xref: /OK3568_Linux_fs/u-boot/doc/README.x86 (revision 4882a59341e53eb6f0b4789bf948001014eff981)
1*4882a593Smuzhiyun#
2*4882a593Smuzhiyun# Copyright (C) 2014, Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
3*4882a593Smuzhiyun# Copyright (C) 2014, Bin Meng <bmeng.cn@gmail.com>
4*4882a593Smuzhiyun#
5*4882a593Smuzhiyun# SPDX-License-Identifier:	GPL-2.0+
6*4882a593Smuzhiyun#
7*4882a593Smuzhiyun
8*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot on x86
9*4882a593Smuzhiyun=============
10*4882a593Smuzhiyun
11*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis document describes the information about U-Boot running on x86 targets,
12*4882a593Smuzhiyunincluding supported boards, build instructions, todo list, etc.
13*4882a593Smuzhiyun
14*4882a593SmuzhiyunStatus
15*4882a593Smuzhiyun------
16*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot supports running as a coreboot [1] payload on x86. So far only Link
17*4882a593Smuzhiyun(Chromebook Pixel) and QEMU [2] x86 targets have been tested, but it should
18*4882a593Smuzhiyunwork with minimal adjustments on other x86 boards since coreboot deals with
19*4882a593Smuzhiyunmost of the low-level details.
20*4882a593Smuzhiyun
21*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot is a main bootloader on Intel Edison board.
22*4882a593Smuzhiyun
23*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot also supports booting directly from x86 reset vector, without coreboot.
24*4882a593SmuzhiyunIn this case, known as bare mode, from the fact that it runs on the
25*4882a593Smuzhiyun'bare metal', U-Boot acts like a BIOS replacement. The following platforms
26*4882a593Smuzhiyunare supported:
27*4882a593Smuzhiyun
28*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Bayley Bay CRB
29*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Congatec QEVAL 2.0 & conga-QA3/E3845
30*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Cougar Canyon 2 CRB
31*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Crown Bay CRB
32*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Galileo
33*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Link (Chromebook Pixel)
34*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Minnowboard MAX
35*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Samus (Chromebook Pixel 2015)
36*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - QEMU x86
37*4882a593Smuzhiyun
38*4882a593SmuzhiyunAs for loading an OS, U-Boot supports directly booting a 32-bit or 64-bit
39*4882a593SmuzhiyunLinux kernel as part of a FIT image. It also supports a compressed zImage.
40*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot supports loading an x86 VxWorks kernel. Please check README.vxworks
41*4882a593Smuzhiyunfor more details.
42*4882a593Smuzhiyun
43*4882a593SmuzhiyunBuild Instructions for U-Boot as coreboot payload
44*4882a593Smuzhiyun-------------------------------------------------
45*4882a593SmuzhiyunBuilding U-Boot as a coreboot payload is just like building U-Boot for targets
46*4882a593Smuzhiyunon other architectures, like below:
47*4882a593Smuzhiyun
48*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make coreboot-x86_defconfig
49*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
50*4882a593Smuzhiyun
51*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote this default configuration will build a U-Boot payload for the QEMU board.
52*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo build a coreboot payload against another board, you can change the build
53*4882a593Smuzhiyunconfiguration during the 'make menuconfig' process.
54*4882a593Smuzhiyun
55*4882a593Smuzhiyunx86 architecture  --->
56*4882a593Smuzhiyun	...
57*4882a593Smuzhiyun	(qemu-x86) Board configuration file
58*4882a593Smuzhiyun	(qemu-x86_i440fx) Board Device Tree Source (dts) file
59*4882a593Smuzhiyun	(0x01920000) Board specific Cache-As-RAM (CAR) address
60*4882a593Smuzhiyun	(0x4000) Board specific Cache-As-RAM (CAR) size
61*4882a593Smuzhiyun
62*4882a593SmuzhiyunChange the 'Board configuration file' and 'Board Device Tree Source (dts) file'
63*4882a593Smuzhiyunto point to a new board. You can also change the Cache-As-RAM (CAR) related
64*4882a593Smuzhiyunsettings here if the default values do not fit your new board.
65*4882a593Smuzhiyun
66*4882a593SmuzhiyunBuild Instructions for U-Boot as main bootloader
67*4882a593Smuzhiyun------------------------------------------------
68*4882a593Smuzhiyun
69*4882a593SmuzhiyunIntel Edison instructions:
70*4882a593Smuzhiyun
71*4882a593SmuzhiyunSimple you can build U-Boot and obtain u-boot.bin
72*4882a593Smuzhiyun
73*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make edison_defconfig
74*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
75*4882a593Smuzhiyun
76*4882a593SmuzhiyunBuild Instructions for U-Boot as BIOS replacement (bare mode)
77*4882a593Smuzhiyun-------------------------------------------------------------
78*4882a593SmuzhiyunBuilding a ROM version of U-Boot (hereafter referred to as u-boot.rom) is a
79*4882a593Smuzhiyunlittle bit tricky, as generally it requires several binary blobs which are not
80*4882a593Smuzhiyunshipped in the U-Boot source tree. Due to this reason, the u-boot.rom build is
81*4882a593Smuzhiyunnot turned on by default in the U-Boot source tree. Firstly, you need turn it
82*4882a593Smuzhiyunon by enabling the ROM build:
83*4882a593Smuzhiyun
84*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ export BUILD_ROM=y
85*4882a593Smuzhiyun
86*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis tells the Makefile to build u-boot.rom as a target.
87*4882a593Smuzhiyun
88*4882a593Smuzhiyun---
89*4882a593Smuzhiyun
90*4882a593SmuzhiyunChromebook Link specific instructions for bare mode:
91*4882a593Smuzhiyun
92*4882a593SmuzhiyunFirst, you need the following binary blobs:
93*4882a593Smuzhiyun
94*4882a593Smuzhiyun* descriptor.bin - Intel flash descriptor
95*4882a593Smuzhiyun* me.bin - Intel Management Engine
96*4882a593Smuzhiyun* mrc.bin - Memory Reference Code, which sets up SDRAM
97*4882a593Smuzhiyun* video ROM - sets up the display
98*4882a593Smuzhiyun
99*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can get these binary blobs by:
100*4882a593Smuzhiyun
101*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ git clone http://review.coreboot.org/p/blobs.git
102*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ cd blobs
103*4882a593Smuzhiyun
104*4882a593SmuzhiyunFind the following files:
105*4882a593Smuzhiyun
106*4882a593Smuzhiyun* ./mainboard/google/link/descriptor.bin
107*4882a593Smuzhiyun* ./mainboard/google/link/me.bin
108*4882a593Smuzhiyun* ./northbridge/intel/sandybridge/systemagent-r6.bin
109*4882a593Smuzhiyun
110*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe 3rd one should be renamed to mrc.bin.
111*4882a593SmuzhiyunAs for the video ROM, you can get it here [3] and rename it to vga.bin.
112*4882a593SmuzhiyunMake sure all these binary blobs are put in the board directory.
113*4882a593Smuzhiyun
114*4882a593SmuzhiyunNow you can build U-Boot and obtain u-boot.rom:
115*4882a593Smuzhiyun
116*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make chromebook_link_defconfig
117*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
118*4882a593Smuzhiyun
119*4882a593Smuzhiyun---
120*4882a593Smuzhiyun
121*4882a593SmuzhiyunChromebook Samus (2015 Pixel) instructions for bare mode:
122*4882a593Smuzhiyun
123*4882a593SmuzhiyunFirst, you need the following binary blobs:
124*4882a593Smuzhiyun
125*4882a593Smuzhiyun* descriptor.bin - Intel flash descriptor
126*4882a593Smuzhiyun* me.bin - Intel Management Engine
127*4882a593Smuzhiyun* mrc.bin - Memory Reference Code, which sets up SDRAM
128*4882a593Smuzhiyun* refcode.elf - Additional Reference code
129*4882a593Smuzhiyun* vga.bin - video ROM, which sets up the display
130*4882a593Smuzhiyun
131*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf you have a samus you can obtain them from your flash, for example, in
132*4882a593Smuzhiyundeveloper mode on the Chromebook (use Ctrl-Alt-F2 to obtain a terminal and
133*4882a593Smuzhiyunlog in as 'root'):
134*4882a593Smuzhiyun
135*4882a593Smuzhiyun   cd /tmp
136*4882a593Smuzhiyun   flashrom -w samus.bin
137*4882a593Smuzhiyun   scp samus.bin username@ip_address:/path/to/somewhere
138*4882a593Smuzhiyun
139*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf not see the coreboot tree [4] where you can use:
140*4882a593Smuzhiyun
141*4882a593Smuzhiyun   bash crosfirmware.sh samus
142*4882a593Smuzhiyun
143*4882a593Smuzhiyunto get the image. There is also an 'extract_blobs.sh' scripts that you can use
144*4882a593Smuzhiyunon the 'coreboot-Google_Samus.*' file to short-circuit some of the below.
145*4882a593Smuzhiyun
146*4882a593SmuzhiyunThen 'ifdtool -x samus.bin' on your development machine will produce:
147*4882a593Smuzhiyun
148*4882a593Smuzhiyun   flashregion_0_flashdescriptor.bin
149*4882a593Smuzhiyun   flashregion_1_bios.bin
150*4882a593Smuzhiyun   flashregion_2_intel_me.bin
151*4882a593Smuzhiyun
152*4882a593SmuzhiyunRename flashregion_0_flashdescriptor.bin to descriptor.bin
153*4882a593SmuzhiyunRename flashregion_2_intel_me.bin to me.bin
154*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can ignore flashregion_1_bios.bin - it is not used.
155*4882a593Smuzhiyun
156*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo get the rest, use 'cbfstool samus.bin print':
157*4882a593Smuzhiyun
158*4882a593Smuzhiyunsamus.bin: 8192 kB, bootblocksize 2864, romsize 8388608, offset 0x700000
159*4882a593Smuzhiyunalignment: 64 bytes, architecture: x86
160*4882a593Smuzhiyun
161*4882a593SmuzhiyunName                           Offset     Type         Size
162*4882a593Smuzhiyuncmos_layout.bin                0x700000   cmos_layout  1164
163*4882a593Smuzhiyunpci8086,0406.rom               0x7004c0   optionrom    65536
164*4882a593Smuzhiyunspd.bin                        0x710500   (unknown)    4096
165*4882a593Smuzhiyuncpu_microcode_blob.bin         0x711540   microcode    70720
166*4882a593Smuzhiyunfallback/romstage              0x722a00   stage        54210
167*4882a593Smuzhiyunfallback/ramstage              0x72fe00   stage        96382
168*4882a593Smuzhiyunconfig                         0x7476c0   raw          6075
169*4882a593Smuzhiyunfallback/vboot                 0x748ec0   stage        15980
170*4882a593Smuzhiyunfallback/refcode               0x74cd80   stage        75578
171*4882a593Smuzhiyunfallback/payload               0x75f500   payload      62878
172*4882a593Smuzhiyunu-boot.dtb                     0x76eb00   (unknown)    5318
173*4882a593Smuzhiyun(empty)                        0x770000   null         196504
174*4882a593Smuzhiyunmrc.bin                        0x79ffc0   (unknown)    222876
175*4882a593Smuzhiyun(empty)                        0x7d66c0   null         167320
176*4882a593Smuzhiyun
177*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can extract what you need:
178*4882a593Smuzhiyun
179*4882a593Smuzhiyun   cbfstool samus.bin extract -n pci8086,0406.rom -f vga.bin
180*4882a593Smuzhiyun   cbfstool samus.bin extract -n fallback/refcode -f refcode.rmod
181*4882a593Smuzhiyun   cbfstool samus.bin extract -n mrc.bin -f mrc.bin
182*4882a593Smuzhiyun   cbfstool samus.bin extract -n fallback/refcode -f refcode.bin -U
183*4882a593Smuzhiyun
184*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote that the -U flag is only supported by the latest cbfstool. It unpacks
185*4882a593Smuzhiyunand decompresses the stage to produce a coreboot rmodule. This is a simple
186*4882a593Smuzhiyunrepresentation of an ELF file. You need the patch "Support decoding a stage
187*4882a593Smuzhiyunwith compression".
188*4882a593Smuzhiyun
189*4882a593SmuzhiyunPut all 5 files into board/google/chromebook_samus.
190*4882a593Smuzhiyun
191*4882a593SmuzhiyunNow you can build U-Boot and obtain u-boot.rom:
192*4882a593Smuzhiyun
193*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make chromebook_link_defconfig
194*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
195*4882a593Smuzhiyun
196*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf you are using em100, then this command will flash write -Boot:
197*4882a593Smuzhiyun
198*4882a593Smuzhiyun   em100 -s -d filename.rom -c W25Q64CV -r
199*4882a593Smuzhiyun
200*4882a593Smuzhiyun---
201*4882a593Smuzhiyun
202*4882a593SmuzhiyunIntel Crown Bay specific instructions for bare mode:
203*4882a593Smuzhiyun
204*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot support of Intel Crown Bay board [4] relies on a binary blob called
205*4882a593SmuzhiyunFirmware Support Package [5] to perform all the necessary initialization steps
206*4882a593Smuzhiyunas documented in the BIOS Writer Guide, including initialization of the CPU,
207*4882a593Smuzhiyunmemory controller, chipset and certain bus interfaces.
208*4882a593Smuzhiyun
209*4882a593SmuzhiyunDownload the Intel FSP for Atom E6xx series and Platform Controller Hub EG20T,
210*4882a593Smuzhiyuninstall it on your host and locate the FSP binary blob. Note this platform
211*4882a593Smuzhiyunalso requires a Chipset Micro Code (CMC) state machine binary to be present in
212*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe SPI flash where u-boot.rom resides, and this CMC binary blob can be found
213*4882a593Smuzhiyunin this FSP package too.
214*4882a593Smuzhiyun
215*4882a593Smuzhiyun* ./FSP/QUEENSBAY_FSP_GOLD_001_20-DECEMBER-2013.fd
216*4882a593Smuzhiyun* ./Microcode/C0_22211.BIN
217*4882a593Smuzhiyun
218*4882a593SmuzhiyunRename the first one to fsp.bin and second one to cmc.bin and put them in the
219*4882a593Smuzhiyunboard directory.
220*4882a593Smuzhiyun
221*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote the FSP release version 001 has a bug which could cause random endless
222*4882a593Smuzhiyunloop during the FspInit call. This bug was published by Intel although Intel
223*4882a593Smuzhiyundid not describe any details. We need manually apply the patch to the FSP
224*4882a593Smuzhiyunbinary using any hex editor (eg: bvi). Go to the offset 0x1fcd8 of the FSP
225*4882a593Smuzhiyunbinary, change the following five bytes values from orginally E8 42 FF FF FF
226*4882a593Smuzhiyunto B8 00 80 0B 00.
227*4882a593Smuzhiyun
228*4882a593SmuzhiyunAs for the video ROM, you need manually extract it from the Intel provided
229*4882a593SmuzhiyunBIOS for Crown Bay here [6], using the AMI MMTool [7]. Check PCI option ROM
230*4882a593SmuzhiyunID 8086:4108, extract and save it as vga.bin in the board directory.
231*4882a593Smuzhiyun
232*4882a593SmuzhiyunNow you can build U-Boot and obtain u-boot.rom
233*4882a593Smuzhiyun
234*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make crownbay_defconfig
235*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
236*4882a593Smuzhiyun
237*4882a593Smuzhiyun---
238*4882a593Smuzhiyun
239*4882a593SmuzhiyunIntel Cougar Canyon 2 specific instructions for bare mode:
240*4882a593Smuzhiyun
241*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis uses Intel FSP for 3rd generation Intel Core and Intel Celeron processors
242*4882a593Smuzhiyunwith mobile Intel HM76 and QM77 chipsets platform. Download it from Intel FSP
243*4882a593Smuzhiyunwebsite and put the .fd file (CHIEFRIVER_FSP_GOLD_001_09-OCTOBER-2013.fd at the
244*4882a593Smuzhiyuntime of writing) in the board directory and rename it to fsp.bin.
245*4882a593Smuzhiyun
246*4882a593SmuzhiyunNow build U-Boot and obtain u-boot.rom
247*4882a593Smuzhiyun
248*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make cougarcanyon2_defconfig
249*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
250*4882a593Smuzhiyun
251*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe board has two 8MB SPI flashes mounted, which are called SPI-0 and SPI-1 in
252*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe board manual. The SPI-0 flash should have flash descriptor plus ME firmware
253*4882a593Smuzhiyunand SPI-1 flash is used to store U-Boot. For convenience, the complete 8MB SPI-0
254*4882a593Smuzhiyunflash image is included in the FSP package (named Rom00_8M_MB_PPT.bin). Program
255*4882a593Smuzhiyunthis image to the SPI-0 flash according to the board manual just once and we are
256*4882a593Smuzhiyunall set. For programming U-Boot we just need to program SPI-1 flash.
257*4882a593Smuzhiyun
258*4882a593Smuzhiyun---
259*4882a593Smuzhiyun
260*4882a593SmuzhiyunIntel Bay Trail based board instructions for bare mode:
261*4882a593Smuzhiyun
262*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis uses as FSP as with Crown Bay, except it is for the Atom E3800 series.
263*4882a593SmuzhiyunTwo boards that use this configuration are Bayley Bay and Minnowboard MAX.
264*4882a593SmuzhiyunDownload this and get the .fd file (BAYTRAIL_FSP_GOLD_003_16-SEP-2014.fd at
265*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe time of writing). Put it in the corresponding board directory and rename
266*4882a593Smuzhiyunit to fsp.bin.
267*4882a593Smuzhiyun
268*4882a593SmuzhiyunObtain the VGA RAM (Vga.dat at the time of writing) and put it into the same
269*4882a593Smuzhiyunboard directory as vga.bin.
270*4882a593Smuzhiyun
271*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou still need two more binary blobs. For Bayley Bay, they can be extracted
272*4882a593Smuzhiyunfrom the sample SPI image provided in the FSP (SPI.bin at the time of writing).
273*4882a593Smuzhiyun
274*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ ./tools/ifdtool -x BayleyBay/SPI.bin
275*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ cp flashregion_0_flashdescriptor.bin board/intel/bayleybay/descriptor.bin
276*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ cp flashregion_2_intel_me.bin board/intel/bayleybay/me.bin
277*4882a593Smuzhiyun
278*4882a593SmuzhiyunFor Minnowboard MAX, we can reuse the same ME firmware above, but for flash
279*4882a593Smuzhiyundescriptor, we need get that somewhere else, as the one above does not seem to
280*4882a593Smuzhiyunwork, probably because it is not designed for the Minnowboard MAX. Now download
281*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe original firmware image for this board from:
282*4882a593Smuzhiyun
283*4882a593Smuzhiyunhttp://firmware.intel.com/sites/default/files/2014-WW42.4-MinnowBoardMax.73-64-bit.bin_Release.zip
284*4882a593Smuzhiyun
285*4882a593SmuzhiyunUnzip it:
286*4882a593Smuzhiyun
287*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ unzip 2014-WW42.4-MinnowBoardMax.73-64-bit.bin_Release.zip
288*4882a593Smuzhiyun
289*4882a593SmuzhiyunUse ifdtool in the U-Boot tools directory to extract the images from that
290*4882a593Smuzhiyunfile, for example:
291*4882a593Smuzhiyun
292*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ ./tools/ifdtool -x MNW2MAX1.X64.0073.R02.1409160934.bin
293*4882a593Smuzhiyun
294*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis will provide the descriptor file - copy this into the correct place:
295*4882a593Smuzhiyun
296*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ cp flashregion_0_flashdescriptor.bin board/intel/minnowmax/descriptor.bin
297*4882a593Smuzhiyun
298*4882a593SmuzhiyunNow you can build U-Boot and obtain u-boot.rom
299*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote: below are examples/information for Minnowboard MAX.
300*4882a593Smuzhiyun
301*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make minnowmax_defconfig
302*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
303*4882a593Smuzhiyun
304*4882a593SmuzhiyunChecksums are as follows (but note that newer versions will invalidate this):
305*4882a593Smuzhiyun
306*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ md5sum -b board/intel/minnowmax/*.bin
307*4882a593Smuzhiyunffda9a3b94df5b74323afb328d51e6b4  board/intel/minnowmax/descriptor.bin
308*4882a593Smuzhiyun69f65b9a580246291d20d08cbef9d7c5  board/intel/minnowmax/fsp.bin
309*4882a593Smuzhiyun894a97d371544ec21de9c3e8e1716c4b  board/intel/minnowmax/me.bin
310*4882a593Smuzhiyuna2588537da387da592a27219d56e9962  board/intel/minnowmax/vga.bin
311*4882a593Smuzhiyun
312*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe ROM image is broken up into these parts:
313*4882a593Smuzhiyun
314*4882a593SmuzhiyunOffset   Description         Controlling config
315*4882a593Smuzhiyun------------------------------------------------------------
316*4882a593Smuzhiyun000000   descriptor.bin      Hard-coded to 0 in ifdtool
317*4882a593Smuzhiyun001000   me.bin              Set by the descriptor
318*4882a593Smuzhiyun500000   <spare>
319*4882a593Smuzhiyun6ef000   Environment         CONFIG_ENV_OFFSET
320*4882a593Smuzhiyun6f0000   MRC cache           CONFIG_ENABLE_MRC_CACHE
321*4882a593Smuzhiyun700000   u-boot-dtb.bin      CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE
322*4882a593Smuzhiyun790000   vga.bin             CONFIG_VGA_BIOS_ADDR
323*4882a593Smuzhiyun7c0000   fsp.bin             CONFIG_FSP_ADDR
324*4882a593Smuzhiyun7f8000   <spare>             (depends on size of fsp.bin)
325*4882a593Smuzhiyun7ff800   U-Boot 16-bit boot  CONFIG_SYS_X86_START16
326*4882a593Smuzhiyun
327*4882a593SmuzhiyunOverall ROM image size is controlled by CONFIG_ROM_SIZE.
328*4882a593Smuzhiyun
329*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote that the debug version of the FSP is bigger in size. If this version
330*4882a593Smuzhiyunis used, CONFIG_FSP_ADDR needs to be configured to 0xfffb0000 instead of
331*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe default value 0xfffc0000.
332*4882a593Smuzhiyun
333*4882a593Smuzhiyun---
334*4882a593Smuzhiyun
335*4882a593SmuzhiyunIntel Galileo instructions for bare mode:
336*4882a593Smuzhiyun
337*4882a593SmuzhiyunOnly one binary blob is needed for Remote Management Unit (RMU) within Intel
338*4882a593SmuzhiyunQuark SoC. Not like FSP, U-Boot does not call into the binary. The binary is
339*4882a593Smuzhiyunneeded by the Quark SoC itself.
340*4882a593Smuzhiyun
341*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can get the binary blob from Quark Board Support Package from Intel website:
342*4882a593Smuzhiyun
343*4882a593Smuzhiyun* ./QuarkSocPkg/QuarkNorthCluster/Binary/QuarkMicrocode/RMU.bin
344*4882a593Smuzhiyun
345*4882a593SmuzhiyunRename the file and put it to the board directory by:
346*4882a593Smuzhiyun
347*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ cp RMU.bin board/intel/galileo/rmu.bin
348*4882a593Smuzhiyun
349*4882a593SmuzhiyunNow you can build U-Boot and obtain u-boot.rom
350*4882a593Smuzhiyun
351*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make galileo_defconfig
352*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
353*4882a593Smuzhiyun
354*4882a593Smuzhiyun---
355*4882a593Smuzhiyun
356*4882a593SmuzhiyunQEMU x86 target instructions for bare mode:
357*4882a593Smuzhiyun
358*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo build u-boot.rom for QEMU x86 targets, just simply run
359*4882a593Smuzhiyun
360*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make qemu-x86_defconfig
361*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ make all
362*4882a593Smuzhiyun
363*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote this default configuration will build a U-Boot for the QEMU x86 i440FX
364*4882a593Smuzhiyunboard. To build a U-Boot against QEMU x86 Q35 board, you can change the build
365*4882a593Smuzhiyunconfiguration during the 'make menuconfig' process like below:
366*4882a593Smuzhiyun
367*4882a593SmuzhiyunDevice Tree Control  --->
368*4882a593Smuzhiyun	...
369*4882a593Smuzhiyun	(qemu-x86_q35) Default Device Tree for DT control
370*4882a593Smuzhiyun
371*4882a593SmuzhiyunTest with coreboot
372*4882a593Smuzhiyun------------------
373*4882a593SmuzhiyunFor testing U-Boot as the coreboot payload, there are things that need be paid
374*4882a593Smuzhiyunattention to. coreboot supports loading an ELF executable and a 32-bit plain
375*4882a593Smuzhiyunbinary, as well as other supported payloads. With the default configuration,
376*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot is set up to use a separate Device Tree Blob (dtb). As of today, the
377*4882a593Smuzhiyungenerated u-boot-dtb.bin needs to be packaged by the cbfstool utility (a tool
378*4882a593Smuzhiyunprovided by coreboot) manually as coreboot's 'make menuconfig' does not provide
379*4882a593Smuzhiyunthis capability yet. The command is as follows:
380*4882a593Smuzhiyun
381*4882a593Smuzhiyun# in the coreboot root directory
382*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ ./build/util/cbfstool/cbfstool build/coreboot.rom add-flat-binary \
383*4882a593Smuzhiyun  -f u-boot-dtb.bin -n fallback/payload -c lzma -l 0x1110000 -e 0x1110000
384*4882a593Smuzhiyun
385*4882a593SmuzhiyunMake sure 0x1110000 matches CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE, which is the symbol address
386*4882a593Smuzhiyunof _x86boot_start (in arch/x86/cpu/start.S).
387*4882a593Smuzhiyun
388*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf you want to use ELF as the coreboot payload, change U-Boot configuration to
389*4882a593Smuzhiyunuse CONFIG_OF_EMBED instead of CONFIG_OF_SEPARATE.
390*4882a593Smuzhiyun
391*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo enable video you must enable these options in coreboot:
392*4882a593Smuzhiyun
393*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Set framebuffer graphics resolution (1280x1024 32k-color (1:5:5))
394*4882a593Smuzhiyun   - Keep VESA framebuffer
395*4882a593Smuzhiyun
396*4882a593SmuzhiyunAnd include coreboot_fb.dtsi in your board's device tree source file, like:
397*4882a593Smuzhiyun
398*4882a593Smuzhiyun   /include/ "coreboot_fb.dtsi"
399*4882a593Smuzhiyun
400*4882a593SmuzhiyunAt present it seems that for Minnowboard Max, coreboot does not pass through
401*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe video information correctly (it always says the resolution is 0x0). This
402*4882a593Smuzhiyunworks correctly for link though.
403*4882a593Smuzhiyun
404*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote: coreboot framebuffer driver does not work on QEMU. The reason is unknown
405*4882a593Smuzhiyunat this point. Patches are welcome if you figure out anything wrong.
406*4882a593Smuzhiyun
407*4882a593SmuzhiyunTest with QEMU for bare mode
408*4882a593Smuzhiyun----------------------------
409*4882a593SmuzhiyunQEMU is a fancy emulator that can enable us to test U-Boot without access to
410*4882a593Smuzhiyuna real x86 board. Please make sure your QEMU version is 2.3.0 or above test
411*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot. To launch QEMU with u-boot.rom, call QEMU as follows:
412*4882a593Smuzhiyun
413*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ qemu-system-i386 -nographic -bios path/to/u-boot.rom
414*4882a593Smuzhiyun
415*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis will instantiate an emulated x86 board with i440FX and PIIX chipset. QEMU
416*4882a593Smuzhiyunalso supports emulating an x86 board with Q35 and ICH9 based chipset, which is
417*4882a593Smuzhiyunalso supported by U-Boot. To instantiate such a machine, call QEMU with:
418*4882a593Smuzhiyun
419*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ qemu-system-i386 -nographic -bios path/to/u-boot.rom -M q35
420*4882a593Smuzhiyun
421*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote by default QEMU instantiated boards only have 128 MiB system memory. But
422*4882a593Smuzhiyunit is enough to have U-Boot boot and function correctly. You can increase the
423*4882a593Smuzhiyunsystem memory by pass '-m' parameter to QEMU if you want more memory:
424*4882a593Smuzhiyun
425*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ qemu-system-i386 -nographic -bios path/to/u-boot.rom -m 1024
426*4882a593Smuzhiyun
427*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis creates a board with 1 GiB system memory. Currently U-Boot for QEMU only
428*4882a593Smuzhiyunsupports 3 GiB maximum system memory and reserves the last 1 GiB address space
429*4882a593Smuzhiyunfor PCI device memory-mapped I/O and other stuff, so the maximum value of '-m'
430*4882a593Smuzhiyunwould be 3072.
431*4882a593Smuzhiyun
432*4882a593SmuzhiyunQEMU emulates a graphic card which U-Boot supports. Removing '-nographic' will
433*4882a593Smuzhiyunshow QEMU's VGA console window. Note this will disable QEMU's serial output.
434*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf you want to check both consoles, use '-serial stdio'.
435*4882a593Smuzhiyun
436*4882a593SmuzhiyunMulticore is also supported by QEMU via '-smp n' where n is the number of cores
437*4882a593Smuzhiyunto instantiate. Note, the maximum supported CPU number in QEMU is 255.
438*4882a593Smuzhiyun
439*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe fw_cfg interface in QEMU also provides information about kernel data,
440*4882a593Smuzhiyuninitrd, command-line arguments and more. U-Boot supports directly accessing
441*4882a593Smuzhiyunthese informtion from fw_cfg interface, which saves the time of loading them
442*4882a593Smuzhiyunfrom hard disk or network again, through emulated devices. To use it , simply
443*4882a593Smuzhiyunproviding them in QEMU command line:
444*4882a593Smuzhiyun
445*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ qemu-system-i386 -nographic -bios path/to/u-boot.rom -m 1024 -kernel /path/to/bzImage
446*4882a593Smuzhiyun    -append 'root=/dev/ram console=ttyS0' -initrd /path/to/initrd -smp 8
447*4882a593Smuzhiyun
448*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote: -initrd and -smp are both optional
449*4882a593Smuzhiyun
450*4882a593SmuzhiyunThen start QEMU, in U-Boot command line use the following U-Boot command to
451*4882a593Smuzhiyunsetup kernel:
452*4882a593Smuzhiyun
453*4882a593Smuzhiyun => qfw
454*4882a593Smuzhiyunqfw - QEMU firmware interface
455*4882a593Smuzhiyun
456*4882a593SmuzhiyunUsage:
457*4882a593Smuzhiyunqfw <command>
458*4882a593Smuzhiyun    - list                             : print firmware(s) currently loaded
459*4882a593Smuzhiyun    - cpus                             : print online cpu number
460*4882a593Smuzhiyun    - load <kernel addr> <initrd addr> : load kernel and initrd (if any) and setup for zboot
461*4882a593Smuzhiyun
462*4882a593Smuzhiyun=> qfw load
463*4882a593Smuzhiyunloading kernel to address 01000000 size 5d9d30 initrd 04000000 size 1b1ab50
464*4882a593Smuzhiyun
465*4882a593SmuzhiyunHere the kernel (bzImage) is loaded to 01000000 and initrd is to 04000000. Then,
466*4882a593Smuzhiyun'zboot' can be used to boot the kernel:
467*4882a593Smuzhiyun
468*4882a593Smuzhiyun=> zboot 01000000 - 04000000 1b1ab50
469*4882a593Smuzhiyun
470*4882a593SmuzhiyunUpdating U-Boot on Edison
471*4882a593Smuzhiyun-------------------------
472*4882a593SmuzhiyunBy default Intel Edison boards are shipped with preinstalled heavily
473*4882a593Smuzhiyunpatched U-Boot v2014.04. Though it supports DFU which we may be able to
474*4882a593Smuzhiyunuse.
475*4882a593Smuzhiyun
476*4882a593Smuzhiyun1. Prepare u-boot.bin as described in chapter above. You still need one
477*4882a593Smuzhiyunmore step (if and only if you have original U-Boot), i.e. run the
478*4882a593Smuzhiyunfollowing command:
479*4882a593Smuzhiyun
480*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ truncate -s %4096 u-boot.bin
481*4882a593Smuzhiyun
482*4882a593Smuzhiyun2. Run your board and interrupt booting to U-Boot console. In the console
483*4882a593Smuzhiyuncall:
484*4882a593Smuzhiyun
485*4882a593Smuzhiyun => run do_force_flash_os
486*4882a593Smuzhiyun
487*4882a593Smuzhiyun3. Wait for few seconds, it will prepare environment variable and runs
488*4882a593SmuzhiyunDFU. Run DFU command from the host system:
489*4882a593Smuzhiyun
490*4882a593Smuzhiyun$ dfu-util -v -d 8087:0a99 --alt u-boot0 -D u-boot.bin
491*4882a593Smuzhiyun
492*4882a593Smuzhiyun4. Return to U-Boot console and following hint. i.e. push Ctrl+C, and
493*4882a593Smuzhiyunreset the board:
494*4882a593Smuzhiyun
495*4882a593Smuzhiyun => reset
496*4882a593Smuzhiyun
497*4882a593SmuzhiyunCPU Microcode
498*4882a593Smuzhiyun-------------
499*4882a593SmuzhiyunModern CPUs usually require a special bit stream called microcode [8] to be
500*4882a593Smuzhiyunloaded on the processor after power up in order to function properly. U-Boot
501*4882a593Smuzhiyunhas already integrated these as hex dumps in the source tree.
502*4882a593Smuzhiyun
503*4882a593SmuzhiyunSMP Support
504*4882a593Smuzhiyun-----------
505*4882a593SmuzhiyunOn a multicore system, U-Boot is executed on the bootstrap processor (BSP).
506*4882a593SmuzhiyunAdditional application processors (AP) can be brought up by U-Boot. In order to
507*4882a593Smuzhiyunhave an SMP kernel to discover all of the available processors, U-Boot needs to
508*4882a593Smuzhiyunprepare configuration tables which contain the multi-CPUs information before
509*4882a593Smuzhiyunloading the OS kernel. Currently U-Boot supports generating two types of tables
510*4882a593Smuzhiyunfor SMP, called Simple Firmware Interface (SFI) [9] and Multi-Processor (MP)
511*4882a593Smuzhiyun[10] tables. The writing of these two tables are controlled by two Kconfig
512*4882a593Smuzhiyunoptions GENERATE_SFI_TABLE and GENERATE_MP_TABLE.
513*4882a593Smuzhiyun
514*4882a593SmuzhiyunDriver Model
515*4882a593Smuzhiyun------------
516*4882a593Smuzhiyunx86 has been converted to use driver model for serial, GPIO, SPI, SPI flash,
517*4882a593Smuzhiyunkeyboard, real-time clock, USB. Video is in progress.
518*4882a593Smuzhiyun
519*4882a593SmuzhiyunDevice Tree
520*4882a593Smuzhiyun-----------
521*4882a593Smuzhiyunx86 uses device tree to configure the board thus requires CONFIG_OF_CONTROL to
522*4882a593Smuzhiyunbe turned on. Not every device on the board is configured via device tree, but
523*4882a593Smuzhiyunmore and more devices will be added as time goes by. Check out the directory
524*4882a593Smuzhiyunarch/x86/dts/ for these device tree source files.
525*4882a593Smuzhiyun
526*4882a593SmuzhiyunUseful Commands
527*4882a593Smuzhiyun---------------
528*4882a593SmuzhiyunIn keeping with the U-Boot philosophy of providing functions to check and
529*4882a593Smuzhiyunadjust internal settings, there are several x86-specific commands that may be
530*4882a593Smuzhiyunuseful:
531*4882a593Smuzhiyun
532*4882a593Smuzhiyunfsp  - Display information about Intel Firmware Support Package (FSP).
533*4882a593Smuzhiyun	 This is only available on platforms which use FSP, mostly Atom.
534*4882a593Smuzhiyuniod  - Display I/O memory
535*4882a593Smuzhiyuniow  - Write I/O memory
536*4882a593Smuzhiyunmtrr - List and set the Memory Type Range Registers (MTRR). These are used to
537*4882a593Smuzhiyun	 tell the CPU whether memory is cacheable and if so the cache write
538*4882a593Smuzhiyun	 mode to use. U-Boot sets up some reasonable values but you can
539*4882a593Smuzhiyun	 adjust then with this command.
540*4882a593Smuzhiyun
541*4882a593SmuzhiyunBooting Ubuntu
542*4882a593Smuzhiyun--------------
543*4882a593SmuzhiyunAs an example of how to set up your boot flow with U-Boot, here are
544*4882a593Smuzhiyuninstructions for starting Ubuntu from U-Boot. These instructions have been
545*4882a593Smuzhiyuntested on Minnowboard MAX with a SATA drive but are equally applicable on
546*4882a593Smuzhiyunother platforms and other media. There are really only four steps and it's a
547*4882a593Smuzhiyunvery simple script, but a more detailed explanation is provided here for
548*4882a593Smuzhiyuncompleteness.
549*4882a593Smuzhiyun
550*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote: It is possible to set up U-Boot to boot automatically using syslinux.
551*4882a593SmuzhiyunIt could also use the grub.cfg file (/efi/ubuntu/grub.cfg) to obtain the
552*4882a593SmuzhiyunGUID. If you figure these out, please post patches to this README.
553*4882a593Smuzhiyun
554*4882a593SmuzhiyunFirstly, you will need Ubuntu installed on an available disk. It should be
555*4882a593Smuzhiyunpossible to make U-Boot start a USB start-up disk but for now let's assume
556*4882a593Smuzhiyunthat you used another boot loader to install Ubuntu.
557*4882a593Smuzhiyun
558*4882a593SmuzhiyunUse the U-Boot command line to find the UUID of the partition you want to
559*4882a593Smuzhiyunboot. For example our disk is SCSI device 0:
560*4882a593Smuzhiyun
561*4882a593Smuzhiyun=> part list scsi 0
562*4882a593Smuzhiyun
563*4882a593SmuzhiyunPartition Map for SCSI device 0  --   Partition Type: EFI
564*4882a593Smuzhiyun
565*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Part	Start LBA	End LBA		Name
566*4882a593Smuzhiyun	Attributes
567*4882a593Smuzhiyun	Type GUID
568*4882a593Smuzhiyun	Partition GUID
569*4882a593Smuzhiyun   1	0x00000800	0x001007ff	""
570*4882a593Smuzhiyun	attrs:	0x0000000000000000
571*4882a593Smuzhiyun	type:	c12a7328-f81f-11d2-ba4b-00a0c93ec93b
572*4882a593Smuzhiyun	guid:	9d02e8e4-4d59-408f-a9b0-fd497bc9291c
573*4882a593Smuzhiyun   2	0x00100800	0x037d8fff	""
574*4882a593Smuzhiyun	attrs:	0x0000000000000000
575*4882a593Smuzhiyun	type:	0fc63daf-8483-4772-8e79-3d69d8477de4
576*4882a593Smuzhiyun	guid:	965c59ee-1822-4326-90d2-b02446050059
577*4882a593Smuzhiyun   3	0x037d9000	0x03ba27ff	""
578*4882a593Smuzhiyun	attrs:	0x0000000000000000
579*4882a593Smuzhiyun	type:	0657fd6d-a4ab-43c4-84e5-0933c84b4f4f
580*4882a593Smuzhiyun	guid:	2c4282bd-1e82-4bcf-a5ff-51dedbf39f17
581*4882a593Smuzhiyun   =>
582*4882a593Smuzhiyun
583*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis shows that your SCSI disk has three partitions. The really long hex
584*4882a593Smuzhiyunstrings are called Globally Unique Identifiers (GUIDs). You can look up the
585*4882a593Smuzhiyun'type' ones here [11]. On this disk the first partition is for EFI and is in
586*4882a593SmuzhiyunVFAT format (DOS/Windows):
587*4882a593Smuzhiyun
588*4882a593Smuzhiyun   => fatls scsi 0:1
589*4882a593Smuzhiyun               efi/
590*4882a593Smuzhiyun
591*4882a593Smuzhiyun   0 file(s), 1 dir(s)
592*4882a593Smuzhiyun
593*4882a593Smuzhiyun
594*4882a593SmuzhiyunPartition 2 is 'Linux filesystem data' so that will be our root disk. It is
595*4882a593Smuzhiyunin ext2 format:
596*4882a593Smuzhiyun
597*4882a593Smuzhiyun   => ext2ls scsi 0:2
598*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 .
599*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 ..
600*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>      16384 lost+found
601*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 boot
602*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>      12288 etc
603*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 media
604*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 bin
605*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 dev
606*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 home
607*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 lib
608*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 lib64
609*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 mnt
610*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 opt
611*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 proc
612*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 root
613*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 run
614*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>      12288 sbin
615*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 srv
616*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 sys
617*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 tmp
618*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 usr
619*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 var
620*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <SYM>         33 initrd.img
621*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <SYM>         30 vmlinuz
622*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 cdrom
623*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <SYM>         33 initrd.img.old
624*4882a593Smuzhiyun   =>
625*4882a593Smuzhiyun
626*4882a593Smuzhiyunand if you look in the /boot directory you will see the kernel:
627*4882a593Smuzhiyun
628*4882a593Smuzhiyun   => ext2ls scsi 0:2 /boot
629*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 .
630*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 ..
631*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 efi
632*4882a593Smuzhiyun   <DIR>       4096 grub
633*4882a593Smuzhiyun            3381262 System.map-3.13.0-32-generic
634*4882a593Smuzhiyun            1162712 abi-3.13.0-32-generic
635*4882a593Smuzhiyun             165611 config-3.13.0-32-generic
636*4882a593Smuzhiyun             176500 memtest86+.bin
637*4882a593Smuzhiyun             178176 memtest86+.elf
638*4882a593Smuzhiyun             178680 memtest86+_multiboot.bin
639*4882a593Smuzhiyun            5798112 vmlinuz-3.13.0-32-generic
640*4882a593Smuzhiyun             165762 config-3.13.0-58-generic
641*4882a593Smuzhiyun            1165129 abi-3.13.0-58-generic
642*4882a593Smuzhiyun            5823136 vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic
643*4882a593Smuzhiyun           19215259 initrd.img-3.13.0-58-generic
644*4882a593Smuzhiyun            3391763 System.map-3.13.0-58-generic
645*4882a593Smuzhiyun            5825048 vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic.efi.signed
646*4882a593Smuzhiyun           28304443 initrd.img-3.13.0-32-generic
647*4882a593Smuzhiyun   =>
648*4882a593Smuzhiyun
649*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe 'vmlinuz' files contain a packaged Linux kernel. The format is a kind of
650*4882a593Smuzhiyunself-extracting compressed file mixed with some 'setup' configuration data.
651*4882a593SmuzhiyunDespite its size (uncompressed it is >10MB) this only includes a basic set of
652*4882a593Smuzhiyundevice drivers, enough to boot on most hardware types.
653*4882a593Smuzhiyun
654*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe 'initrd' files contain a RAM disk. This is something that can be loaded
655*4882a593Smuzhiyuninto RAM and will appear to Linux like a disk. Ubuntu uses this to hold lots
656*4882a593Smuzhiyunof drivers for whatever hardware you might have. It is loaded before the
657*4882a593Smuzhiyunreal root disk is accessed.
658*4882a593Smuzhiyun
659*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe numbers after the end of each file are the version. Here it is Linux
660*4882a593Smuzhiyunversion 3.13. You can find the source code for this in the Linux tree with
661*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe tag v3.13. The '.0' allows for additional Linux releases to fix problems,
662*4882a593Smuzhiyunbut normally this is not needed. The '-58' is used by Ubuntu. Each time they
663*4882a593Smuzhiyunrelease a new kernel they increment this number. New Ubuntu versions might
664*4882a593Smuzhiyuninclude kernel patches to fix reported bugs. Stable kernels can exist for
665*4882a593Smuzhiyunsome years so this number can get quite high.
666*4882a593Smuzhiyun
667*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe '.efi.signed' kernel is signed for EFI's secure boot. U-Boot has its own
668*4882a593Smuzhiyunsecure boot mechanism - see [12] [13] and cannot read .efi files at present.
669*4882a593Smuzhiyun
670*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo boot Ubuntu from U-Boot the steps are as follows:
671*4882a593Smuzhiyun
672*4882a593Smuzhiyun1. Set up the boot arguments. Use the GUID for the partition you want to
673*4882a593Smuzhiyunboot:
674*4882a593Smuzhiyun
675*4882a593Smuzhiyun   => setenv bootargs root=/dev/disk/by-partuuid/965c59ee-1822-4326-90d2-b02446050059 ro
676*4882a593Smuzhiyun
677*4882a593SmuzhiyunHere root= tells Linux the location of its root disk. The disk is specified
678*4882a593Smuzhiyunby its GUID, using '/dev/disk/by-partuuid/', a Linux path to a 'directory'
679*4882a593Smuzhiyuncontaining all the GUIDs Linux has found. When it starts up, there will be a
680*4882a593Smuzhiyunfile in that directory with this name in it. It is also possible to use a
681*4882a593Smuzhiyundevice name here, see later.
682*4882a593Smuzhiyun
683*4882a593Smuzhiyun2. Load the kernel. Since it is an ext2/4 filesystem we can do:
684*4882a593Smuzhiyun
685*4882a593Smuzhiyun   => ext2load scsi 0:2 03000000 /boot/vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic
686*4882a593Smuzhiyun
687*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe address 30000000 is arbitrary, but there seem to be problems with using
688*4882a593Smuzhiyunsmall addresses (sometimes Linux cannot find the ramdisk). This is 48MB into
689*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe start of RAM (which is at 0 on x86).
690*4882a593Smuzhiyun
691*4882a593Smuzhiyun3. Load the ramdisk (to 64MB):
692*4882a593Smuzhiyun
693*4882a593Smuzhiyun   => ext2load scsi 0:2 04000000 /boot/initrd.img-3.13.0-58-generic
694*4882a593Smuzhiyun
695*4882a593Smuzhiyun4. Start up the kernel. We need to know the size of the ramdisk, but can use
696*4882a593Smuzhiyuna variable for that. U-Boot sets 'filesize' to the size of the last file it
697*4882a593Smuzhiyunloaded.
698*4882a593Smuzhiyun
699*4882a593Smuzhiyun   => zboot 03000000 0 04000000 ${filesize}
700*4882a593Smuzhiyun
701*4882a593SmuzhiyunType 'help zboot' if you want to see what the arguments are. U-Boot on x86 is
702*4882a593Smuzhiyunquite verbose when it boots a kernel. You should see these messages from
703*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot:
704*4882a593Smuzhiyun
705*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Valid Boot Flag
706*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Setup Size = 0x00004400
707*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Magic signature found
708*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Using boot protocol version 2.0c
709*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Linux kernel version 3.13.0-58-generic (buildd@allspice) #97-Ubuntu SMP Wed Jul 8 02:56:15 UTC 2015
710*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Building boot_params at 0x00090000
711*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Loading bzImage at address 100000 (5805728 bytes)
712*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Magic signature found
713*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Initial RAM disk at linear address 0x04000000, size 19215259 bytes
714*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Kernel command line: "root=/dev/disk/by-partuuid/965c59ee-1822-4326-90d2-b02446050059 ro"
715*4882a593Smuzhiyun
716*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Starting kernel ...
717*4882a593Smuzhiyun
718*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot prints out some bootstage timing. This is more useful if you put the
719*4882a593Smuzhiyunabove commands into a script since then it will be faster.
720*4882a593Smuzhiyun
721*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Timer summary in microseconds:
722*4882a593Smuzhiyun          Mark    Elapsed  Stage
723*4882a593Smuzhiyun             0          0  reset
724*4882a593Smuzhiyun       241,535    241,535  board_init_r
725*4882a593Smuzhiyun     2,421,611  2,180,076  id=64
726*4882a593Smuzhiyun     2,421,790        179  id=65
727*4882a593Smuzhiyun     2,428,215      6,425  main_loop
728*4882a593Smuzhiyun    48,860,584 46,432,369  start_kernel
729*4882a593Smuzhiyun
730*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Accumulated time:
731*4882a593Smuzhiyun                  240,329  ahci
732*4882a593Smuzhiyun                1,422,704  vesa display
733*4882a593Smuzhiyun
734*4882a593SmuzhiyunNow the kernel actually starts: (if you want to examine kernel boot up message
735*4882a593Smuzhiyunon the serial console, append "console=ttyS0,115200" to the kernel command line)
736*4882a593Smuzhiyun
737*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    0.000000] Initializing cgroup subsys cpuset
738*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    0.000000] Initializing cgroup subsys cpu
739*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    0.000000] Initializing cgroup subsys cpuacct
740*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    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)
741*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    0.000000] Command line: root=/dev/disk/by-partuuid/965c59ee-1822-4326-90d2-b02446050059 ro console=ttyS0,115200
742*4882a593Smuzhiyun
743*4882a593SmuzhiyunIt continues for a long time. Along the way you will see it pick up your
744*4882a593Smuzhiyunramdisk:
745*4882a593Smuzhiyun
746*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    0.000000] RAMDISK: [mem 0x04000000-0x05253fff]
747*4882a593Smuzhiyun...
748*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    0.788540] Trying to unpack rootfs image as initramfs...
749*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    1.540111] Freeing initrd memory: 18768K (ffff880004000000 - ffff880005254000)
750*4882a593Smuzhiyun...
751*4882a593Smuzhiyun
752*4882a593SmuzhiyunLater it actually starts using it:
753*4882a593Smuzhiyun
754*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Begin: Running /scripts/local-premount ... done.
755*4882a593Smuzhiyun
756*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou should also see your boot disk turn up:
757*4882a593Smuzhiyun
758*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    4.357243] scsi 1:0:0:0: Direct-Access     ATA      ADATA SP310      5.2  PQ: 0 ANSI: 5
759*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    4.366860] sd 1:0:0:0: [sda] 62533296 512-byte logical blocks: (32.0 GB/29.8 GiB)
760*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    4.375677] sd 1:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg0 type 0
761*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    4.381859] sd 1:0:0:0: [sda] Write Protect is off
762*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    4.387452] sd 1:0:0:0: [sda] Write cache: enabled, read cache: enabled, doesn't support DPO or FUA
763*4882a593Smuzhiyun   [    4.399535]  sda: sda1 sda2 sda3
764*4882a593Smuzhiyun
765*4882a593SmuzhiyunLinux has found the three partitions (sda1-3). Mercifully it doesn't print out
766*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe GUIDs. In step 1 above we could have used:
767*4882a593Smuzhiyun
768*4882a593Smuzhiyun   setenv bootargs root=/dev/sda2 ro
769*4882a593Smuzhiyun
770*4882a593Smuzhiyuninstead of the GUID. However if you add another drive to your board the
771*4882a593Smuzhiyunnumbering may change whereas the GUIDs will not. So if your boot partition
772*4882a593Smuzhiyunbecomes sdb2, it will still boot. For embedded systems where you just want to
773*4882a593Smuzhiyunboot the first disk, you have that option.
774*4882a593Smuzhiyun
775*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe last thing you will see on the console is mention of plymouth (which
776*4882a593Smuzhiyundisplays the Ubuntu start-up screen) and a lot of 'Starting' messages:
777*4882a593Smuzhiyun
778*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Starting Mount filesystems on boot                                    [ OK ]
779*4882a593Smuzhiyun
780*4882a593SmuzhiyunAfter a pause you should see a login screen on your display and you are done.
781*4882a593Smuzhiyun
782*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf you want to put this in a script you can use something like this:
783*4882a593Smuzhiyun
784*4882a593Smuzhiyun   setenv bootargs root=UUID=b2aaf743-0418-4d90-94cc-3e6108d7d968 ro
785*4882a593Smuzhiyun   setenv boot zboot 03000000 0 04000000 \${filesize}
786*4882a593Smuzhiyun   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"
787*4882a593Smuzhiyun   saveenv
788*4882a593Smuzhiyun
789*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe \ is to tell the shell not to evaluate ${filesize} as part of the setenv
790*4882a593Smuzhiyuncommand.
791*4882a593Smuzhiyun
792*4882a593SmuzhiyunYou can also bake this behaviour into your build by hard-coding the
793*4882a593Smuzhiyunenvironment variables if you add this to minnowmax.h:
794*4882a593Smuzhiyun
795*4882a593Smuzhiyun#undef CONFIG_BOOTCOMMAND
796*4882a593Smuzhiyun#define CONFIG_BOOTCOMMAND	\
797*4882a593Smuzhiyun	"ext2load scsi 0:2 03000000 /boot/vmlinuz-3.13.0-58-generic; " \
798*4882a593Smuzhiyun	"ext2load scsi 0:2 04000000 /boot/initrd.img-3.13.0-58-generic; " \
799*4882a593Smuzhiyun	"run boot"
800*4882a593Smuzhiyun
801*4882a593Smuzhiyun#undef CONFIG_EXTRA_ENV_SETTINGS
802*4882a593Smuzhiyun#define CONFIG_EXTRA_ENV_SETTINGS "boot=zboot 03000000 0 04000000 ${filesize}"
803*4882a593Smuzhiyun
804*4882a593Smuzhiyunand change CONFIG_BOOTARGS value in configs/minnowmax_defconfig to:
805*4882a593Smuzhiyun
806*4882a593SmuzhiyunCONFIG_BOOTARGS="root=/dev/sda2 ro"
807*4882a593Smuzhiyun
808*4882a593SmuzhiyunTest with SeaBIOS
809*4882a593Smuzhiyun-----------------
810*4882a593SmuzhiyunSeaBIOS [14] is an open source implementation of a 16-bit x86 BIOS. It can run
811*4882a593Smuzhiyunin an emulator or natively on x86 hardware with the use of U-Boot. With its
812*4882a593Smuzhiyunhelp, we can boot some OSes that require 16-bit BIOS services like Windows/DOS.
813*4882a593Smuzhiyun
814*4882a593SmuzhiyunAs U-Boot, we have to manually create a table where SeaBIOS gets various system
815*4882a593Smuzhiyuninformation (eg: E820) from. The table unfortunately has to follow the coreboot
816*4882a593Smuzhiyuntable format as SeaBIOS currently supports booting as a coreboot payload.
817*4882a593Smuzhiyun
818*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo support loading SeaBIOS, U-Boot should be built with CONFIG_SEABIOS on.
819*4882a593SmuzhiyunBooting SeaBIOS is done via U-Boot's bootelf command, like below:
820*4882a593Smuzhiyun
821*4882a593Smuzhiyun   => tftp bios.bin.elf;bootelf
822*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Using e1000#0 device
823*4882a593Smuzhiyun   TFTP from server 10.10.0.100; our IP address is 10.10.0.108
824*4882a593Smuzhiyun   ...
825*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Bytes transferred = 122124 (1dd0c hex)
826*4882a593Smuzhiyun   ## Starting application at 0x000ff06e ...
827*4882a593Smuzhiyun   SeaBIOS (version rel-1.9.0)
828*4882a593Smuzhiyun   ...
829*4882a593Smuzhiyun
830*4882a593Smuzhiyunbios.bin.elf is the SeaBIOS image built from SeaBIOS source tree.
831*4882a593SmuzhiyunMake sure it is built as follows:
832*4882a593Smuzhiyun
833*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ make menuconfig
834*4882a593Smuzhiyun
835*4882a593SmuzhiyunInside the "General Features" menu, select "Build for coreboot" as the
836*4882a593Smuzhiyun"Build Target". Inside the "Debugging" menu, turn on "Serial port debugging"
837*4882a593Smuzhiyunso that we can see something as soon as SeaBIOS boots. Leave other options
838*4882a593Smuzhiyunas in their default state. Then,
839*4882a593Smuzhiyun
840*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ make
841*4882a593Smuzhiyun   ...
842*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Total size: 121888  Fixed: 66496  Free: 9184 (used 93.0% of 128KiB rom)
843*4882a593Smuzhiyun   Creating out/bios.bin.elf
844*4882a593Smuzhiyun
845*4882a593SmuzhiyunCurrently this is tested on QEMU x86 target with U-Boot chain-loading SeaBIOS
846*4882a593Smuzhiyunto install/boot a Windows XP OS (below for example command to install Windows).
847*4882a593Smuzhiyun
848*4882a593Smuzhiyun   # Create a 10G disk.img as the virtual hard disk
849*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ qemu-img create -f qcow2 disk.img 10G
850*4882a593Smuzhiyun
851*4882a593Smuzhiyun   # Install a Windows XP OS from an ISO image 'winxp.iso'
852*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ qemu-system-i386 -serial stdio -bios u-boot.rom -hda disk.img -cdrom winxp.iso -smp 2 -m 512
853*4882a593Smuzhiyun
854*4882a593Smuzhiyun   # Boot a Windows XP OS installed on the virutal hard disk
855*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ qemu-system-i386 -serial stdio -bios u-boot.rom -hda disk.img -smp 2 -m 512
856*4882a593Smuzhiyun
857*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis is also tested on Intel Crown Bay board with a PCIe graphics card, booting
858*4882a593SmuzhiyunSeaBIOS then chain-loading a GRUB on a USB drive, then Linux kernel finally.
859*4882a593Smuzhiyun
860*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf you are using Intel Integrated Graphics Device (IGD) as the primary display
861*4882a593Smuzhiyundevice on your board, SeaBIOS needs to be patched manually to get its VGA ROM
862*4882a593Smuzhiyunloaded and run by SeaBIOS. SeaBIOS locates VGA ROM via the PCI expansion ROM
863*4882a593Smuzhiyunregister, but IGD device does not have its VGA ROM mapped by this register.
864*4882a593SmuzhiyunIts VGA ROM is packaged as part of u-boot.rom at a configurable flash address
865*4882a593Smuzhiyunwhich is unknown to SeaBIOS. An example patch is needed for SeaBIOS below:
866*4882a593Smuzhiyun
867*4882a593Smuzhiyundiff --git a/src/optionroms.c b/src/optionroms.c
868*4882a593Smuzhiyunindex 65f7fe0..c7b6f5e 100644
869*4882a593Smuzhiyun--- a/src/optionroms.c
870*4882a593Smuzhiyun+++ b/src/optionroms.c
871*4882a593Smuzhiyun@@ -324,6 +324,8 @@ init_pcirom(struct pci_device *pci, int isvga, u64 *sources)
872*4882a593Smuzhiyun         rom = deploy_romfile(file);
873*4882a593Smuzhiyun     else if (RunPCIroms > 1 || (RunPCIroms == 1 && isvga))
874*4882a593Smuzhiyun         rom = map_pcirom(pci);
875*4882a593Smuzhiyun+    if (pci->bdf == pci_to_bdf(0, 2, 0))
876*4882a593Smuzhiyun+        rom = (struct rom_header *)0xfff90000;
877*4882a593Smuzhiyun     if (! rom)
878*4882a593Smuzhiyun         // No ROM present.
879*4882a593Smuzhiyun         return;
880*4882a593Smuzhiyun
881*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote: the patch above expects IGD device is at PCI b.d.f 0.2.0 and its VGA ROM
882*4882a593Smuzhiyunis at 0xfff90000 which corresponds to CONFIG_VGA_BIOS_ADDR on Minnowboard MAX.
883*4882a593SmuzhiyunChange these two accordingly if this is not the case on your board.
884*4882a593Smuzhiyun
885*4882a593SmuzhiyunDevelopment Flow
886*4882a593Smuzhiyun----------------
887*4882a593SmuzhiyunThese notes are for those who want to port U-Boot to a new x86 platform.
888*4882a593Smuzhiyun
889*4882a593SmuzhiyunSince x86 CPUs boot from SPI flash, a SPI flash emulator is a good investment.
890*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe Dediprog em100 can be used on Linux. The em100 tool is available here:
891*4882a593Smuzhiyun
892*4882a593Smuzhiyun   http://review.coreboot.org/p/em100.git
893*4882a593Smuzhiyun
894*4882a593SmuzhiyunOn Minnowboard Max the following command line can be used:
895*4882a593Smuzhiyun
896*4882a593Smuzhiyun   sudo em100 -s -p LOW -d u-boot.rom -c W25Q64DW -r
897*4882a593Smuzhiyun
898*4882a593SmuzhiyunA suitable clip for connecting over the SPI flash chip is here:
899*4882a593Smuzhiyun
900*4882a593Smuzhiyun   http://www.dediprog.com/pd/programmer-accessories/EM-TC-8
901*4882a593Smuzhiyun
902*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis allows you to override the SPI flash contents for development purposes.
903*4882a593SmuzhiyunTypically you can write to the em100 in around 1200ms, considerably faster
904*4882a593Smuzhiyunthan programming the real flash device each time. The only important
905*4882a593Smuzhiyunlimitation of the em100 is that it only supports SPI bus speeds up to 20MHz.
906*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis means that images must be set to boot with that speed. This is an
907*4882a593SmuzhiyunIntel-specific feature - e.g. tools/ifttool has an option to set the SPI
908*4882a593Smuzhiyunspeed in the SPI descriptor region.
909*4882a593Smuzhiyun
910*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf your chip/board uses an Intel Firmware Support Package (FSP) it is fairly
911*4882a593Smuzhiyuneasy to fit it in. You can follow the Minnowboard Max implementation, for
912*4882a593Smuzhiyunexample. Hopefully you will just need to create new files similar to those
913*4882a593Smuzhiyunin arch/x86/cpu/baytrail which provide Bay Trail support.
914*4882a593Smuzhiyun
915*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf you are not using an FSP you have more freedom and more responsibility.
916*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe ivybridge support works this way, although it still uses a ROM for
917*4882a593Smuzhiyungraphics and still has binary blobs containing Intel code. You should aim to
918*4882a593Smuzhiyunsupport all important peripherals on your platform including video and storage.
919*4882a593SmuzhiyunUse the device tree for configuration where possible.
920*4882a593Smuzhiyun
921*4882a593SmuzhiyunFor the microcode you can create a suitable device tree file using the
922*4882a593Smuzhiyunmicrocode tool:
923*4882a593Smuzhiyun
924*4882a593Smuzhiyun  ./tools/microcode-tool -d microcode.dat -m <model> create
925*4882a593Smuzhiyun
926*4882a593Smuzhiyunor if you only have header files and not the full Intel microcode.dat database:
927*4882a593Smuzhiyun
928*4882a593Smuzhiyun  ./tools/microcode-tool -H BAY_TRAIL_FSP_KIT/Microcode/M0130673322.h \
929*4882a593Smuzhiyun	-H BAY_TRAIL_FSP_KIT/Microcode/M0130679901.h \
930*4882a593Smuzhiyun	-m all create
931*4882a593Smuzhiyun
932*4882a593SmuzhiyunThese are written to arch/x86/dts/microcode/ by default.
933*4882a593Smuzhiyun
934*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote that it is possible to just add the micrcode for your CPU if you know its
935*4882a593Smuzhiyunmodel. U-Boot prints this information when it starts
936*4882a593Smuzhiyun
937*4882a593Smuzhiyun   CPU: x86_64, vendor Intel, device 30673h
938*4882a593Smuzhiyun
939*4882a593Smuzhiyunso here we can use the M0130673322 file.
940*4882a593Smuzhiyun
941*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf you platform can display POST codes on two little 7-segment displays on
942*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe board, then you can use post_code() calls from C or assembler to monitor
943*4882a593Smuzhiyunboot progress. This can be good for debugging.
944*4882a593Smuzhiyun
945*4882a593SmuzhiyunIf not, you can try to get serial working as early as possible. The early
946*4882a593Smuzhiyundebug serial port may be useful here. See setup_internal_uart() for an example.
947*4882a593Smuzhiyun
948*4882a593SmuzhiyunDuring the U-Boot porting, one of the important steps is to write correct PIRQ
949*4882a593Smuzhiyunrouting information in the board device tree. Without it, device drivers in the
950*4882a593SmuzhiyunLinux kernel won't function correctly due to interrupt is not working. Please
951*4882a593Smuzhiyunrefer to U-Boot doc [15] for the device tree bindings of Intel interrupt router.
952*4882a593SmuzhiyunHere we have more details on the intel,pirq-routing property below.
953*4882a593Smuzhiyun
954*4882a593Smuzhiyun	intel,pirq-routing = <
955*4882a593Smuzhiyun		PCI_BDF(0, 2, 0) INTA PIRQA
956*4882a593Smuzhiyun		...
957*4882a593Smuzhiyun	>;
958*4882a593Smuzhiyun
959*4882a593SmuzhiyunAs you see each entry has 3 cells. For the first one, we need describe all pci
960*4882a593Smuzhiyundevices mounted on the board. For SoC devices, normally there is a chapter on
961*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe chipset datasheet which lists all the available PCI devices. For example on
962*4882a593SmuzhiyunBay Trail, this is chapter 4.3 (PCI configuration space). For the second one, we
963*4882a593Smuzhiyuncan get the interrupt pin either from datasheet or hardware via U-Boot shell.
964*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe reliable source is the hardware as sometimes chipset datasheet is not 100%
965*4882a593Smuzhiyunup-to-date. Type 'pci header' plus the device's pci bus/device/function number
966*4882a593Smuzhiyunfrom U-Boot shell below.
967*4882a593Smuzhiyun
968*4882a593Smuzhiyun  => pci header 0.1e.1
969*4882a593Smuzhiyun    vendor ID =			0x8086
970*4882a593Smuzhiyun    device ID =			0x0f08
971*4882a593Smuzhiyun    ...
972*4882a593Smuzhiyun    interrupt line =		0x09
973*4882a593Smuzhiyun    interrupt pin =		0x04
974*4882a593Smuzhiyun    ...
975*4882a593Smuzhiyun
976*4882a593SmuzhiyunIt shows this PCI device is using INTD pin as it reports 4 in the interrupt pin
977*4882a593Smuzhiyunregister. Repeat this until you get interrupt pins for all the devices. The last
978*4882a593Smuzhiyuncell is the PIRQ line which a particular interrupt pin is mapped to. On Intel
979*4882a593Smuzhiyunchipset, the power-up default mapping is INTA/B/C/D maps to PIRQA/B/C/D. This
980*4882a593Smuzhiyuncan be changed by registers in LPC bridge. So far Intel FSP does not touch those
981*4882a593Smuzhiyunregisters so we can write down the PIRQ according to the default mapping rule.
982*4882a593Smuzhiyun
983*4882a593SmuzhiyunOnce we get the PIRQ routing information in the device tree, the interrupt
984*4882a593Smuzhiyunallocation and assignment will be done by U-Boot automatically. Now you can
985*4882a593Smuzhiyunenable CONFIG_GENERATE_PIRQ_TABLE for testing Linux kernel using i8259 PIC and
986*4882a593SmuzhiyunCONFIG_GENERATE_MP_TABLE for testing Linux kernel using local APIC and I/O APIC.
987*4882a593Smuzhiyun
988*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis script might be useful. If you feed it the output of 'pci long' from
989*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot then it will generate a device tree fragment with the interrupt
990*4882a593Smuzhiyunconfiguration for each device (note it needs gawk 4.0.0):
991*4882a593Smuzhiyun
992*4882a593Smuzhiyun   $ cat console_output |awk '/PCI/ {device=$4} /interrupt line/ {line=$4} \
993*4882a593Smuzhiyun	/interrupt pin/ {pin = $4; if (pin != "0x00" && pin != "0xff") \
994*4882a593Smuzhiyun	{patsplit(device, bdf, "[0-9a-f]+"); \
995*4882a593Smuzhiyun	printf "PCI_BDF(%d, %d, %d) INT%c PIRQ%c\n", strtonum("0x" bdf[1]), \
996*4882a593Smuzhiyun	strtonum("0x" bdf[2]), bdf[3], strtonum(pin) + 64, 64 + strtonum(pin)}}'
997*4882a593Smuzhiyun
998*4882a593SmuzhiyunExample output:
999*4882a593Smuzhiyun   PCI_BDF(0, 2, 0) INTA PIRQA
1000*4882a593Smuzhiyun   PCI_BDF(0, 3, 0) INTA PIRQA
1001*4882a593Smuzhiyun...
1002*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1003*4882a593SmuzhiyunPorting Hints
1004*4882a593Smuzhiyun-------------
1005*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1006*4882a593SmuzhiyunQuark-specific considerations:
1007*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1008*4882a593SmuzhiyunTo port U-Boot to other boards based on the Intel Quark SoC, a few things need
1009*4882a593Smuzhiyunto be taken care of. The first important part is the Memory Reference Code (MRC)
1010*4882a593Smuzhiyunparameters. Quark MRC supports memory-down configuration only. All these MRC
1011*4882a593Smuzhiyunparameters are supplied via the board device tree. To get started, first copy
1012*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe MRC section of arch/x86/dts/galileo.dts to your board's device tree, then
1013*4882a593Smuzhiyunchange these values by consulting board manuals or your hardware vendor.
1014*4882a593SmuzhiyunAvailable MRC parameter values are listed in include/dt-bindings/mrc/quark.h.
1015*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe other tricky part is with PCIe. Quark SoC integrates two PCIe root ports,
1016*4882a593Smuzhiyunbut by default they are held in reset after power on. In U-Boot, PCIe
1017*4882a593Smuzhiyuninitialization is properly handled as per Quark's firmware writer guide.
1018*4882a593SmuzhiyunIn your board support codes, you need provide two routines to aid PCIe
1019*4882a593Smuzhiyuninitialization, which are board_assert_perst() and board_deassert_perst().
1020*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe two routines need implement a board-specific mechanism to assert/deassert
1021*4882a593SmuzhiyunPCIe PERST# pin. Care must be taken that in those routines that any APIs that
1022*4882a593Smuzhiyunmay trigger PCI enumeration process are strictly forbidden, as any access to
1023*4882a593SmuzhiyunPCIe root port's configuration registers will cause system hang while it is
1024*4882a593Smuzhiyunheld in reset. For more details, check how they are implemented by the Intel
1025*4882a593SmuzhiyunGalileo board support codes in board/intel/galileo/galileo.c.
1026*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1027*4882a593Smuzhiyuncoreboot:
1028*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1029*4882a593SmuzhiyunSee scripts/coreboot.sed which can assist with porting coreboot code into
1030*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot drivers. It will not resolve all build errors, but will perform common
1031*4882a593Smuzhiyuntransformations. Remember to add attribution to coreboot for new files added
1032*4882a593Smuzhiyunto U-Boot. This should go at the top of each file and list the coreboot
1033*4882a593Smuzhiyunfilename where the code originated.
1034*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1035*4882a593SmuzhiyunDebugging ACPI issues with Windows:
1036*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1037*4882a593SmuzhiyunWindows might cache system information and only detect ACPI changes if you
1038*4882a593Smuzhiyunmodify the ACPI table versions. So tweak them liberally when debugging ACPI
1039*4882a593Smuzhiyunissues with Windows.
1040*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1041*4882a593SmuzhiyunACPI Support Status
1042*4882a593Smuzhiyun-------------------
1043*4882a593SmuzhiyunAdvanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) [16] aims to establish
1044*4882a593Smuzhiyunindustry-standard interfaces enabling OS-directed configuration, power
1045*4882a593Smuzhiyunmanagement, and thermal management of mobile, desktop, and server platforms.
1046*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1047*4882a593SmuzhiyunLinux can boot without ACPI with "acpi=off" command line parameter, but
1048*4882a593Smuzhiyunwith ACPI the kernel gains the capabilities to handle power management.
1049*4882a593SmuzhiyunFor Windows, ACPI is a must-have firmware feature since Windows Vista.
1050*4882a593SmuzhiyunCONFIG_GENERATE_ACPI_TABLE is the config option to turn on ACPI support in
1051*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot. This requires Intel ACPI compiler to be installed on your host to
1052*4882a593Smuzhiyuncompile ACPI DSDT table written in ASL format to AML format. You can get
1053*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe compiler via "apt-get install iasl" if you are on Ubuntu or download
1054*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe source from [17] to compile one by yourself.
1055*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1056*4882a593SmuzhiyunCurrent ACPI support in U-Boot is basically complete. More optional features
1057*4882a593Smuzhiyuncan be added in the future. The status as of today is:
1058*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1059*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Support generating RSDT, XSDT, FACS, FADT, MADT, MCFG tables.
1060*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Support one static DSDT table only, compiled by Intel ACPI compiler.
1061*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Support S0/S3/S4/S5, reboot and shutdown from OS.
1062*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Support booting a pre-installed Ubuntu distribution via 'zboot' command.
1063*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Support installing and booting Ubuntu 14.04 (or above) from U-Boot with
1064*4882a593Smuzhiyun   the help of SeaBIOS using legacy interface (non-UEFI mode).
1065*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Support installing and booting Windows 8.1/10 from U-Boot with the help
1066*4882a593Smuzhiyun   of SeaBIOS using legacy interface (non-UEFI mode).
1067*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Support ACPI interrupts with SCI only.
1068*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1069*4882a593SmuzhiyunFeatures that are optional:
1070*4882a593Smuzhiyun * Dynamic AML bytecodes insertion at run-time. We may need this to support
1071*4882a593Smuzhiyun   SSDT table generation and DSDT fix up.
1072*4882a593Smuzhiyun * SMI support. Since U-Boot is a modern bootloader, we don't want to bring
1073*4882a593Smuzhiyun   those legacy stuff into U-Boot. ACPI spec allows a system that does not
1074*4882a593Smuzhiyun   support SMI (a legacy-free system).
1075*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1076*4882a593SmuzhiyunACPI was initially enabled on BayTrail based boards. Testing was done by booting
1077*4882a593Smuzhiyuna pre-installed Ubuntu 14.04 from a SATA drive. Installing Ubuntu 14.04 and
1078*4882a593SmuzhiyunWindows 8.1/10 to a SATA drive and booting from there is also tested. Most
1079*4882a593Smuzhiyundevices seem to work correctly and the board can respond a reboot/shutdown
1080*4882a593Smuzhiyuncommand from the OS.
1081*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1082*4882a593SmuzhiyunFor other platform boards, ACPI support status can be checked by examining their
1083*4882a593Smuzhiyunboard defconfig files to see if CONFIG_GENERATE_ACPI_TABLE is set to y.
1084*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1085*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe S3 sleeping state is a low wake latency sleeping state defined by ACPI
1086*4882a593Smuzhiyunspec where all system context is lost except system memory. To test S3 resume
1087*4882a593Smuzhiyunwith a Linux kernel, simply run "echo mem > /sys/power/state" and kernel will
1088*4882a593Smuzhiyunput the board to S3 state where the power is off. So when the power button is
1089*4882a593Smuzhiyunpressed again, U-Boot runs as it does in cold boot and detects the sleeping
1090*4882a593Smuzhiyunstate via ACPI register to see if it is S3, if yes it means we are waking up.
1091*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot is responsible for restoring the machine state as it is before sleep.
1092*4882a593SmuzhiyunWhen everything is done, U-Boot finds out the wakeup vector provided by OSes
1093*4882a593Smuzhiyunand jump there. To determine whether ACPI S3 resume is supported, check to
1094*4882a593Smuzhiyunsee if CONFIG_HAVE_ACPI_RESUME is set for that specific board.
1095*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1096*4882a593SmuzhiyunNote for testing S3 resume with Windows, correct graphics driver must be
1097*4882a593Smuzhiyuninstalled for your platform, otherwise you won't find "Sleep" option in
1098*4882a593Smuzhiyunthe "Power" submenu from the Windows start menu.
1099*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1100*4882a593SmuzhiyunEFI Support
1101*4882a593Smuzhiyun-----------
1102*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot supports booting as a 32-bit or 64-bit EFI payload, e.g. with UEFI.
1103*4882a593SmuzhiyunThis is enabled with CONFIG_EFI_STUB. U-Boot can also run as an EFI
1104*4882a593Smuzhiyunapplication, with CONFIG_EFI_APP. The CONFIG_EFI_LOADER option, where U-Booot
1105*4882a593Smuzhiyunprovides an EFI environment to the kernel (i.e. replaces UEFI completely but
1106*4882a593Smuzhiyunprovides the same EFI run-time services) is not currently supported on x86.
1107*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1108*4882a593SmuzhiyunSee README.efi for details of EFI support in U-Boot.
1109*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1110*4882a593Smuzhiyun64-bit Support
1111*4882a593Smuzhiyun--------------
1112*4882a593SmuzhiyunU-Boot supports booting a 64-bit kernel directly and is able to change to
1113*4882a593Smuzhiyun64-bit mode to do so. It also supports (with CONFIG_EFI_STUB) booting from
1114*4882a593Smuzhiyunboth 32-bit and 64-bit UEFI. However, U-Boot itself is currently always built
1115*4882a593Smuzhiyunin 32-bit mode. Some access to the full memory range is provided with
1116*4882a593Smuzhiyunarch_phys_memset().
1117*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1118*4882a593SmuzhiyunThe development work to make U-Boot itself run in 64-bit mode has not yet
1119*4882a593Smuzhiyunbeen attempted. The best approach would likely be to build a 32-bit SPL
1120*4882a593Smuzhiyunimage for U-Boot, with CONFIG_SPL_BUILD. This could then handle the early CPU
1121*4882a593Smuzhiyuninit in 16-bit and 32-bit mode, running the FSP and any other binaries that
1122*4882a593Smuzhiyunare needed. Then it could change to 64-bit model and jump to U-Boot proper.
1123*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1124*4882a593SmuzhiyunGiven U-Boot's extensive 64-bit support this has not been a high priority,
1125*4882a593Smuzhiyunbut it would be a nice addition.
1126*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1127*4882a593SmuzhiyunTODO List
1128*4882a593Smuzhiyun---------
1129*4882a593Smuzhiyun- Audio
1130*4882a593Smuzhiyun- Chrome OS verified boot
1131*4882a593Smuzhiyun- Building U-Boot to run in 64-bit mode
1132*4882a593Smuzhiyun
1133*4882a593SmuzhiyunReferences
1134*4882a593Smuzhiyun----------
1135*4882a593Smuzhiyun[1] http://www.coreboot.org
1136*4882a593Smuzhiyun[2] http://www.qemu.org
1137*4882a593Smuzhiyun[3] http://www.coreboot.org/~stepan/pci8086,0166.rom
1138*4882a593Smuzhiyun[4] http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/embedded/design-tools/evaluation-platforms/atom-e660-eg20t-development-kit.html
1139*4882a593Smuzhiyun[5] http://www.intel.com/fsp
1140*4882a593Smuzhiyun[6] http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/secure/intelligent-systems/privileged/e6xx-35-b1-cmc22211.html
1141*4882a593Smuzhiyun[7] http://www.ami.com/products/bios-uefi-tools-and-utilities/bios-uefi-utilities/
1142*4882a593Smuzhiyun[8] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcode
1143*4882a593Smuzhiyun[9] http://simplefirmware.org
1144*4882a593Smuzhiyun[10] http://www.intel.com/design/archives/processors/pro/docs/242016.htm
1145*4882a593Smuzhiyun[11] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table
1146*4882a593Smuzhiyun[12] http://events.linuxfoundation.org/sites/events/files/slides/chromeos_and_diy_vboot_0.pdf
1147*4882a593Smuzhiyun[13] http://events.linuxfoundation.org/sites/events/files/slides/elce-2014.pdf
1148*4882a593Smuzhiyun[14] http://www.seabios.org/SeaBIOS
1149*4882a593Smuzhiyun[15] doc/device-tree-bindings/misc/intel,irq-router.txt
1150*4882a593Smuzhiyun[16] http://www.acpi.info
1151*4882a593Smuzhiyun[17] https://www.acpica.org/downloads
1152