uboot/doc/README.distro
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   1SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
   2/*
   3 * (C) Copyright 2014 Red Hat Inc.
   4 * Copyright (c) 2014-2015, NVIDIA CORPORATION.  All rights reserved.
   5 * Copyright (C) 2015 K. Merker <merker@debian.org>
   6 */
   7
   8Generic Distro Configuration Concept
   9====================================
  10
  11Linux distributions are faced with supporting a variety of boot mechanisms,
  12environments or bootloaders (PC BIOS, EFI, U-Boot, Barebox, ...). This makes
  13life complicated. Worse, bootloaders such as U-Boot have a configurable set
  14of features, and each board chooses to enable a different set of features.
  15Hence, distros typically need to have board-specific knowledge in order to
  16set up a bootable system.
  17
  18This document defines a common set of U-Boot features that are required for
  19a distro to support the board in a generic fashion. Any board wishing to
  20allow distros to install and boot in an out-of-the-box fashion should enable
  21all these features. Linux distros can then create a single set of boot
  22support/install logic that targets these features. This will allow distros
  23to install on many boards without the need for board-specific logic.
  24
  25In fact, some of these features can be implemented by any bootloader, thus
  26decoupling distro install/boot logic from any knowledge of the bootloader.
  27
  28This model assumes that boards will load boot configuration files from a
  29regular storage mechanism (eMMC, SD card, USB Disk, SATA disk, etc.) with
  30a standard partitioning scheme (MBR, GPT). Boards that cannot support this
  31storage model are outside the scope of this document, and may still need
  32board-specific installer/boot-configuration support in a distro.
  33
  34To some extent, this model assumes that a board has a separate boot flash
  35that contains U-Boot, and that the user has somehow installed U-Boot to this
  36flash before running the distro installer. Even on boards that do not conform
  37to this aspect of the model, the extent of the board-specific support in the
  38distro installer logic would be to install a board-specific U-Boot package to
  39the boot partition during installation. This distro-supplied U-Boot can still
  40implement the same features as on any other board, and hence the distro's boot
  41configuration file generation logic can still be board-agnostic.
  42
  43Locating Bootable Disks
  44-----------------------
  45
  46Typical desktop/server PCs search all (or a user-defined subset of) attached
  47storage devices for a bootable partition, then load the bootloader or boot
  48configuration files from there. A U-Boot board port that enables the features
  49mentioned in this document will search for boot configuration files in the
  50same way.
  51
  52Thus, distros do not need to manipulate any kind of bootloader-specific
  53configuration data to indicate which storage device the system should boot
  54from.
  55
  56Distros simply need to install the boot configuration files (see next
  57section) in an ext2/3/4 or FAT partition, mark the partition bootable (via
  58the MBR bootable flag, or GPT legacy_bios_bootable attribute), and U-Boot (or
  59any other bootloader) will find those boot files and execute them. This is
  60conceptually identical to creating a grub2 configuration file on a desktop
  61PC.
  62
  63Note that in the absence of any partition that is explicitly marked bootable,
  64U-Boot falls back to searching the first valid partition of a disk for boot
  65configuration files. Other bootloaders are recommended to do the same, since
  66I believe that partition table bootable flags aren't so commonly used outside
  67the realm of x86 PCs.
  68
  69U-Boot can also search for boot configuration files from a TFTP server.
  70
  71Boot Configuration Files
  72------------------------
  73
  74The standard format for boot configuration files is that of extlinux.conf, as
  75handled by U-Boot's "syslinux" (disk) or "pxe boot" (network). This is roughly
  76as specified at:
  77
  78http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/BootLoaderSpec/
  79
  80... with the exceptions that the BootLoaderSpec document:
  81
  82* Prescribes a separate configuration per boot menu option, whereas U-Boot
  83  lumps all options into a single extlinux.conf file. Hence, U-Boot searches
  84  for /extlinux/extlinux.conf then /boot/extlinux/extlinux.conf on disk, or
  85  pxelinux.cfg/default over the network.
  86
  87* Does not document the fdtdir option, which automatically selects the DTB to
  88  pass to the kernel.
  89
  90One example extlinux.conf generated by the Fedora installer is:
  91
  92------------------------------------------------------------
  93# extlinux.conf generated by anaconda
  94
  95ui menu.c32
  96
  97menu autoboot Welcome to Fedora. Automatic boot in # second{,s}. Press a key for options.
  98menu title Fedora Boot Options.
  99menu hidden
 100
 101timeout 50
 102#totaltimeout 9000
 103
 104default Fedora (3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl+lpae) 22 (Rawhide)
 105
 106label Fedora (3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl) 22 (Rawhide)
 107        kernel /boot/vmlinuz-3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl
 108        append ro root=UUID=8eac677f-8ea8-4270-8479-d5ddbb797450 console=ttyS0,115200n8 LANG=en_US.UTF-8 drm.debug=0xf
 109        fdtdir /boot/dtb-3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl
 110        initrd /boot/initramfs-3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl.img
 111
 112label Fedora (3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl+lpae) 22 (Rawhide)
 113        kernel /boot/vmlinuz-3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl+lpae
 114        append ro root=UUID=8eac677f-8ea8-4270-8479-d5ddbb797450 console=ttyS0,115200n8 LANG=en_US.UTF-8 drm.debug=0xf
 115        fdtdir /boot/dtb-3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl+lpae
 116        initrd /boot/initramfs-3.17.0-0.rc4.git2.1.fc22.armv7hl+lpae.img
 117
 118label Fedora-0-rescue-8f6ba7b039524e0eb957d2c9203f04bc (0-rescue-8f6ba7b039524e0eb957d2c9203f04bc)
 119        kernel /boot/vmlinuz-0-rescue-8f6ba7b039524e0eb957d2c9203f04bc
 120        initrd /boot/initramfs-0-rescue-8f6ba7b039524e0eb957d2c9203f04bc.img
 121        append ro root=UUID=8eac677f-8ea8-4270-8479-d5ddbb797450 console=ttyS0,115200n8
 122        fdtdir /boot/dtb-3.16.0-0.rc6.git1.1.fc22.armv7hl+lpae
 123------------------------------------------------------------
 124
 125Another hand-crafted network boot configuration file is:
 126
 127------------------------------------------------------------
 128TIMEOUT 100
 129
 130MENU TITLE TFTP boot options
 131
 132LABEL jetson-tk1-emmc
 133        MENU LABEL ../zImage root on Jetson TK1 eMMC
 134        LINUX ../zImage
 135        FDTDIR ../
 136        APPEND console=ttyS0,115200n8 console=tty1 loglevel=8 rootwait rw earlyprintk root=PARTUUID=80a5a8e9-c744-491a-93c1-4f4194fd690b
 137
 138LABEL venice2-emmc
 139        MENU LABEL ../zImage root on Venice2 eMMC
 140        LINUX ../zImage
 141        FDTDIR ../
 142        APPEND console=ttyS0,115200n8 console=tty1 loglevel=8 rootwait rw earlyprintk root=PARTUUID=5f71e06f-be08-48ed-b1ef-ee4800cc860f
 143
 144LABEL sdcard
 145        MENU LABEL ../zImage, root on 2GB sdcard
 146        LINUX ../zImage
 147        FDTDIR ../
 148        APPEND console=ttyS0,115200n8 console=tty1 loglevel=8 rootwait rw earlyprintk root=PARTUUID=b2f82cda-2535-4779-b467-094a210fbae7
 149
 150LABEL fedora-installer-fk
 151        MENU LABEL Fedora installer w/ Fedora kernel
 152        LINUX fedora-installer/vmlinuz
 153        INITRD fedora-installer/initrd.img.orig
 154        FDTDIR fedora-installer/dtb
 155        APPEND loglevel=8 ip=dhcp inst.repo=http://10.0.0.2/mirrors/fedora/linux/development/rawhide/armhfp/os/ rd.shell cma=64M
 156------------------------------------------------------------
 157
 158U-Boot Implementation
 159=====================
 160
 161Enabling the distro options
 162---------------------------
 163
 164In your board's defconfig, enable the DISTRO_DEFAULTS option by adding
 165a line with "CONFIG_DISTRO_DEFAULTS=y". If you want to enable this
 166from Kconfig itself, for e.g. all boards using a specific SoC then
 167add a "imply DISTRO_DEFAULTS" to your SoC CONFIG option.
 168
 169In your board configuration file, include the following:
 170
 171------------------------------------------------------------
 172#ifndef CONFIG_SPL_BUILD
 173#include <config_distro_bootcmd.h>
 174#endif
 175------------------------------------------------------------
 176
 177The first of those headers primarily enables a core set of U-Boot features,
 178such as support for MBR and GPT partitions, ext* and FAT filesystems, booting
 179raw zImage and initrd (rather than FIT- or uImage-wrapped files), etc. Network
 180boot support is also enabled here, which is useful in order to boot distro
 181installers given that distros do not commonly distribute bootable install
 182media for non-PC targets at present.
 183
 184Finally, a few options that are mostly relevant only when using U-Boot-
 185specific boot.scr scripts are enabled. This enables distros to generate a
 186U-Boot-specific boot.scr script rather than extlinux.conf as the boot
 187configuration file. While doing so is fully supported, and
 188CONFIG_DISTRO_DEFAULTS exposes enough parameterization to boot.scr to
 189allow for board-agnostic boot.scr content, this document recommends that
 190distros generate extlinux.conf rather than boot.scr. extlinux.conf is intended
 191to work across multiple bootloaders, whereas boot.scr will only work with
 192U-Boot. TODO: document the contract between U-Boot and boot.scr re: which
 193environment variables a generic boot.scr may rely upon.
 194
 195The second of those headers sets up the default environment so that $bootcmd
 196is defined in a way that searches attached disks for boot configuration files,
 197and executes them if found.
 198
 199Required Environment Variables
 200------------------------------
 201
 202The U-Boot "syslinux" and "pxe boot" commands require a number of environment
 203variables be set. Default values for these variables are often hard-coded into
 204CONFIG_EXTRA_ENV_SETTINGS in the board's U-Boot configuration file, so that
 205the user doesn't have to configure them.
 206
 207fdt_addr:
 208
 209  Mandatory for any system that provides the DTB in HW (e.g. ROM) and wishes
 210  to pass that DTB to Linux, rather than loading a DTB from the boot
 211  filesystem. Prohibited for any other system.
 212
 213  If specified a DTB to boot the system must be available at the given
 214  address.
 215
 216fdt_addr_r:
 217
 218  Mandatory. The location in RAM where the DTB will be loaded or copied to when
 219  processing the fdtdir/devicetreedir or fdt/devicetree options in
 220  extlinux.conf.
 221
 222  This is mandatory even when fdt_addr is provided, since extlinux.conf must
 223  always be able to provide a DTB which overrides any copy provided by the HW.
 224
 225  A size of 1MB for the FDT/DTB seems reasonable.
 226
 227fdtfile:
 228
 229  Mandatory. the name of the DTB file for the specific board for instance
 230  the espressobin v5 board the value is "marvell/armada-3720-espressobin.dtb"
 231  while on a clearfog pro it is "armada-388-clearfog-pro.dtb" in the case of
 232  a board providing its firmware based DTB this value can be used to override
 233  the DTB with a different DTB. fdtfile will automatically be set for you if
 234  it matches the format ${soc}-${board}.dtb which covers most 32 bit use cases.
 235  AArch64 generally does not match as the Linux kernel put the dtb files under
 236  SoC vendor directories. 
 237
 238ramdisk_addr_r:
 239
 240  Mandatory. The location in RAM where the initial ramdisk will be loaded to
 241  when processing the initrd option in extlinux.conf.
 242
 243  It is recommended that this location be highest in RAM out of fdt_addr_,
 244  kernel_addr_r, and ramdisk_addr_r, so that the RAM disk can vary in size
 245  and use any available RAM.
 246
 247kernel_addr_r:
 248
 249  Mandatory. The location in RAM where the kernel will be loaded to when
 250  processing the kernel option in the extlinux.conf.
 251
 252  The kernel should be located within the first 128M of RAM in order for the
 253  kernel CONFIG_AUTO_ZRELADDR option to work, which is likely enabled on any
 254  distro kernel. Since the kernel will decompress itself to 0x8000 after the
 255  start of RAM, kernel_addr_r should not overlap that area, or the kernel will
 256  have to copy itself somewhere else first before decompression.
 257
 258  A size of 16MB for the kernel is likely adequate.
 259
 260kernel_comp_addr_r:
 261  Optional. This is only required if user wants to boot Linux from a compressed
 262  Image(.gz, .bz2, .lzma, .lzo) using the booti command. It represents the
 263  location in RAM where the compressed Image will be decompressed temporarily.
 264  Once the decompression is complete, the decompressed data will be moved to
 265  kernel_addr_r for booting.
 266
 267kernel_comp_size:
 268  Optional. This is only required if user wants to boot Linux from a compressed
 269  Image using booti command. It represents the size of the compressed file. The
 270  size has to at least the size of loaded image for decompression to succeed.
 271
 272pxefile_addr_r:
 273
 274  Mandatory. The location in RAM where extlinux.conf will be loaded to prior
 275  to processing.
 276
 277  A size of 1MB for extlinux.conf is more than adequate.
 278
 279scriptaddr:
 280
 281  Mandatory, if the boot script is boot.scr rather than extlinux.conf. The
 282  location in RAM where boot.scr will be loaded to prior to execution.
 283
 284  A size of 1MB for extlinux.conf is more than adequate.
 285
 286For suggestions on memory locations for ARM systems, you must follow the
 287guidelines specified in Documentation/arm/Booting in the Linux kernel tree.
 288
 289For a commented example of setting these values, please see the definition of
 290MEM_LAYOUT_ENV_SETTINGS in include/configs/tegra124-common.h.
 291
 292Boot Target Configuration
 293-------------------------
 294
 295<config_distro_bootcmd.h> defines $bootcmd and many helper command variables
 296that automatically search attached disks for boot configuration files and
 297execute them. Boards must provide configure <config_distro_bootcmd.h> so that
 298it supports the correct set of possible boot device types. To provide this
 299configuration, simply define macro BOOT_TARGET_DEVICES prior to including
 300<config_distro_bootcmd.h>. For example:
 301
 302------------------------------------------------------------
 303#ifndef CONFIG_SPL_BUILD
 304#define BOOT_TARGET_DEVICES(func) \
 305        func(MMC, mmc, 1) \
 306        func(MMC, mmc, 0) \
 307        func(USB, usb, 0) \
 308        func(PXE, pxe, na) \
 309        func(DHCP, dhcp, na)
 310#include <config_distro_bootcmd.h>
 311#endif
 312------------------------------------------------------------
 313
 314Each entry in the macro defines a single boot device (e.g. a specific eMMC
 315device or SD card) or type of boot device (e.g. USB disk). The parameters to
 316the func macro (passed in by the internal implementation of the header) are:
 317
 318- Upper-case disk type (MMC, SATA, SCSI, IDE, USB, DHCP, PXE, VIRTIO).
 319- Lower-case disk type (same options as above).
 320- ID of the specific disk (MMC only) or ignored for other types.
 321
 322User Configuration
 323==================
 324
 325Once the user has installed U-Boot, it is expected that the environment will
 326be reset to the default values in order to enable $bootcmd and friends, as set
 327up by <config_distro_bootcmd.h>. After this, various environment variables may
 328be altered to influence the boot process:
 329
 330boot_targets:
 331
 332  The list of boot locations searched.
 333
 334  Example: mmc0, mmc1, usb, pxe
 335
 336  Entries may be removed or re-ordered in this list to affect the boot order.
 337
 338boot_prefixes:
 339
 340  For disk-based booting, the list of directories within a partition that are
 341  searched for boot configuration files (extlinux.conf, boot.scr).
 342
 343  Example: / /boot/
 344
 345  Entries may be removed or re-ordered in this list to affect the set of
 346  directories which are searched.
 347
 348boot_scripts:
 349
 350  The name of U-Boot style boot.scr files that $bootcmd searches for.
 351
 352  Example: boot.scr.uimg boot.scr
 353
 354  (Typically we expect extlinux.conf to be used, but execution of boot.scr is
 355  maintained for backwards-compatibility.)
 356
 357  Entries may be removed or re-ordered in this list to affect the set of
 358  filenames which are supported.
 359
 360scan_dev_for_extlinux:
 361
 362  If you want to disable extlinux.conf on all disks, set the value to something
 363  innocuous, e.g. setenv scan_dev_for_extlinux true.
 364
 365scan_dev_for_scripts:
 366
 367  If you want to disable boot.scr on all disks, set the value to something
 368  innocuous, e.g. setenv scan_dev_for_scripts true.
 369
 370boot_net_usb_start:
 371
 372  If you want to prevent USB enumeration by distro boot commands which execute
 373  network operations, set the value to something innocuous, e.g. setenv
 374  boot_net_usb_start true. This would be useful if you know your Ethernet
 375  device is not attached to USB, and you wish to increase boot speed by
 376  avoiding unnecessary actions.
 377
 378boot_net_pci_enum:
 379
 380  If you want to prevent PCI enumeration by distro boot commands which execute
 381  network operations, set the value to something innocuous, e.g. setenv
 382  boot_net_pci_enum true. This would be useful if you know your Ethernet
 383  device is not attached to PCI, and you wish to increase boot speed by
 384  avoiding unnecessary actions.
 385
 386Interactively booting from a specific device at the u-boot prompt
 387=================================================================
 388
 389For interactively booting from a user-selected device at the u-boot command
 390prompt, the environment provides predefined bootcmd_<target> variables for
 391every target defined in boot_targets, which can be run be the user.
 392
 393If the target is a storage device, the format of the target is always
 394<device type><device number>, e.g. mmc0.  Specifying the device number is
 395mandatory for storage devices, even if only support for a single instance
 396of the storage device is actually implemented.
 397
 398For network targets (dhcp, pxe), only the device type gets specified;
 399they do not have a device number.
 400
 401Examples:
 402
 403 - run bootcmd_usb0
 404   boots from the first USB mass storage device
 405
 406 - run bootcmd_mmc1
 407   boots from the second MMC device
 408
 409 - run bootcmd_pxe
 410   boots by tftp using a pxelinux.cfg
 411
 412The list of possible targets consists of:
 413
 414- network targets
 415  * dhcp
 416  * pxe
 417
 418- storage targets (to which a device number must be appended)
 419  * mmc
 420  * sata
 421  * scsi
 422  * ide
 423  * usb
 424  * virtio
 425
 426Other *boot* variables than the ones defined above are only for internal use
 427of the boot environment and are not guaranteed to exist or work in the same
 428way in future u-boot versions.  In particular the <device type>_boot
 429variables (e.g. mmc_boot, usb_boot) are a strictly internal implementation
 430detail and must not be used as a public interface.
 431