"norboot=setexpr fit_addr $nor_base + $fit_addr &&" \
 		"bootm $fit_addr\0" \
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@
 #ifdef CONFIG_ARM64
 #define CONFIG_BOOTFILE			"Image.gz"
 #define LINUXBOOT_CMD			"booti"
-#define KERNEL_ADDR_LOAD		"kernel_addr_load=0x84200000\0"
+#define KERNEL_ADDR_LOAD		"kernel_addr_load=0x85200000\0"
 #define KERNEL_ADDR_R			"kernel_addr_r=0x82080000\0"
 #else
 #define CONFIG_BOOTFILE			"zImage"
@@ -138,15 +138,15 @@
 #endif
 #define LINUXBOOT_ENV_SETTINGS \
 	"fdt_addr=0x00100000\0" \
-	"fdt_addr_r=0x84100000\0" \
+	"fdt_addr_r=0x85100000\0" \
 	"fdt_size=0x00008000\0" \
 	"kernel_addr=0x00200000\0" \
 	KERNEL_ADDR_LOAD \
 	KERNEL_ADDR_R \
-	"kernel_size=0x00800000\0" \
-	"ramdisk_addr=0x00a00000\0" \
-	"ramdisk_addr_r=0x84a00000\0" \
-	"ramdisk_size=0x00600000\0" \
+	"kernel_size=0x00e00000\0" \
+	"ramdisk_addr=0x01000000\0" \
+	"ramdisk_addr_r=0x86000000\0" \
+	"ramdisk_size=0x00800000\0" \
 	"ramdisk_file=rootfs.cpio.uboot\0" \
 	"boot_common=setexpr bootm_low $kernel_addr_r '&' fe000000 && " \
 		"if test $kernel_addr_load = $kernel_addr_r; then " \