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1 | .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ */ |
2 | .. Copyright (c) 2014 The Chromium OS Authors. | |
3 | .. sectionauthor:: Simon Glass <[email protected]> | |
4 | ||
5 | Sandbox | |
6 | ======= | |
744d9859 SG |
7 | |
8 | Native Execution of U-Boot | |
49116e6d | 9 | -------------------------- |
744d9859 SG |
10 | |
11 | The 'sandbox' architecture is designed to allow U-Boot to run under Linux on | |
12 | almost any hardware. To achieve this it builds U-Boot (so far as possible) | |
13 | as a normal C application with a main() and normal C libraries. | |
14 | ||
15 | All of U-Boot's architecture-specific code therefore cannot be built as part | |
16 | of the sandbox U-Boot. The purpose of running U-Boot under Linux is to test | |
17 | all the generic code, not specific to any one architecture. The idea is to | |
18 | create unit tests which we can run to test this upper level code. | |
19 | ||
20 | CONFIG_SANDBOX is defined when building a native board. | |
21 | ||
9b250ac4 SG |
22 | The board name is 'sandbox' but the vendor name is unset, so there is a |
23 | single board in board/sandbox. | |
744d9859 SG |
24 | |
25 | CONFIG_SANDBOX_BIG_ENDIAN should be defined when running on big-endian | |
26 | machines. | |
27 | ||
c6b89f31 MS |
28 | There are two versions of the sandbox: One using 32-bit-wide integers, and one |
29 | using 64-bit-wide integers. The 32-bit version can be build and run on either | |
30 | 32 or 64-bit hosts by either selecting or deselecting CONFIG_SANDBOX_32BIT; by | |
31 | default, the sandbox it built for a 32-bit host. The sandbox using 64-bit-wide | |
32 | integers can only be built on 64-bit hosts. | |
226b50bb | 33 | |
744d9859 SG |
34 | Note that standalone/API support is not available at present. |
35 | ||
75b3c3aa SG |
36 | |
37 | Basic Operation | |
38 | --------------- | |
39 | ||
49116e6d | 40 | To run sandbox U-Boot use something like:: |
75b3c3aa | 41 | |
6b1978f8 | 42 | make sandbox_defconfig all |
75b3c3aa SG |
43 | ./u-boot |
44 | ||
49116e6d BM |
45 | Note: If you get errors about 'sdl-config: Command not found' you may need to |
46 | install libsdl1.2-dev or similar to get SDL support. Alternatively you can | |
47 | build sandbox without SDL (i.e. no display/keyboard support) by removing | |
48 | the CONFIG_SANDBOX_SDL line in include/configs/sandbox.h or using:: | |
75b3c3aa | 49 | |
49116e6d BM |
50 | make sandbox_defconfig all NO_SDL=1 |
51 | ./u-boot | |
75b3c3aa | 52 | |
75b3c3aa | 53 | U-Boot will start on your computer, showing a sandbox emulation of the serial |
49116e6d | 54 | console:: |
75b3c3aa | 55 | |
49116e6d | 56 | U-Boot 2014.04 (Mar 20 2014 - 19:06:00) |
75b3c3aa | 57 | |
49116e6d BM |
58 | DRAM: 128 MiB |
59 | Using default environment | |
75b3c3aa | 60 | |
49116e6d BM |
61 | In: serial |
62 | Out: lcd | |
63 | Err: lcd | |
64 | => | |
75b3c3aa SG |
65 | |
66 | You can issue commands as your would normally. If the command you want is | |
67 | not supported you can add it to include/configs/sandbox.h. | |
68 | ||
69 | To exit, type 'reset' or press Ctrl-C. | |
70 | ||
71 | ||
72 | Console / LCD support | |
73 | --------------------- | |
74 | ||
75 | Assuming that CONFIG_SANDBOX_SDL is defined when building, you can run the | |
49116e6d | 76 | sandbox with LCD and keyboard emulation, using something like:: |
75b3c3aa SG |
77 | |
78 | ./u-boot -d u-boot.dtb -l | |
79 | ||
80 | This will start U-Boot with a window showing the contents of the LCD. If | |
81 | that window has the focus then you will be able to type commands as you | |
82 | would on the console. You can adjust the display settings in the device | |
83 | tree file - see arch/sandbox/dts/sandbox.dts. | |
84 | ||
85 | ||
86 | Command-line Options | |
87 | -------------------- | |
88 | ||
89 | Various options are available, mostly for test purposes. Use -h to see | |
90 | available options. Some of these are described below. | |
91 | ||
92 | The terminal is normally in what is called 'raw-with-sigs' mode. This means | |
93 | that you can use arrow keys for command editing and history, but if you | |
94 | press Ctrl-C, U-Boot will exit instead of handling this as a keypress. | |
95 | ||
96 | Other options are 'raw' (so Ctrl-C is handled within U-Boot) and 'cooked' | |
97 | (where the terminal is in cooked mode and cursor keys will not work, Ctrl-C | |
98 | will exit). | |
99 | ||
100 | As mentioned above, -l causes the LCD emulation window to be shown. | |
101 | ||
102 | A device tree binary file can be provided with -d. If you edit the source | |
103 | (it is stored at arch/sandbox/dts/sandbox.dts) you must rebuild U-Boot to | |
104 | recreate the binary file. | |
105 | ||
189882c9 SG |
106 | To use the default device tree, use -D. To use the test device tree, use -T. |
107 | ||
75b3c3aa SG |
108 | To execute commands directly, use the -c option. You can specify a single |
109 | command, or multiple commands separated by a semicolon, as is normal in | |
1f154a63 TW |
110 | U-Boot. Be careful with quoting as the shell will normally process and |
111 | swallow quotes. When -c is used, U-Boot exits after the command is complete, | |
75b3c3aa SG |
112 | but you can force it to go to interactive mode instead with -i. |
113 | ||
114 | ||
115 | Memory Emulation | |
116 | ---------------- | |
117 | ||
118 | Memory emulation is supported, with the size set by CONFIG_SYS_SDRAM_SIZE. | |
119 | The -m option can be used to read memory from a file on start-up and write | |
120 | it when shutting down. This allows preserving of memory contents across | |
121 | test runs. You can tell U-Boot to remove the memory file after it is read | |
122 | (on start-up) with the --rm_memory option. | |
123 | ||
124 | To access U-Boot's emulated memory within the code, use map_sysmem(). This | |
125 | function is used throughout U-Boot to ensure that emulated memory is used | |
126 | rather than the U-Boot application memory. This provides memory starting | |
127 | at 0 and extending to the size of the emulation. | |
128 | ||
129 | ||
130 | Storing State | |
131 | ------------- | |
132 | ||
133 | With sandbox you can write drivers which emulate the operation of drivers on | |
134 | real devices. Some of these drivers may want to record state which is | |
135 | preserved across U-Boot runs. This is particularly useful for testing. For | |
136 | example, the contents of a SPI flash chip should not disappear just because | |
137 | U-Boot exits. | |
138 | ||
139 | State is stored in a device tree file in a simple format which is driver- | |
140 | specific. You then use the -s option to specify the state file. Use -r to | |
141 | make U-Boot read the state on start-up (otherwise it starts empty) and -w | |
142 | to write it on exit (otherwise the stored state is left unchanged and any | |
143 | changes U-Boot made will be lost). You can also use -n to tell U-Boot to | |
144 | ignore any problems with missing state. This is useful when first running | |
145 | since the state file will be empty. | |
146 | ||
147 | The device tree file has one node for each driver - the driver can store | |
148 | whatever properties it likes in there. See 'Writing Sandbox Drivers' below | |
149 | for more details on how to get drivers to read and write their state. | |
150 | ||
151 | ||
152 | Running and Booting | |
153 | ------------------- | |
154 | ||
155 | Since there is no machine architecture, sandbox U-Boot cannot actually boot | |
156 | a kernel, but it does support the bootm command. Filesystems, memory | |
157 | commands, hashing, FIT images, verified boot and many other features are | |
158 | supported. | |
159 | ||
160 | When 'bootm' runs a kernel, sandbox will exit, as U-Boot does on a real | |
161 | machine. Of course in this case, no kernel is run. | |
162 | ||
163 | It is also possible to tell U-Boot that it has jumped from a temporary | |
164 | previous U-Boot binary, with the -j option. That binary is automatically | |
165 | removed by the U-Boot that gets the -j option. This allows you to write | |
166 | tests which emulate the action of chain-loading U-Boot, typically used in | |
167 | a situation where a second 'updatable' U-Boot is stored on your board. It | |
168 | is very risky to overwrite or upgrade the only U-Boot on a board, since a | |
169 | power or other failure will brick the board and require return to the | |
170 | manufacturer in the case of a consumer device. | |
171 | ||
172 | ||
173 | Supported Drivers | |
174 | ----------------- | |
175 | ||
176 | U-Boot sandbox supports these emulations: | |
177 | ||
178 | - Block devices | |
179 | - Chrome OS EC | |
180 | - GPIO | |
181 | - Host filesystem (access files on the host from within U-Boot) | |
3ea143ab | 182 | - I2C |
75b3c3aa SG |
183 | - Keyboard (Chrome OS) |
184 | - LCD | |
3ea143ab | 185 | - Network |
75b3c3aa SG |
186 | - Serial (for console only) |
187 | - Sound (incomplete - see sandbox_sdl_sound_init() for details) | |
188 | - SPI | |
189 | - SPI flash | |
190 | - TPM (Trusted Platform Module) | |
191 | ||
1f154a63 | 192 | A wide range of commands are implemented. Filesystems which use a block |
75b3c3aa SG |
193 | device are supported. |
194 | ||
89b199c3 | 195 | Also sandbox supports driver model (CONFIG_DM) and associated commands. |
744d9859 SG |
196 | |
197 | ||
969c8f4d SG |
198 | Sandbox Variants |
199 | ---------------- | |
200 | ||
201 | There are unfortunately quite a few variants at present: | |
202 | ||
49116e6d BM |
203 | sandbox: |
204 | should be used for most tests | |
205 | sandbox64: | |
206 | special build that forces a 64-bit host | |
207 | sandbox_flattree: | |
208 | builds with dev_read\_...() functions defined as inline. | |
209 | We need this build so that we can test those inline functions, and we | |
210 | cannot build with both the inline functions and the non-inline functions | |
211 | since they are named the same. | |
49116e6d BM |
212 | sandbox_spl: |
213 | builds sandbox with SPL support, so you can run spl/u-boot-spl | |
214 | and it will start up and then load ./u-boot. It is also possible to | |
215 | run ./u-boot directly. | |
969c8f4d | 216 | |
ee8da596 | 217 | Of these sandbox_spl can probably be removed since it is a superset of sandbox. |
969c8f4d SG |
218 | |
219 | Most of the config options should be identical between these variants. | |
220 | ||
221 | ||
a346ca79 JH |
222 | Linux RAW Networking Bridge |
223 | --------------------------- | |
224 | ||
225 | The sandbox_eth_raw driver bridges traffic between the bottom of the network | |
226 | stack and the RAW sockets API in Linux. This allows much of the U-Boot network | |
227 | functionality to be tested in sandbox against real network traffic. | |
228 | ||
229 | For Ethernet network adapters, the bridge utilizes the RAW AF_PACKET API. This | |
230 | is needed to get access to the lowest level of the network stack in Linux. This | |
231 | means that all of the Ethernet frame is included. This allows the U-Boot network | |
232 | stack to be fully used. In other words, nothing about the Linux network stack is | |
233 | involved in forming the packets that end up on the wire. To receive the | |
234 | responses to packets sent from U-Boot the network interface has to be set to | |
235 | promiscuous mode so that the network card won't filter out packets not destined | |
236 | for its configured (on Linux) MAC address. | |
237 | ||
238 | The RAW sockets Ethernet API requires elevated privileges in Linux. You can | |
49116e6d | 239 | either run as root, or you can add the capability needed like so:: |
a346ca79 | 240 | |
49116e6d | 241 | sudo /sbin/setcap "CAP_NET_RAW+ep" /path/to/u-boot |
a346ca79 JH |
242 | |
243 | The default device tree for sandbox includes an entry for eth0 on the sandbox | |
244 | host machine whose alias is "eth1". The following are a few examples of network | |
245 | operations being tested on the eth0 interface. | |
246 | ||
49116e6d BM |
247 | .. code-block:: none |
248 | ||
249 | sudo /path/to/u-boot -D | |
a346ca79 | 250 | |
49116e6d BM |
251 | DHCP |
252 | .... | |
a346ca79 | 253 | |
49116e6d BM |
254 | setenv autoload no |
255 | setenv ethrotate no | |
256 | setenv ethact eth1 | |
257 | dhcp | |
a346ca79 | 258 | |
49116e6d BM |
259 | PING |
260 | .... | |
a346ca79 | 261 | |
49116e6d BM |
262 | setenv autoload no |
263 | setenv ethrotate no | |
264 | setenv ethact eth1 | |
265 | dhcp | |
266 | ping $gatewayip | |
a346ca79 | 267 | |
49116e6d BM |
268 | TFTP |
269 | .... | |
a346ca79 | 270 | |
49116e6d BM |
271 | setenv autoload no |
272 | setenv ethrotate no | |
273 | setenv ethact eth1 | |
274 | dhcp | |
275 | setenv serverip WWW.XXX.YYY.ZZZ | |
276 | tftpboot u-boot.bin | |
a346ca79 | 277 | |
1f154a63 | 278 | The bridge also supports (to a lesser extent) the localhost interface, 'lo'. |
22f68524 JH |
279 | |
280 | The 'lo' interface cannot use the RAW AF_PACKET API because the lo interface | |
281 | doesn't support Ethernet-level traffic. It is a higher-level interface that is | |
282 | expected only to be used at the AF_INET level of the API. As such, the most raw | |
283 | we can get on that interface is the RAW AF_INET API on UDP. This allows us to | |
284 | set the IP_HDRINCL option to include everything except the Ethernet header in | |
285 | the packets we send and receive. | |
286 | ||
287 | Because only UDP is supported, ICMP traffic will not work, so expect that ping | |
288 | commands will time out. | |
289 | ||
290 | The default device tree for sandbox includes an entry for lo on the sandbox | |
291 | host machine whose alias is "eth5". The following is an example of a network | |
292 | operation being tested on the lo interface. | |
293 | ||
49116e6d | 294 | .. code-block:: none |
22f68524 | 295 | |
49116e6d BM |
296 | TFTP |
297 | .... | |
298 | ||
299 | setenv ethrotate no | |
300 | setenv ethact eth5 | |
301 | tftpboot u-boot.bin | |
22f68524 | 302 | |
a346ca79 | 303 | |
ffdb20be MF |
304 | SPI Emulation |
305 | ------------- | |
306 | ||
307 | Sandbox supports SPI and SPI flash emulation. | |
308 | ||
49116e6d | 309 | This is controlled by the spi_sf argument, the format of which is:: |
ffdb20be MF |
310 | |
311 | bus:cs:device:file | |
312 | ||
313 | bus - SPI bus number | |
314 | cs - SPI chip select number | |
315 | device - SPI device emulation name | |
316 | file - File on disk containing the data | |
317 | ||
49116e6d | 318 | For example:: |
ffdb20be | 319 | |
49116e6d BM |
320 | dd if=/dev/zero of=spi.bin bs=1M count=4 |
321 | ./u-boot --spi_sf 0:0:M25P16:spi.bin | |
ffdb20be | 322 | |
49116e6d | 323 | With this setup you can issue SPI flash commands as normal:: |
ffdb20be | 324 | |
49116e6d BM |
325 | =>sf probe |
326 | SF: Detected M25P16 with page size 64 KiB, total 2 MiB | |
327 | =>sf read 0 0 10000 | |
328 | SF: 65536 bytes @ 0x0 Read: OK | |
ffdb20be MF |
329 | |
330 | Since this is a full SPI emulation (rather than just flash), you can | |
49116e6d | 331 | also use low-level SPI commands:: |
ffdb20be | 332 | |
49116e6d BM |
333 | =>sspi 0:0 32 9f |
334 | FF202015 | |
ffdb20be MF |
335 | |
336 | This is issuing a READ_ID command and getting back 20 (ST Micro) part | |
337 | 0x2015 (the M25P16). | |
338 | ||
339 | Drivers are connected to a particular bus/cs using sandbox's state | |
340 | structure (see the 'spi' member). A set of operations must be provided | |
341 | for each driver. | |
342 | ||
343 | ||
344 | Configuration settings for the curious are: | |
345 | ||
49116e6d BM |
346 | CONFIG_SANDBOX_SPI_MAX_BUS: |
347 | The maximum number of SPI buses supported by the driver (default 1). | |
ffdb20be | 348 | |
49116e6d BM |
349 | CONFIG_SANDBOX_SPI_MAX_CS: |
350 | The maximum number of chip selects supported by the driver (default 10). | |
ffdb20be | 351 | |
49116e6d BM |
352 | CONFIG_SPI_IDLE_VAL: |
353 | The idle value on the SPI bus | |
ffdb20be MF |
354 | |
355 | ||
2945eb73 SB |
356 | Block Device Emulation |
357 | ---------------------- | |
358 | ||
359 | U-Boot can use raw disk images for block device emulation. To e.g. list | |
360 | the contents of the root directory on the second partion of the image | |
49116e6d | 361 | "disk.raw", you can use the following commands:: |
2945eb73 | 362 | |
49116e6d BM |
363 | =>host bind 0 ./disk.raw |
364 | =>ls host 0:2 | |
2945eb73 | 365 | |
49116e6d | 366 | A disk image can be created using the following commands:: |
2945eb73 | 367 | |
49116e6d BM |
368 | $> truncate -s 1200M ./disk.raw |
369 | $> echo -e "label: gpt\n,64M,U\n,,L" | /usr/sbin/sgdisk ./disk.raw | |
370 | $> lodev=`sudo losetup -P -f --show ./disk.raw` | |
371 | $> sudo mkfs.vfat -n EFI -v ${lodev}p1 | |
372 | $> sudo mkfs.ext4 -L ROOT -v ${lodev}p2 | |
2945eb73 | 373 | |
49116e6d | 374 | or utilize the device described in test/py/make_test_disk.py:: |
bf6d76b8 AC |
375 | |
376 | #!/usr/bin/python | |
377 | import make_test_disk | |
378 | make_test_disk.makeDisk() | |
2945eb73 | 379 | |
75b3c3aa SG |
380 | Writing Sandbox Drivers |
381 | ----------------------- | |
382 | ||
383 | Generally you should put your driver in a file containing the word 'sandbox' | |
384 | and put it in the same directory as other drivers of its type. You can then | |
385 | implement the same hooks as the other drivers. | |
386 | ||
387 | To access U-Boot's emulated memory, use map_sysmem() as mentioned above. | |
388 | ||
389 | If your driver needs to store configuration or state (such as SPI flash | |
390 | contents or emulated chip registers), you can use the device tree as | |
391 | described above. Define handlers for this with the SANDBOX_STATE_IO macro. | |
392 | See arch/sandbox/include/asm/state.h for documentation. In short you provide | |
393 | a node name, compatible string and functions to read and write the state. | |
394 | Since writing the state can expand the device tree, you may need to use | |
395 | state_setprop() which does this automatically and avoids running out of | |
396 | space. See existing code for examples. | |
397 | ||
398 | ||
001d1885 SG |
399 | Debugging the init sequence |
400 | --------------------------- | |
401 | ||
49116e6d | 402 | If you get a failure in the initcall sequence, like this:: |
001d1885 SG |
403 | |
404 | initcall sequence 0000560775957c80 failed at call 0000000000048134 (err=-96) | |
405 | ||
49116e6d | 406 | Then you use can use grep to see which init call failed, e.g.:: |
001d1885 SG |
407 | |
408 | $ grep 0000000000048134 u-boot.map | |
409 | stdio_add_devices | |
410 | ||
49116e6d | 411 | Of course another option is to run it with a debugger such as gdb:: |
001d1885 SG |
412 | |
413 | $ gdb u-boot | |
414 | ... | |
415 | (gdb) br initcall.h:41 | |
416 | Breakpoint 1 at 0x4db9d: initcall.h:41. (2 locations) | |
417 | ||
418 | Note that two locations are reported, since this function is used in both | |
419 | board_init_f() and board_init_r(). | |
420 | ||
49116e6d BM |
421 | .. code-block:: none |
422 | ||
001d1885 SG |
423 | (gdb) r |
424 | Starting program: /tmp/b/sandbox/u-boot | |
425 | [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled] | |
426 | Using host libthread_db library "/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libthread_db.so.1". | |
427 | ||
428 | U-Boot 2018.09-00264-ge0c2ba9814-dirty (Sep 22 2018 - 12:21:46 -0600) | |
429 | ||
430 | DRAM: 128 MiB | |
431 | MMC: | |
432 | ||
433 | Breakpoint 1, initcall_run_list (init_sequence=0x5555559619e0 <init_sequence_f>) | |
434 | at /scratch/sglass/cosarm/src/third_party/u-boot/files/include/initcall.h:41 | |
435 | 41 printf("initcall sequence %p failed at call %p (err=%d)\n", | |
436 | (gdb) print *init_fnc_ptr | |
437 | $1 = (const init_fnc_t) 0x55555559c114 <stdio_add_devices> | |
438 | (gdb) | |
439 | ||
440 | ||
441 | This approach can be used on normal boards as well as sandbox. | |
442 | ||
443 | ||
e8a7b305 SG |
444 | SDL_CONFIG |
445 | ---------- | |
446 | ||
447 | If sdl-config is on a different path from the default, set the SDL_CONFIG | |
448 | environment variable to the correct pathname before building U-Boot. | |
449 | ||
450 | ||
80b7cb8c SG |
451 | Using valgrind / memcheck |
452 | ------------------------- | |
453 | ||
49116e6d | 454 | It is possible to run U-Boot under valgrind to check memory allocations:: |
80b7cb8c SG |
455 | |
456 | valgrind u-boot | |
457 | ||
458 | If you are running sandbox SPL or TPL, then valgrind will not by default | |
459 | notice when U-Boot jumps from TPL to SPL, or from SPL to U-Boot proper. To | |
49116e6d | 460 | fix this, use:: |
80b7cb8c SG |
461 | |
462 | valgrind --trace-children=yes u-boot | |
463 | ||
464 | ||
75b3c3aa SG |
465 | Testing |
466 | ------- | |
467 | ||
468 | U-Boot sandbox can be used to run various tests, mostly in the test/ | |
469 | directory. These include: | |
470 | ||
49116e6d BM |
471 | command_ut: |
472 | Unit tests for command parsing and handling | |
473 | compression: | |
474 | Unit tests for U-Boot's compression algorithms, useful for | |
475 | security checking. It supports gzip, bzip2, lzma and lzo. | |
476 | driver model: | |
477 | Run this pytest:: | |
478 | ||
479 | ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build -k ut_dm -v | |
480 | ||
481 | image: | |
482 | Unit tests for images: | |
483 | test/image/test-imagetools.sh - multi-file images | |
484 | test/image/test-fit.py - FIT images | |
485 | tracing: | |
486 | test/trace/test-trace.sh tests the tracing system (see README.trace) | |
487 | verified boot: | |
488 | See test/vboot/vboot_test.sh for this | |
75b3c3aa SG |
489 | |
490 | If you change or enhance any of the above subsystems, you shold write or | |
491 | expand a test and include it with your patch series submission. Test | |
492 | coverage in U-Boot is limited, as we need to work to improve it. | |
493 | ||
494 | Note that many of these tests are implemented as commands which you can | |
495 | run natively on your board if desired (and enabled). | |
496 | ||
9946d557 SG |
497 | To run all tests use "make check". |
498 | ||
189882c9 SG |
499 | To run a single test in an existing sandbox build, you can use -T to use the |
500 | test device tree, and -c to select the test: | |
501 | ||
502 | /tmp/b/sandbox/u-boot -T -c "ut dm pci_busdev" | |
503 | ||
504 | This runs dm_test_pci_busdev() which is in test/dm/pci.c | |
505 | ||
9946d557 SG |
506 | |
507 | Memory Map | |
508 | ---------- | |
509 | ||
510 | Sandbox has its own emulated memory starting at 0. Here are some of the things | |
511 | that are mapped into that memory: | |
512 | ||
49116e6d BM |
513 | ======= ======================== =============================== |
514 | Addr Config Usage | |
515 | ======= ======================== =============================== | |
9946d557 SG |
516 | 0 CONFIG_SYS_FDT_LOAD_ADDR Device tree |
517 | e000 CONFIG_BLOBLIST_ADDR Blob list | |
518 | 10000 CONFIG_MALLOC_F_ADDR Early memory allocation | |
a1396cdc SG |
519 | f0000 CONFIG_PRE_CON_BUF_ADDR Pre-console buffer |
520 | 100000 CONFIG_TRACE_EARLY_ADDR Early trace buffer (if enabled) | |
49116e6d | 521 | ======= ======================== =============================== |