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1 | .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ |
2 | .. Copyright (C) 2014, Simon Glass <[email protected]> | |
3 | .. Copyright (C) 2014, Bin Meng <[email protected]> | |
5dad97ed | 4 | |
a70e2ace BM |
5 | x86 |
6 | === | |
5dad97ed BM |
7 | |
8 | This document describes the information about U-Boot running on x86 targets, | |
9 | including supported boards, build instructions, todo list, etc. | |
10 | ||
11 | Status | |
12 | ------ | |
a70e2ace BM |
13 | U-Boot supports running as a `coreboot`_ payload on x86. So far only Link |
14 | (Chromebook Pixel) and `QEMU`_ x86 targets have been tested, but it should | |
1ae5b78c BM |
15 | work with minimal adjustments on other x86 boards since coreboot deals with |
16 | most of the low-level details. | |
5dad97ed | 17 | |
495f3774 AS |
18 | U-Boot is a main bootloader on Intel Edison board. |
19 | ||
28a85365 SI |
20 | U-Boot also supports booting directly from x86 reset vector, without coreboot. |
21 | In this case, known as bare mode, from the fact that it runs on the | |
f21069ff SG |
22 | 'bare metal', U-Boot acts like a BIOS replacement. The following platforms |
23 | are supported: | |
24 | ||
eda995a8 | 25 | - Bayley Bay CRB |
eb45787b | 26 | - Cherry Hill CRB |
eda995a8 | 27 | - Congatec QEVAL 2.0 & conga-QA3/E3845 |
f21069ff SG |
28 | - Cougar Canyon 2 CRB |
29 | - Crown Bay CRB | |
30 | - Galileo | |
31 | - Link (Chromebook Pixel) | |
32 | - Minnowboard MAX | |
33 | - Samus (Chromebook Pixel 2015) | |
6feb2ff5 | 34 | - QEMU x86 (32-bit & 64-bit) |
5dad97ed | 35 | |
3a1a18ff SG |
36 | As for loading an OS, U-Boot supports directly booting a 32-bit or 64-bit |
37 | Linux kernel as part of a FIT image. It also supports a compressed zImage. | |
3619e94a BM |
38 | U-Boot supports loading an x86 VxWorks kernel. Please check README.vxworks |
39 | for more details. | |
5dad97ed | 40 | |
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41 | Build Instructions for U-Boot as BIOS replacement (bare mode) |
42 | ------------------------------------------------------------- | |
3a1a18ff | 43 | Building a ROM version of U-Boot (hereafter referred to as u-boot.rom) is a |
5dad97ed | 44 | little bit tricky, as generally it requires several binary blobs which are not |
ffaa7abf BM |
45 | shipped in the U-Boot source tree. Due to this reason, the u-boot.rom build may |
46 | print some warnings if required binary blobs (e.g.: FSP) are not present. | |
5dad97ed | 47 | |
5dad97ed BM |
48 | CPU Microcode |
49 | ------------- | |
a70e2ace | 50 | Modern CPUs usually require a special bit stream called `microcode`_ to be |
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51 | loaded on the processor after power up in order to function properly. U-Boot |
52 | has already integrated these as hex dumps in the source tree. | |
53 | ||
1281a1fc BM |
54 | SMP Support |
55 | ----------- | |
56 | On a multicore system, U-Boot is executed on the bootstrap processor (BSP). | |
57 | Additional application processors (AP) can be brought up by U-Boot. In order to | |
58 | have an SMP kernel to discover all of the available processors, U-Boot needs to | |
59 | prepare configuration tables which contain the multi-CPUs information before | |
60 | loading the OS kernel. Currently U-Boot supports generating two types of tables | |
a70e2ace BM |
61 | for SMP, called Simple Firmware Interface (`SFI`_) and Multi-Processor (`MP`_) |
62 | tables. The writing of these two tables are controlled by two Kconfig | |
7aaff9bf | 63 | options GENERATE_SFI_TABLE and GENERATE_MP_TABLE. |
1281a1fc | 64 | |
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65 | Driver Model |
66 | ------------ | |
f21069ff SG |
67 | x86 has been converted to use driver model for serial, GPIO, SPI, SPI flash, |
68 | keyboard, real-time clock, USB. Video is in progress. | |
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69 | |
70 | Device Tree | |
71 | ----------- | |
72 | x86 uses device tree to configure the board thus requires CONFIG_OF_CONTROL to | |
617b867f | 73 | be turned on. Not every device on the board is configured via device tree, but |
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74 | more and more devices will be added as time goes by. Check out the directory |
75 | arch/x86/dts/ for these device tree source files. | |
76 | ||
cb3b2e62 SG |
77 | Useful Commands |
78 | --------------- | |
cb3b2e62 SG |
79 | In keeping with the U-Boot philosophy of providing functions to check and |
80 | adjust internal settings, there are several x86-specific commands that may be | |
81 | useful: | |
82 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
83 | fsp |
84 | Display information about Intel Firmware Support Package (FSP). | |
85 | This is only available on platforms which use FSP, mostly Atom. | |
86 | iod | |
87 | Display I/O memory | |
88 | iow | |
89 | Write I/O memory | |
90 | mtrr | |
91 | List and set the Memory Type Range Registers (MTRR). These are used to | |
92 | tell the CPU whether memory is cacheable and if so the cache write | |
93 | mode to use. U-Boot sets up some reasonable values but you can | |
94 | adjust then with this command. | |
cb3b2e62 | 95 | |
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96 | Booting Ubuntu |
97 | -------------- | |
98 | As an example of how to set up your boot flow with U-Boot, here are | |
99 | instructions for starting Ubuntu from U-Boot. These instructions have been | |
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100 | tested on Minnowboard MAX with a SATA drive but are equally applicable on |
101 | other platforms and other media. There are really only four steps and it's a | |
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102 | very simple script, but a more detailed explanation is provided here for |
103 | completeness. | |
104 | ||
105 | Note: It is possible to set up U-Boot to boot automatically using syslinux. | |
106 | It could also use the grub.cfg file (/efi/ubuntu/grub.cfg) to obtain the | |
107 | GUID. If you figure these out, please post patches to this README. | |
108 | ||
eda995a8 | 109 | Firstly, you will need Ubuntu installed on an available disk. It should be |
7bea5271 SG |
110 | possible to make U-Boot start a USB start-up disk but for now let's assume |
111 | that you used another boot loader to install Ubuntu. | |
112 | ||
113 | Use the U-Boot command line to find the UUID of the partition you want to | |
a70e2ace BM |
114 | boot. For example our disk is SCSI device 0:: |
115 | ||
116 | => part list scsi 0 | |
117 | ||
118 | Partition Map for SCSI device 0 -- Partition Type: EFI | |
119 | ||
120 | Part Start LBA End LBA Name | |
121 | Attributes | |
122 | Type GUID | |
123 | Partition GUID | |
124 | 1 0x00000800 0x001007ff "" | |
125 | attrs: 0x0000000000000000 | |
126 | type: c12a7328-f81f-11d2-ba4b-00a0c93ec93b | |
127 | guid: 9d02e8e4-4d59-408f-a9b0-fd497bc9291c | |
128 | 2 0x00100800 0x037d8fff "" | |
129 | attrs: 0x0000000000000000 | |
130 | type: 0fc63daf-8483-4772-8e79-3d69d8477de4 | |
131 | guid: 965c59ee-1822-4326-90d2-b02446050059 | |
132 | 3 0x037d9000 0x03ba27ff "" | |
133 | attrs: 0x0000000000000000 | |
134 | type: 0657fd6d-a4ab-43c4-84e5-0933c84b4f4f | |
135 | guid: 2c4282bd-1e82-4bcf-a5ff-51dedbf39f17 | |
136 | => | |
7bea5271 SG |
137 | |
138 | This shows that your SCSI disk has three partitions. The really long hex | |
139 | strings are called Globally Unique Identifiers (GUIDs). You can look up the | |
a70e2ace BM |
140 | 'type' ones `here`_. On this disk the first partition is for EFI and is in |
141 | VFAT format (DOS/Windows):: | |
7bea5271 SG |
142 | |
143 | => fatls scsi 0:1 | |
144 | efi/ | |
145 | ||
146 | 0 file(s), 1 dir(s) | |
147 | ||
148 | ||
149 | Partition 2 is 'Linux filesystem data' so that will be our root disk. It is | |
a70e2ace | 150 | in ext2 format:: |
7bea5271 SG |
151 | |
152 | => ext2ls scsi 0:2 | |
153 | <DIR> 4096 . | |
154 | <DIR> 4096 .. | |
155 | <DIR> 16384 lost+found | |
156 | <DIR> 4096 boot | |
157 | <DIR> 12288 etc | |
158 | <DIR> 4096 media | |
159 | <DIR> 4096 bin | |
160 | <DIR> 4096 dev | |
161 | <DIR> 4096 home | |
162 | <DIR> 4096 lib | |
163 | <DIR> 4096 lib64 | |
164 | <DIR> 4096 mnt | |
165 | <DIR> 4096 opt | |
166 | <DIR> 4096 proc | |
167 | <DIR> 4096 root | |
168 | <DIR> 4096 run | |
169 | <DIR> 12288 sbin | |
170 | <DIR> 4096 srv | |
171 | <DIR> 4096 sys | |
172 | <DIR> 4096 tmp | |
173 | <DIR> 4096 usr | |
174 | <DIR> 4096 var | |
175 | <SYM> 33 initrd.img | |
176 | <SYM> 30 vmlinuz | |
177 | <DIR> 4096 cdrom | |
178 | <SYM> 33 initrd.img.old | |
179 | => | |
180 | ||
a70e2ace | 181 | and if you look in the /boot directory you will see the kernel:: |
7bea5271 SG |
182 | |
183 | => ext2ls scsi 0:2 /boot | |
184 | <DIR> 4096 . | |
185 | <DIR> 4096 .. | |
186 | <DIR> 4096 efi | |
187 | <DIR> 4096 grub | |
188 | 3381262 System.map-3.13.0-32-generic | |
189 | 1162712 abi-3.13.0-32-generic | |
190 | 165611 config-3.13.0-32-generic | |
191 | 176500 memtest86+.bin | |
192 | 178176 memtest86+.elf | |
193 | 178680 memtest86+_multiboot.bin | |
194 | 5798112 vmlinuz-3.13.0-32-generic | |
195 | 165762 config-3.13.0-58-generic | |
196 | 1165129 abi-3.13.0-58-generic | |
197 | 5823136 vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic | |
198 | 19215259 initrd.img-3.13.0-58-generic | |
199 | 3391763 System.map-3.13.0-58-generic | |
200 | 5825048 vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic.efi.signed | |
201 | 28304443 initrd.img-3.13.0-32-generic | |
202 | => | |
203 | ||
204 | The 'vmlinuz' files contain a packaged Linux kernel. The format is a kind of | |
205 | self-extracting compressed file mixed with some 'setup' configuration data. | |
206 | Despite its size (uncompressed it is >10MB) this only includes a basic set of | |
207 | device drivers, enough to boot on most hardware types. | |
208 | ||
209 | The 'initrd' files contain a RAM disk. This is something that can be loaded | |
210 | into RAM and will appear to Linux like a disk. Ubuntu uses this to hold lots | |
211 | of drivers for whatever hardware you might have. It is loaded before the | |
212 | real root disk is accessed. | |
213 | ||
214 | The numbers after the end of each file are the version. Here it is Linux | |
215 | version 3.13. You can find the source code for this in the Linux tree with | |
216 | the tag v3.13. The '.0' allows for additional Linux releases to fix problems, | |
217 | but normally this is not needed. The '-58' is used by Ubuntu. Each time they | |
218 | release a new kernel they increment this number. New Ubuntu versions might | |
219 | include kernel patches to fix reported bugs. Stable kernels can exist for | |
220 | some years so this number can get quite high. | |
221 | ||
222 | The '.efi.signed' kernel is signed for EFI's secure boot. U-Boot has its own | |
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223 | secure boot mechanism - see `this`_ & `that`_. It cannot read .efi files |
224 | at present. | |
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225 | |
226 | To boot Ubuntu from U-Boot the steps are as follows: | |
227 | ||
a70e2ace | 228 | 1. Set up the boot arguments. Use the GUID for the partition you want to boot:: |
7bea5271 SG |
229 | |
230 | => setenv bootargs root=/dev/disk/by-partuuid/965c59ee-1822-4326-90d2-b02446050059 ro | |
231 | ||
232 | Here root= tells Linux the location of its root disk. The disk is specified | |
233 | by its GUID, using '/dev/disk/by-partuuid/', a Linux path to a 'directory' | |
234 | containing all the GUIDs Linux has found. When it starts up, there will be a | |
235 | file in that directory with this name in it. It is also possible to use a | |
236 | device name here, see later. | |
237 | ||
a70e2ace | 238 | 2. Load the kernel. Since it is an ext2/4 filesystem we can do:: |
7bea5271 SG |
239 | |
240 | => ext2load scsi 0:2 03000000 /boot/vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic | |
241 | ||
242 | The address 30000000 is arbitrary, but there seem to be problems with using | |
243 | small addresses (sometimes Linux cannot find the ramdisk). This is 48MB into | |
244 | the start of RAM (which is at 0 on x86). | |
245 | ||
a70e2ace | 246 | 3. Load the ramdisk (to 64MB):: |
7bea5271 SG |
247 | |
248 | => ext2load scsi 0:2 04000000 /boot/initrd.img-3.13.0-58-generic | |
249 | ||
250 | 4. Start up the kernel. We need to know the size of the ramdisk, but can use | |
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251 | a variable for that. U-Boot sets 'filesize' to the size of the last file it |
252 | loaded:: | |
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253 | |
254 | => zboot 03000000 0 04000000 ${filesize} | |
255 | ||
256 | Type 'help zboot' if you want to see what the arguments are. U-Boot on x86 is | |
257 | quite verbose when it boots a kernel. You should see these messages from | |
a70e2ace | 258 | U-Boot:: |
7bea5271 SG |
259 | |
260 | Valid Boot Flag | |
261 | Setup Size = 0x00004400 | |
262 | Magic signature found | |
263 | Using boot protocol version 2.0c | |
264 | Linux kernel version 3.13.0-58-generic (buildd@allspice) #97-Ubuntu SMP Wed Jul 8 02:56:15 UTC 2015 | |
265 | Building boot_params at 0x00090000 | |
266 | Loading bzImage at address 100000 (5805728 bytes) | |
267 | Magic signature found | |
268 | Initial RAM disk at linear address 0x04000000, size 19215259 bytes | |
eda995a8 | 269 | Kernel command line: "root=/dev/disk/by-partuuid/965c59ee-1822-4326-90d2-b02446050059 ro" |
7bea5271 SG |
270 | |
271 | Starting kernel ... | |
272 | ||
273 | U-Boot prints out some bootstage timing. This is more useful if you put the | |
a70e2ace | 274 | above commands into a script since then it will be faster:: |
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275 | |
276 | Timer summary in microseconds: | |
277 | Mark Elapsed Stage | |
278 | 0 0 reset | |
279 | 241,535 241,535 board_init_r | |
280 | 2,421,611 2,180,076 id=64 | |
281 | 2,421,790 179 id=65 | |
282 | 2,428,215 6,425 main_loop | |
283 | 48,860,584 46,432,369 start_kernel | |
284 | ||
285 | Accumulated time: | |
286 | 240,329 ahci | |
287 | 1,422,704 vesa display | |
288 | ||
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289 | Now the kernel actually starts (if you want to examine kernel boot up message on |
290 | the serial console, append "console=ttyS0,115200" to the kernel command line):: | |
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291 | |
292 | [ 0.000000] Initializing cgroup subsys cpuset | |
293 | [ 0.000000] Initializing cgroup subsys cpu | |
294 | [ 0.000000] Initializing cgroup subsys cpuacct | |
295 | [ 0.000000] Linux version 3.13.0-58-generic (buildd@allspice) (gcc version 4.8.2 (Ubuntu 4.8.2-19ubuntu1) ) #97-Ubuntu SMP Wed Jul 8 02:56:15 UTC 2015 (Ubuntu 3.13.0-58.97-generic 3.13.11-ckt22) | |
eda995a8 | 296 | [ 0.000000] Command line: root=/dev/disk/by-partuuid/965c59ee-1822-4326-90d2-b02446050059 ro console=ttyS0,115200 |
7bea5271 SG |
297 | |
298 | It continues for a long time. Along the way you will see it pick up your | |
a70e2ace | 299 | ramdisk:: |
7bea5271 SG |
300 | |
301 | [ 0.000000] RAMDISK: [mem 0x04000000-0x05253fff] | |
a70e2ace | 302 | ... |
7bea5271 SG |
303 | [ 0.788540] Trying to unpack rootfs image as initramfs... |
304 | [ 1.540111] Freeing initrd memory: 18768K (ffff880004000000 - ffff880005254000) | |
a70e2ace | 305 | ... |
7bea5271 | 306 | |
a70e2ace | 307 | Later it actually starts using it:: |
7bea5271 SG |
308 | |
309 | Begin: Running /scripts/local-premount ... done. | |
310 | ||
a70e2ace | 311 | You should also see your boot disk turn up:: |
7bea5271 SG |
312 | |
313 | [ 4.357243] scsi 1:0:0:0: Direct-Access ATA ADATA SP310 5.2 PQ: 0 ANSI: 5 | |
314 | [ 4.366860] sd 1:0:0:0: [sda] 62533296 512-byte logical blocks: (32.0 GB/29.8 GiB) | |
315 | [ 4.375677] sd 1:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg0 type 0 | |
316 | [ 4.381859] sd 1:0:0:0: [sda] Write Protect is off | |
317 | [ 4.387452] sd 1:0:0:0: [sda] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA | |
318 | [ 4.399535] sda: sda1 sda2 sda3 | |
319 | ||
320 | Linux has found the three partitions (sda1-3). Mercifully it doesn't print out | |
a70e2ace | 321 | the GUIDs. In step 1 above we could have used:: |
7bea5271 SG |
322 | |
323 | setenv bootargs root=/dev/sda2 ro | |
324 | ||
325 | instead of the GUID. However if you add another drive to your board the | |
326 | numbering may change whereas the GUIDs will not. So if your boot partition | |
327 | becomes sdb2, it will still boot. For embedded systems where you just want to | |
328 | boot the first disk, you have that option. | |
329 | ||
330 | The last thing you will see on the console is mention of plymouth (which | |
a70e2ace | 331 | displays the Ubuntu start-up screen) and a lot of 'Starting' messages:: |
7bea5271 | 332 | |
a70e2ace | 333 | * Starting Mount filesystems on boot [ OK ] |
7bea5271 SG |
334 | |
335 | After a pause you should see a login screen on your display and you are done. | |
336 | ||
a70e2ace | 337 | If you want to put this in a script you can use something like this:: |
7bea5271 SG |
338 | |
339 | setenv bootargs root=UUID=b2aaf743-0418-4d90-94cc-3e6108d7d968 ro | |
340 | setenv boot zboot 03000000 0 04000000 \${filesize} | |
341 | setenv bootcmd "ext2load scsi 0:2 03000000 /boot/vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic; ext2load scsi 0:2 04000000 /boot/initrd.img-3.13.0-58-generic; run boot" | |
342 | saveenv | |
343 | ||
344 | The \ is to tell the shell not to evaluate ${filesize} as part of the setenv | |
345 | command. | |
346 | ||
7bea5271 SG |
347 | You can also bake this behaviour into your build by hard-coding the |
348 | environment variables if you add this to minnowmax.h: | |
349 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
350 | .. code-block:: c |
351 | ||
352 | #undef CONFIG_BOOTCOMMAND | |
353 | #define CONFIG_BOOTCOMMAND \ | |
354 | "ext2load scsi 0:2 03000000 /boot/vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic; " \ | |
355 | "ext2load scsi 0:2 04000000 /boot/initrd.img-3.13.0-58-generic; " \ | |
356 | "run boot" | |
7bea5271 | 357 | |
a70e2ace BM |
358 | #undef CONFIG_EXTRA_ENV_SETTINGS |
359 | #define CONFIG_EXTRA_ENV_SETTINGS "boot=zboot 03000000 0 04000000 ${filesize}" | |
7bea5271 | 360 | |
a70e2ace | 361 | and change CONFIG_BOOTARGS value in configs/minnowmax_defconfig to:: |
5abc1a45 | 362 | |
a70e2ace | 363 | CONFIG_BOOTARGS="root=/dev/sda2 ro" |
5abc1a45 | 364 | |
2e9ae222 BM |
365 | Test with SeaBIOS |
366 | ----------------- | |
a70e2ace | 367 | `SeaBIOS`_ is an open source implementation of a 16-bit x86 BIOS. It can run |
2e9ae222 BM |
368 | in an emulator or natively on x86 hardware with the use of U-Boot. With its |
369 | help, we can boot some OSes that require 16-bit BIOS services like Windows/DOS. | |
370 | ||
371 | As U-Boot, we have to manually create a table where SeaBIOS gets various system | |
372 | information (eg: E820) from. The table unfortunately has to follow the coreboot | |
373 | table format as SeaBIOS currently supports booting as a coreboot payload. | |
374 | ||
375 | To support loading SeaBIOS, U-Boot should be built with CONFIG_SEABIOS on. | |
a70e2ace | 376 | Booting SeaBIOS is done via U-Boot's bootelf command, like below:: |
2e9ae222 BM |
377 | |
378 | => tftp bios.bin.elf;bootelf | |
379 | Using e1000#0 device | |
380 | TFTP from server 10.10.0.100; our IP address is 10.10.0.108 | |
381 | ... | |
85c052cc BM |
382 | Bytes transferred = 128748 (1f6ec hex) |
383 | ## Starting application at 0x000fd269 ... | |
384 | SeaBIOS (version rel-1.14.0-0-g155821a) | |
2e9ae222 BM |
385 | ... |
386 | ||
85c052cc BM |
387 | bios.bin.elf is the SeaBIOS image built from SeaBIOS source tree. At the time |
388 | being, SeaBIOS release 1.14.0 has been tested. To build the SeaBIOS image:: | |
2e9ae222 | 389 | |
85c052cc BM |
390 | $ echo -e 'CONFIG_COREBOOT=y\nCONFIG_COREBOOT_FLASH=n\nCONFIG_DEBUG_SERIAL=y\nCONFIG_DEBUG_COREBOOT=n' > .config |
391 | $ make olddefconfig | |
2e9ae222 BM |
392 | $ make |
393 | ... | |
85c052cc | 394 | Total size: 128512 Fixed: 69216 Free: 2560 (used 98.0% of 128KiB rom) |
2e9ae222 BM |
395 | Creating out/bios.bin.elf |
396 | ||
397 | Currently this is tested on QEMU x86 target with U-Boot chain-loading SeaBIOS | |
398 | to install/boot a Windows XP OS (below for example command to install Windows). | |
399 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
400 | .. code-block:: none |
401 | ||
2e9ae222 BM |
402 | # Create a 10G disk.img as the virtual hard disk |
403 | $ qemu-img create -f qcow2 disk.img 10G | |
404 | ||
405 | # Install a Windows XP OS from an ISO image 'winxp.iso' | |
406 | $ qemu-system-i386 -serial stdio -bios u-boot.rom -hda disk.img -cdrom winxp.iso -smp 2 -m 512 | |
407 | ||
408 | # Boot a Windows XP OS installed on the virutal hard disk | |
409 | $ qemu-system-i386 -serial stdio -bios u-boot.rom -hda disk.img -smp 2 -m 512 | |
410 | ||
411 | This is also tested on Intel Crown Bay board with a PCIe graphics card, booting | |
412 | SeaBIOS then chain-loading a GRUB on a USB drive, then Linux kernel finally. | |
413 | ||
5a6a2c71 BM |
414 | If you are using Intel Integrated Graphics Device (IGD) as the primary display |
415 | device on your board, SeaBIOS needs to be patched manually to get its VGA ROM | |
416 | loaded and run by SeaBIOS. SeaBIOS locates VGA ROM via the PCI expansion ROM | |
417 | register, but IGD device does not have its VGA ROM mapped by this register. | |
418 | Its VGA ROM is packaged as part of u-boot.rom at a configurable flash address | |
419 | which is unknown to SeaBIOS. An example patch is needed for SeaBIOS below: | |
420 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
421 | .. code-block:: none |
422 | ||
423 | diff --git a/src/optionroms.c b/src/optionroms.c | |
424 | index 65f7fe0..c7b6f5e 100644 | |
425 | --- a/src/optionroms.c | |
426 | +++ b/src/optionroms.c | |
427 | @@ -324,6 +324,8 @@ init_pcirom(struct pci_device *pci, int isvga, u64 *sources) | |
428 | rom = deploy_romfile(file); | |
429 | else if (RunPCIroms > 1 || (RunPCIroms == 1 && isvga)) | |
430 | rom = map_pcirom(pci); | |
431 | + if (pci->bdf == pci_to_bdf(0, 2, 0)) | |
432 | + rom = (struct rom_header *)0xfff90000; | |
433 | if (! rom) | |
434 | // No ROM present. | |
435 | return; | |
5a6a2c71 BM |
436 | |
437 | Note: the patch above expects IGD device is at PCI b.d.f 0.2.0 and its VGA ROM | |
438 | is at 0xfff90000 which corresponds to CONFIG_VGA_BIOS_ADDR on Minnowboard MAX. | |
439 | Change these two accordingly if this is not the case on your board. | |
7bea5271 | 440 | |
00bdd952 SG |
441 | Development Flow |
442 | ---------------- | |
00bdd952 SG |
443 | These notes are for those who want to port U-Boot to a new x86 platform. |
444 | ||
445 | Since x86 CPUs boot from SPI flash, a SPI flash emulator is a good investment. | |
a70e2ace | 446 | The Dediprog em100 can be used on Linux. |
00bdd952 | 447 | |
a70e2ace | 448 | The em100 tool is available here: http://review.coreboot.org/p/em100.git |
00bdd952 | 449 | |
a70e2ace | 450 | On Minnowboard Max the following command line can be used:: |
00bdd952 SG |
451 | |
452 | sudo em100 -s -p LOW -d u-boot.rom -c W25Q64DW -r | |
453 | ||
454 | A suitable clip for connecting over the SPI flash chip is here: | |
a70e2ace | 455 | http://www.dediprog.com/pd/programmer-accessories/EM-TC-8. |
00bdd952 SG |
456 | |
457 | This allows you to override the SPI flash contents for development purposes. | |
458 | Typically you can write to the em100 in around 1200ms, considerably faster | |
459 | than programming the real flash device each time. The only important | |
460 | limitation of the em100 is that it only supports SPI bus speeds up to 20MHz. | |
461 | This means that images must be set to boot with that speed. This is an | |
462 | Intel-specific feature - e.g. tools/ifttool has an option to set the SPI | |
463 | speed in the SPI descriptor region. | |
464 | ||
465 | If your chip/board uses an Intel Firmware Support Package (FSP) it is fairly | |
466 | easy to fit it in. You can follow the Minnowboard Max implementation, for | |
467 | example. Hopefully you will just need to create new files similar to those | |
468 | in arch/x86/cpu/baytrail which provide Bay Trail support. | |
469 | ||
470 | If you are not using an FSP you have more freedom and more responsibility. | |
471 | The ivybridge support works this way, although it still uses a ROM for | |
472 | graphics and still has binary blobs containing Intel code. You should aim to | |
473 | support all important peripherals on your platform including video and storage. | |
474 | Use the device tree for configuration where possible. | |
475 | ||
476 | For the microcode you can create a suitable device tree file using the | |
a70e2ace | 477 | microcode tool:: |
00bdd952 | 478 | |
a70e2ace | 479 | ./tools/microcode-tool -d microcode.dat -m <model> create |
00bdd952 | 480 | |
a70e2ace | 481 | or if you only have header files and not the full Intel microcode.dat database:: |
00bdd952 | 482 | |
a70e2ace BM |
483 | ./tools/microcode-tool -H BAY_TRAIL_FSP_KIT/Microcode/M0130673322.h \ |
484 | -H BAY_TRAIL_FSP_KIT/Microcode/M0130679901.h -m all create | |
00bdd952 SG |
485 | |
486 | These are written to arch/x86/dts/microcode/ by default. | |
487 | ||
488 | Note that it is possible to just add the micrcode for your CPU if you know its | |
a70e2ace | 489 | model. U-Boot prints this information when it starts:: |
00bdd952 SG |
490 | |
491 | CPU: x86_64, vendor Intel, device 30673h | |
492 | ||
493 | so here we can use the M0130673322 file. | |
494 | ||
495 | If you platform can display POST codes on two little 7-segment displays on | |
496 | the board, then you can use post_code() calls from C or assembler to monitor | |
497 | boot progress. This can be good for debugging. | |
498 | ||
499 | If not, you can try to get serial working as early as possible. The early | |
d521197d | 500 | debug serial port may be useful here. See setup_internal_uart() for an example. |
00bdd952 | 501 | |
12c7510f BM |
502 | During the U-Boot porting, one of the important steps is to write correct PIRQ |
503 | routing information in the board device tree. Without it, device drivers in the | |
504 | Linux kernel won't function correctly due to interrupt is not working. Please | |
a70e2ace BM |
505 | refer to U-Boot `doc <doc/device-tree-bindings/misc/intel,irq-router.txt>`_ for |
506 | the device tree bindings of Intel interrupt router. Here we have more details | |
507 | on the intel,pirq-routing property below. | |
508 | ||
509 | .. code-block:: none | |
12c7510f BM |
510 | |
511 | intel,pirq-routing = < | |
512 | PCI_BDF(0, 2, 0) INTA PIRQA | |
513 | ... | |
514 | >; | |
515 | ||
516 | As you see each entry has 3 cells. For the first one, we need describe all pci | |
517 | devices mounted on the board. For SoC devices, normally there is a chapter on | |
518 | the chipset datasheet which lists all the available PCI devices. For example on | |
519 | Bay Trail, this is chapter 4.3 (PCI configuration space). For the second one, we | |
520 | can get the interrupt pin either from datasheet or hardware via U-Boot shell. | |
521 | The reliable source is the hardware as sometimes chipset datasheet is not 100% | |
522 | up-to-date. Type 'pci header' plus the device's pci bus/device/function number | |
a70e2ace | 523 | from U-Boot shell below:: |
12c7510f BM |
524 | |
525 | => pci header 0.1e.1 | |
526 | vendor ID = 0x8086 | |
527 | device ID = 0x0f08 | |
528 | ... | |
529 | interrupt line = 0x09 | |
530 | interrupt pin = 0x04 | |
531 | ... | |
532 | ||
533 | It shows this PCI device is using INTD pin as it reports 4 in the interrupt pin | |
534 | register. Repeat this until you get interrupt pins for all the devices. The last | |
535 | cell is the PIRQ line which a particular interrupt pin is mapped to. On Intel | |
536 | chipset, the power-up default mapping is INTA/B/C/D maps to PIRQA/B/C/D. This | |
537 | can be changed by registers in LPC bridge. So far Intel FSP does not touch those | |
538 | registers so we can write down the PIRQ according to the default mapping rule. | |
539 | ||
540 | Once we get the PIRQ routing information in the device tree, the interrupt | |
541 | allocation and assignment will be done by U-Boot automatically. Now you can | |
542 | enable CONFIG_GENERATE_PIRQ_TABLE for testing Linux kernel using i8259 PIC and | |
543 | CONFIG_GENERATE_MP_TABLE for testing Linux kernel using local APIC and I/O APIC. | |
544 | ||
590870e7 SG |
545 | This script might be useful. If you feed it the output of 'pci long' from |
546 | U-Boot then it will generate a device tree fragment with the interrupt | |
a70e2ace | 547 | configuration for each device (note it needs gawk 4.0.0):: |
590870e7 SG |
548 | |
549 | $ cat console_output |awk '/PCI/ {device=$4} /interrupt line/ {line=$4} \ | |
550 | /interrupt pin/ {pin = $4; if (pin != "0x00" && pin != "0xff") \ | |
551 | {patsplit(device, bdf, "[0-9a-f]+"); \ | |
552 | printf "PCI_BDF(%d, %d, %d) INT%c PIRQ%c\n", strtonum("0x" bdf[1]), \ | |
553 | strtonum("0x" bdf[2]), bdf[3], strtonum(pin) + 64, 64 + strtonum(pin)}}' | |
554 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
555 | Example output:: |
556 | ||
590870e7 SG |
557 | PCI_BDF(0, 2, 0) INTA PIRQA |
558 | PCI_BDF(0, 3, 0) INTA PIRQA | |
a70e2ace | 559 | ... |
590870e7 | 560 | |
448719c5 BM |
561 | Porting Hints |
562 | ------------- | |
563 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
564 | Quark-specific considerations |
565 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | |
448719c5 BM |
566 | |
567 | To port U-Boot to other boards based on the Intel Quark SoC, a few things need | |
568 | to be taken care of. The first important part is the Memory Reference Code (MRC) | |
569 | parameters. Quark MRC supports memory-down configuration only. All these MRC | |
570 | parameters are supplied via the board device tree. To get started, first copy | |
571 | the MRC section of arch/x86/dts/galileo.dts to your board's device tree, then | |
572 | change these values by consulting board manuals or your hardware vendor. | |
573 | Available MRC parameter values are listed in include/dt-bindings/mrc/quark.h. | |
574 | The other tricky part is with PCIe. Quark SoC integrates two PCIe root ports, | |
575 | but by default they are held in reset after power on. In U-Boot, PCIe | |
576 | initialization is properly handled as per Quark's firmware writer guide. | |
577 | In your board support codes, you need provide two routines to aid PCIe | |
578 | initialization, which are board_assert_perst() and board_deassert_perst(). | |
579 | The two routines need implement a board-specific mechanism to assert/deassert | |
580 | PCIe PERST# pin. Care must be taken that in those routines that any APIs that | |
581 | may trigger PCI enumeration process are strictly forbidden, as any access to | |
582 | PCIe root port's configuration registers will cause system hang while it is | |
583 | held in reset. For more details, check how they are implemented by the Intel | |
584 | Galileo board support codes in board/intel/galileo/galileo.c. | |
585 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
586 | coreboot |
587 | ^^^^^^^^ | |
e28fcb22 SG |
588 | |
589 | See scripts/coreboot.sed which can assist with porting coreboot code into | |
590 | U-Boot drivers. It will not resolve all build errors, but will perform common | |
591 | transformations. Remember to add attribution to coreboot for new files added | |
592 | to U-Boot. This should go at the top of each file and list the coreboot | |
593 | filename where the code originated. | |
594 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
595 | Debugging ACPI issues with Windows |
596 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | |
efd4be4c BM |
597 | |
598 | Windows might cache system information and only detect ACPI changes if you | |
599 | modify the ACPI table versions. So tweak them liberally when debugging ACPI | |
600 | issues with Windows. | |
601 | ||
49d929bb BM |
602 | ACPI Support Status |
603 | ------------------- | |
a70e2ace | 604 | Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (`ACPI`_) aims to establish |
49d929bb BM |
605 | industry-standard interfaces enabling OS-directed configuration, power |
606 | management, and thermal management of mobile, desktop, and server platforms. | |
607 | ||
608 | Linux can boot without ACPI with "acpi=off" command line parameter, but | |
609 | with ACPI the kernel gains the capabilities to handle power management. | |
610 | For Windows, ACPI is a must-have firmware feature since Windows Vista. | |
611 | CONFIG_GENERATE_ACPI_TABLE is the config option to turn on ACPI support in | |
612 | U-Boot. This requires Intel ACPI compiler to be installed on your host to | |
613 | compile ACPI DSDT table written in ASL format to AML format. You can get | |
614 | the compiler via "apt-get install iasl" if you are on Ubuntu or download | |
a70e2ace | 615 | the source from https://www.acpica.org/downloads to compile one by yourself. |
49d929bb | 616 | |
13c9d848 BM |
617 | Current ACPI support in U-Boot is basically complete. More optional features |
618 | can be added in the future. The status as of today is: | |
49d929bb BM |
619 | |
620 | * Support generating RSDT, XSDT, FACS, FADT, MADT, MCFG tables. | |
621 | * Support one static DSDT table only, compiled by Intel ACPI compiler. | |
13c9d848 | 622 | * Support S0/S3/S4/S5, reboot and shutdown from OS. |
49d929bb | 623 | * Support booting a pre-installed Ubuntu distribution via 'zboot' command. |
206a3a42 BM |
624 | * Support installing and booting Ubuntu 14.04 (or above) from U-Boot with |
625 | the help of SeaBIOS using legacy interface (non-UEFI mode). | |
626 | * Support installing and booting Windows 8.1/10 from U-Boot with the help | |
627 | of SeaBIOS using legacy interface (non-UEFI mode). | |
49d929bb BM |
628 | * Support ACPI interrupts with SCI only. |
629 | ||
49d929bb | 630 | Features that are optional: |
a70e2ace | 631 | |
49d929bb BM |
632 | * Dynamic AML bytecodes insertion at run-time. We may need this to support |
633 | SSDT table generation and DSDT fix up. | |
634 | * SMI support. Since U-Boot is a modern bootloader, we don't want to bring | |
635 | those legacy stuff into U-Boot. ACPI spec allows a system that does not | |
636 | support SMI (a legacy-free system). | |
637 | ||
e6ddb6b0 | 638 | ACPI was initially enabled on BayTrail based boards. Testing was done by booting |
206a3a42 BM |
639 | a pre-installed Ubuntu 14.04 from a SATA drive. Installing Ubuntu 14.04 and |
640 | Windows 8.1/10 to a SATA drive and booting from there is also tested. Most | |
641 | devices seem to work correctly and the board can respond a reboot/shutdown | |
642 | command from the OS. | |
e28fcb22 | 643 | |
e6ddb6b0 BM |
644 | For other platform boards, ACPI support status can be checked by examining their |
645 | board defconfig files to see if CONFIG_GENERATE_ACPI_TABLE is set to y. | |
646 | ||
13c9d848 BM |
647 | The S3 sleeping state is a low wake latency sleeping state defined by ACPI |
648 | spec where all system context is lost except system memory. To test S3 resume | |
649 | with a Linux kernel, simply run "echo mem > /sys/power/state" and kernel will | |
650 | put the board to S3 state where the power is off. So when the power button is | |
651 | pressed again, U-Boot runs as it does in cold boot and detects the sleeping | |
652 | state via ACPI register to see if it is S3, if yes it means we are waking up. | |
653 | U-Boot is responsible for restoring the machine state as it is before sleep. | |
654 | When everything is done, U-Boot finds out the wakeup vector provided by OSes | |
655 | and jump there. To determine whether ACPI S3 resume is supported, check to | |
656 | see if CONFIG_HAVE_ACPI_RESUME is set for that specific board. | |
657 | ||
658 | Note for testing S3 resume with Windows, correct graphics driver must be | |
659 | installed for your platform, otherwise you won't find "Sleep" option in | |
660 | the "Power" submenu from the Windows start menu. | |
661 | ||
007adbc2 SG |
662 | EFI Support |
663 | ----------- | |
664 | U-Boot supports booting as a 32-bit or 64-bit EFI payload, e.g. with UEFI. | |
9efeb3f4 BM |
665 | This is enabled with CONFIG_EFI_STUB to boot from both 32-bit and 64-bit |
666 | UEFI BIOS. U-Boot can also run as an EFI application, with CONFIG_EFI_APP. | |
73149164 | 667 | The CONFIG_EFI_LOADER option, where U-Boot provides an EFI environment to |
9efeb3f4 | 668 | the kernel (i.e. replaces UEFI completely but provides the same EFI run-time |
73149164 BM |
669 | services) is supported too. For example, we can even use 'bootefi' command |
670 | to load a 'u-boot-payload.efi', see below test logs on QEMU. | |
671 | ||
a70e2ace BM |
672 | .. code-block:: none |
673 | ||
73149164 BM |
674 | => load ide 0 3000000 u-boot-payload.efi |
675 | 489787 bytes read in 138 ms (3.4 MiB/s) | |
676 | => bootefi 3000000 | |
677 | Scanning disk ide.blk#0... | |
678 | Found 2 disks | |
679 | WARNING: booting without device tree | |
680 | ## Starting EFI application at 03000000 ... | |
681 | U-Boot EFI Payload | |
682 | ||
683 | ||
684 | U-Boot 2018.07-rc2 (Jun 23 2018 - 17:12:58 +0800) | |
685 | ||
686 | CPU: x86_64, vendor AMD, device 663h | |
687 | DRAM: 2 GiB | |
688 | MMC: | |
689 | Video: 1024x768x32 | |
690 | Model: EFI x86 Payload | |
691 | Net: e1000: 52:54:00:12:34:56 | |
692 | ||
693 | Warning: e1000#0 using MAC address from ROM | |
694 | eth0: e1000#0 | |
695 | No controllers found | |
696 | Hit any key to stop autoboot: 0 | |
007adbc2 | 697 | |
d1ceeeff SG |
698 | See :doc:`../develop/uefi/u-boot_on_efi` and :doc:`../develop/uefi/uefi` for |
699 | details of EFI support in U-Boot. | |
007adbc2 | 700 | |
24915467 SG |
701 | Chain-loading |
702 | ------------- | |
703 | U-Boot can be chain-loaded from another bootloader, such as coreboot or | |
704 | Slim Bootloader. Typically this is done by building for targets 'coreboot' or | |
705 | 'slimbootloader'. | |
706 | ||
707 | For example, at present we have a 'coreboot' target but this runs very | |
708 | different code from the bare-metal targets, such as coral. There is very little | |
709 | in common between them. | |
710 | ||
711 | It is useful to be able to boot the same U-Boot on a device, with or without a | |
712 | first-stage bootloader. For example, with chromebook_coral, it is helpful for | |
713 | testing to be able to boot the same U-Boot (complete with FSP) on bare metal | |
714 | and from coreboot. It allows checking of things like CPU speed, comparing | |
715 | registers, ACPI tables and the like. | |
716 | ||
717 | To do this you can use ll_boot_init() in appropriate places to skip init that | |
718 | has already been done by the previous stage. This works by setting a | |
719 | GD_FLG_NO_LL_INIT flag when U-Boot detects that it is running from another | |
720 | bootloader. | |
721 | ||
722 | With this feature, you can build a bare-metal target and boot it from | |
723 | coreboot, for example. | |
724 | ||
725 | Note that this is a development feature only. It is not intended for use in | |
726 | production environments. Also it is not currently part of the automated tests | |
727 | so may break in the future. | |
728 | ||
f9696531 SG |
729 | SMBIOS tables |
730 | ------------- | |
731 | ||
732 | To generate SMBIOS tables in U-Boot, for use by the OS, enable the | |
733 | CONFIG_GENERATE_SMBIOS_TABLE option. The easiest way to provide the values to | |
734 | use is via the device tree. For details see | |
735 | device-tree-bindings/sysinfo/smbios.txt | |
736 | ||
5dad97ed BM |
737 | TODO List |
738 | --------- | |
5dad97ed BM |
739 | - Audio |
740 | - Chrome OS verified boot | |
5dad97ed | 741 | |
a70e2ace BM |
742 | .. _coreboot: http://www.coreboot.org |
743 | .. _QEMU: http://www.qemu.org | |
744 | .. _microcode: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcode | |
745 | .. _SFI: http://simplefirmware.org | |
746 | .. _MP: http://www.intel.com/design/archives/processors/pro/docs/242016.htm | |
747 | .. _here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table | |
748 | .. _this: http://events.linuxfoundation.org/sites/events/files/slides/chromeos_and_diy_vboot_0.pdf | |
749 | .. _that: http://events.linuxfoundation.org/sites/events/files/slides/elce-2014.pdf | |
750 | .. _SeaBIOS: http://www.seabios.org/SeaBIOS | |
751 | .. _ACPI: http://www.acpi.info |