1U-Boot Falcon Mode 2==================== 3 4Introduction 5------------ 6 7This document provides an overview of how to add support for Falcon Mode 8to a board. 9 10Falcon Mode is introduced to speed up the booting process, allowing 11to boot a Linux kernel (or whatever image) without a full blown U-Boot. 12 13Falcon Mode relies on the SPL framework. In fact, to make booting faster, 14U-Boot is split into two parts: the SPL (Secondary Program Loader) and U-Boot 15image. In most implementations, SPL is used to start U-Boot when booting from 16a mass storage, such as NAND or SD-Card. SPL has now support for other media, 17and can generally be seen as a way to start an image performing the minimum 18required initialization. SPL mainly initializes the RAM controller, and then 19copies U-Boot image into the memory. 20 21The Falcon Mode extends this way allowing to start the Linux kernel directly 22from SPL. A new command is added to U-Boot to prepare the parameters that SPL 23must pass to the kernel, using ATAGS or Device Tree. 24 25In normal mode, these parameters are generated each time before 26loading the kernel, passing to Linux the address in memory where 27the parameters can be read. 28With Falcon Mode, this snapshot can be saved into persistent storage and SPL is 29informed to load it before running the kernel. 30 31To boot the kernel, these steps under a Falcon-aware U-Boot are required: 32 331. Boot the board into U-Boot. 34After loading the desired legacy-format kernel image into memory (and DT as 35well, if used), use the "spl export" command to generate the kernel parameters 36area or the DT. U-Boot runs as when it boots the kernel, but stops before 37passing the control to the kernel. 38 392. Save the prepared snapshot into persistent media. 40The address where to save it must be configured into board configuration 41file (CONFIG_CMD_SPL_NAND_OFS for NAND). 42 433. Boot the board into Falcon Mode. SPL will load the kernel and copy 44the parameters which are saved in the persistent area to the required address. 45If a valid uImage is not found at the defined location, U-Boot will be 46booted instead. 47 48It is required to implement a custom mechanism to select if SPL loads U-Boot 49or another image. 50 51The value of a GPIO is a simple way to operate the selection, as well as 52reading a character from the SPL console if CONFIG_SPL_CONSOLE is set. 53 54Falcon Mode is generally activated by setting CONFIG_SPL_OS_BOOT. This tells 55SPL that U-Boot is not the only available image that SPL is able to start. 56 57Configuration 58---------------------------- 59CONFIG_CMD_SPL Enable the "spl export" command. 60 The command "spl export" is then available in U-Boot 61 mode 62CONFIG_SYS_SPL_ARGS_ADDR Address in RAM where the parameters must be 63 copied by SPL. 64 In most cases, it is <start_of_ram> + 0x100 65 66CONFIG_SYS_NAND_SPL_KERNEL_OFFS Offset in NAND where the kernel is stored 67 68CONFIG_CMD_SPL_NAND_OFS Offset in NAND where the parameters area was saved. 69 70CONFIG_CMD_SPL_NOR_OFS Offset in NOR where the parameters area was saved. 71 72CONFIG_CMD_SPL_WRITE_SIZE Size of the parameters area to be copied 73 74CONFIG_SPL_OS_BOOT Activate Falcon Mode. 75 76Function that a board must implement 77------------------------------------ 78 79void spl_board_prepare_for_linux(void) : optional 80 Called from SPL before starting the kernel 81 82spl_start_uboot() : required 83 Returns "0" if SPL should start the kernel, "1" if U-Boot 84 must be started. 85 86Environment variables 87--------------------- 88 89A board may chose to look at the environment for decisions about falcon 90mode. In this case the following variables may be supported: 91 92boot_os : Set to yes/Yes/true/True/1 to enable booting to OS, 93 any other value to fall back to U-Boot (including 94 unset) 95falcon_args_file : Filename to load as the 'args' portion of falcon mode 96 rather than the hard-coded value. 97falcon_image_file : Filename to load as the OS image portion of falcon 98 mode rather than the hard-coded value. 99 100Using spl command 101----------------- 102 103spl - SPL configuration 104 105Usage: 106 107spl export <img=atags|fdt> [kernel_addr] [initrd_addr] [fdt_addr ] 108 109img : "atags" or "fdt" 110kernel_addr : kernel is loaded as part of the boot process, but it is not started. 111 This is the address where a kernel image is stored. 112initrd_addr : Address of initial ramdisk 113 can be set to "-" if fdt_addr without initrd_addr is used 114fdt_addr : in case of fdt, the address of the device tree. 115 116The spl export command does not write to a storage media. The user is 117responsible to transfer the gathered information (assembled ATAGS list 118or prepared FDT) from temporary storage in RAM into persistant storage 119after each run of 'spl export'. Unfortunately the position of temporary 120storage can not be predicted nor provided at commandline, it depends 121highly on your system setup and your provided data (ATAGS or FDT). 122However at the end of an succesful 'spl export' run it will print the 123RAM address of temporary storage. The RAM address of FDT will also be 124set in the environment variable 'fdtargsaddr', the new length of the 125prepared FDT will be set in the environment variable 'fdtargslen'. 126These environment variables can be used in scripts for writing updated 127FDT to persistent storage. 128 129Now the user have to save the generated BLOB from that printed address 130to the pre-defined address in persistent storage 131(CONFIG_CMD_SPL_NAND_OFS in case of NAND). 132The following example shows how to prepare the data for Falcon Mode on 133twister board with ATAGS BLOB. 134 135The "spl export" command is prepared to work with ATAGS and FDT. However, 136using FDT is at the moment untested. The ppc port (see a3m071 example 137later) prepares the fdt blob with the fdt command instead. 138 139 140Usage on the twister board: 141-------------------------------- 142 143Using mtd names with the following (default) configuration 144for mtdparts: 145 146device nand0 <omap2-nand.0>, # parts = 9 147 #: name size offset mask_flags 148 0: MLO 0x00080000 0x00000000 0 149 1: u-boot 0x00100000 0x00080000 0 150 2: env1 0x00040000 0x00180000 0 151 3: env2 0x00040000 0x001c0000 0 152 4: kernel 0x00600000 0x00200000 0 153 5: bootparms 0x00040000 0x00800000 0 154 6: splashimg 0x00200000 0x00840000 0 155 7: mini 0x02800000 0x00a40000 0 156 8: rootfs 0x1cdc0000 0x03240000 0 157 158 159twister => nand read 82000000 kernel 160 161NAND read: device 0 offset 0x200000, size 0x600000 162 6291456 bytes read: OK 163 164Now the kernel is in RAM at address 0x82000000 165 166twister => spl export atags 0x82000000 167## Booting kernel from Legacy Image at 82000000 ... 168 Image Name: Linux-3.5.0-rc4-14089-gda0b7f4 169 Image Type: ARM Linux Kernel Image (uncompressed) 170 Data Size: 3654808 Bytes = 3.5 MiB 171 Load Address: 80008000 172 Entry Point: 80008000 173 Verifying Checksum ... OK 174 Loading Kernel Image ... OK 175OK 176cmdline subcommand not supported 177bdt subcommand not supported 178Argument image is now in RAM at: 0x80000100 179 180The result can be checked at address 0x80000100: 181 182twister => md 0x80000100 18380000100: 00000005 54410001 00000000 00000000 ......AT........ 18480000110: 00000000 00000067 54410009 746f6f72 ....g.....ATroot 18580000120: 65642f3d 666e2f76 77722073 73666e20 =/dev/nfs rw nfs 186 187The parameters generated with this step can be saved into NAND at the offset 1880x800000 (value for twister for CONFIG_CMD_SPL_NAND_OFS) 189 190nand erase.part bootparms 191nand write 0x80000100 bootparms 0x4000 192 193Now the parameters are stored into the NAND flash at the address 194CONFIG_CMD_SPL_NAND_OFS (=0x800000). 195 196Next time, the board can be started into Falcon Mode moving the 197setting the gpio (on twister gpio 55 is used) to kernel mode. 198 199The kernel is loaded directly by the SPL without passing through U-Boot. 200 201Example with FDT: a3m071 board 202------------------------------- 203 204To boot the Linux kernel from the SPL, the DT blob (fdt) needs to get 205prepard/patched first. U-Boot usually inserts some dynamic values into 206the DT binary (blob), e.g. autodetected memory size, MAC addresses, 207clocks speeds etc. To generate this patched DT blob, you can use 208the following command: 209 2101. Load fdt blob to SDRAM: 211=> tftp 1800000 a3m071/a3m071.dtb 212 2132. Set bootargs as desired for Linux booting (e.g. flash_mtd): 214=> run mtdargs addip2 addtty 215 2163. Use "fdt" commands to patch the DT blob: 217=> fdt addr 1800000 218=> fdt boardsetup 219=> fdt chosen 220 2214. Display patched DT blob (optional): 222=> fdt print 223 2245. Save fdt to NOR flash: 225=> erase fc060000 fc07ffff 226=> cp.b 1800000 fc060000 10000 227... 228 229 230Falcon Mode was presented at the RMLL 2012. Slides are available at: 231 232http://schedule2012.rmll.info/IMG/pdf/LSM2012_UbootFalconMode_Babic.pdf 233