uboot/doc/README.gpt
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   1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
   2#
   3#  Copyright (C) 2012 Samsung Electronics
   4#
   5#  Lukasz Majewski <l.majewski@samsung.com>
   6
   7Glossary:
   8========
   9- UUID -(Universally Unique Identifier)
  10- GUID - (Globally Unique ID)
  11- EFI - (Extensible Firmware Interface)
  12- UEFI - (Unified EFI) - EFI evolution
  13- GPT (GUID Partition Table) - it is the EFI standard part
  14- partitions - lists of available partitions (defined at u-boot):
  15  ./include/configs/{target}.h
  16
  17Introduction:
  18=============
  19This document describes the GPT partition table format and usage of
  20the gpt command in u-boot.
  21
  22UUID introduction:
  23====================
  24
  25GPT for marking disks/partitions is using the UUID. It is supposed to be a
  26globally unique value. A UUID is a 16-byte (128-bit) number. The number of
  27theoretically possible UUIDs is therefore about 3 x 10^38.
  28More often UUID is displayed as 32 hexadecimal digits, in 5 groups,
  29separated by hyphens, in the form 8-4-4-4-12 for a total of 36 characters
  30(32 digits and 4 hyphens)
  31
  32For instance, GUID of Basic data partition: EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
  33and GUID of Linux filesystem data: 0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4
  34
  35Historically there are 5 methods to generate this number. The oldest one is
  36combining machine's MAC address and timer (epoch) value.
  37
  38Successive versions are using MD5 hash, random numbers and SHA-1 hash. All major
  39OSes and programming languages are providing libraries to compute UUID (e.g.
  40uuid command line tool).
  41
  42GPT brief explanation:
  43======================
  44
  45        Layout:
  46        -------
  47
  48        --------------------------------------------------
  49        LBA 0          |Protective MBR                   |
  50        ----------------------------------------------------------
  51        LBA 1          |Primary GPT Header               | Primary
  52        -------------------------------------------------- GPT
  53        LBA 2          |Entry 1|Entry 2| Entry 3| Entry 4|
  54        --------------------------------------------------
  55        LBA 3          |Entries 5 - 128                  |
  56                       |                                 |
  57                       |                                 |
  58        ----------------------------------------------------------
  59        LBA 34         |Partition 1                      |
  60                       |                                 |
  61                       -----------------------------------
  62                       |Partition 2                      |
  63                       |                                 |
  64                       -----------------------------------
  65                       |Partition n                      |
  66                       |                                 |
  67        ----------------------------------------------------------
  68        LBA -34        |Entry 1|Entry 2| Entry 3| Entry 4| Backup
  69        -------------------------------------------------- GPT
  70        LBA -33        |Entries 5 - 128                  |
  71                       |                                 |
  72                       |                                 |
  73        LBA -2         |                                 |
  74        --------------------------------------------------
  75        LBA -1         |Backup GPT Header                |
  76        ----------------------------------------------------------
  77
  78For a legacy reasons, GPT's LBA 0 sector has a MBR structure. It is called
  79"protective MBR".
  80Its first partition entry ID has 0xEE value, and disk software, which is not
  81handling the GPT sees it as a storage device without free space.
  82
  83It is possible to define 128 linearly placed partition entries.
  84
  85"LBA -1" means the last addressable block (in the mmc subsystem:
  86"dev_desc->lba - 1")
  87
  88Primary/Backup GPT header:
  89----------------------------
  90Offset  Size    Description
  91
  920       8 B     Signature ("EFI PART", 45 46 49 20 50 41 52 54)
  938       4 B     Revision (For version 1.0, the value is 00 00 01 00)
  9412      4 B     Header size (in bytes, usually 5C 00 00 00 meaning 92 bytes)
  9516      4 B     CRC32 of header (0 to header size), with this field zeroed
  96                during calculation
  9720      4 B     Reserved (ZERO);
  9824      8 B     Current LBA (location of this header copy)
  9932      8 B     Backup LBA (location of the other header copy)
 10040      8 B     First usable LBA for partitions (primary partition table last
 101                LBA + 1)
 10248      8 B     Last usable LBA (secondary partition table first LBA - 1)
 10356      16 B    Disk GUID (also referred as UUID on UNIXes)
 10472      8 B     Partition entries starting LBA (always 2 in primary copy)
 10580      4 B     Number of partition entries
 10684      4 B     Size of a partition entry (usually 128)
 10788      4 B     CRC32 of partition array
 10892      *       Reserved; must be ZERO (420 bytes for a 512-byte LBA)
 109
 110TOTAL: 512 B
 111
 112
 113IMPORTANT:
 114
 115GPT headers and partition entries are protected by CRC32 (the POSIX CRC32).
 116
 117Primary GPT header and Backup GPT header have swapped values of "Current LBA"
 118and "Backup LBA" and therefore different CRC32 check-sum.
 119
 120CRC32 for GPT headers (field "CRC of header") are calculated up till
 121"Header size" (92), NOT 512 bytes.
 122
 123CRC32 for partition entries (field "CRC32 of partition array") is calculated for
 124the whole array entry ( Number_of_partition_entries *
 125sizeof(partition_entry_size (usually 128)))
 126
 127Observe, how Backup GPT is placed in the memory. It is NOT a mirror reflect
 128of the Primary.
 129
 130           Partition Entry Format:
 131           ----------------------
 132           Offset  Size    Description
 133
 134           0       16 B    Partition type GUID (Big Endian)
 135           16      16 B    Unique partition GUID in (Big Endian)
 136           32      8  B    First LBA (Little Endian)
 137           40      8  B    Last LBA (inclusive)
 138           48      8  B    Attribute flags [+]
 139           56      72 B    Partition name (text)
 140
 141           Attribute flags:
 142           Bit 0  - System partition
 143           Bit 1  - Hide from EFI
 144           Bit 2  - Legacy BIOS bootable
 145           Bit 48-63 - Defined and used by the individual partition type
 146           For Basic data partition :
 147           Bit 60 - Read-only
 148           Bit 62 - Hidden
 149           Bit 63 - Not mount
 150
 151Creating GPT partitions in U-Boot:
 152==============
 153
 154To restore GUID partition table one needs to:
 1551. Define partition layout in the environment.
 156   Format of partitions layout:
 157     "uuid_disk=...;name=u-boot,size=60MiB,uuid=...;
 158        name=kernel,size=60MiB,uuid=...;"
 159     or
 160     "uuid_disk=${uuid_gpt_disk};name=${uboot_name},
 161        size=${uboot_size},uuid=${uboot_uuid};"
 162
 163   The fields 'name' and 'size' are mandatory for every partition.
 164   The field 'start' is optional.
 165
 166   If field 'size' of the last partition is 0, the partition is extended
 167   up to the end of the device.
 168
 169   The fields 'uuid' and 'uuid_disk' are optional if CONFIG_RANDOM_UUID is
 170   enabled. A random uuid will be used if omitted or they point to an empty/
 171   non-existent environment variable. The environment variable will be set to
 172   the generated UUID.  The 'gpt guid' command reads the current value of the
 173   uuid_disk from the GPT.
 174
 175   The field 'bootable' is optional, it is used to mark the GPT partition
 176   bootable (set attribute flags "Legacy BIOS bootable").
 177     "name=u-boot,size=60MiB;name=boot,size=60Mib,bootable;name=rootfs,size=0"
 178   It can be used to locate bootable disks with command
 179   "part list <interface> <dev> -bootable <varname>",
 180   please check out doc/README.distro for use.
 181
 1822. Define 'CONFIG_EFI_PARTITION' and 'CONFIG_CMD_GPT'
 183
 1843. From u-boot prompt type:
 185   gpt write mmc 0 $partitions
 186
 187Checking (validating) GPT partitions in U-Boot:
 188===============================================
 189
 190Procedure is the same as above. The only change is at point 3.
 191
 192At u-boot prompt one needs to write:
 193   gpt verify mmc 0 [$partitions]
 194
 195where [$partitions] is an optional parameter.
 196
 197When it is not provided, only basic checks based on CRC32 calculation for GPT
 198header and PTEs are performed.
 199When provided, additionally partition data - name, size and starting
 200offset (last two in LBA) - are compared with data defined in '$partitions'
 201environment variable.
 202
 203After running this command, return code is set to 0 if no errors found in
 204on non-volatile medium stored GPT.
 205
 206Following line can be used to assess if GPT verification has succeed:
 207
 208U-BOOT> gpt verify mmc 0 $partitions
 209U-BOOT> if test $? = 0; then echo "GPT OK"; else echo "GPT ERR"; fi
 210
 211Renaming GPT partitions from U-Boot:
 212====================================
 213
 214GPT partition names are a mechanism via which userspace and U-Boot can
 215communicate about software updates and boot failure.  The 'gpt guid',
 216'gpt read', 'gpt rename' and 'gpt swap' commands facilitate
 217programmatic renaming of partitions from bootscripts by generating and
 218modifying the partitions layout string.  Here is an illustration of
 219employing 'swap' to exchange 'primary' and 'backup' partition names:
 220
 221U-BOOT> gpt swap mmc 0 primary backup
 222
 223Afterwards, all partitions previously named 'primary' will be named
 224'backup', and vice-versa.  Alternatively, single partitions may be
 225renamed.  In this example, mmc0's first partition will be renamed
 226'primary':
 227
 228U-BOOT> gpt rename mmc 0 1 primary
 229
 230The GPT functionality may be tested with the 'sandbox' board by
 231creating a disk image as described under 'Block Device Emulation' in
 232doc/arch/index.rst:
 233
 234=>host bind 0 ./disk.raw
 235=> gpt read host 0
 236[ . . . ]
 237=> gpt swap host 0 name othername
 238[ . . . ]
 239
 240Modifying GPT partition layout from U-Boot:
 241===========================================
 242
 243The entire GPT partition layout can be exported to an environment
 244variable and then modified enmasse. Users can change the partition
 245numbers, offsets, names and sizes. The resulting variable can used to
 246reformat the device. Here is an example of reading the GPT partitions
 247into a variable and then modifying them:
 248
 249U-BOOT> gpt read mmc 0 current_partitions
 250U-BOOT> env edit current_partitions
 251edit: uuid_disk=[...];name=part1,start=0x4000,size=0x4000,uuid=[...];
 252name=part2,start=0xc000,size=0xc000,uuid=[...];[ . . . ]
 253
 254U-BOOT> gpt write mmc 0 $current_partitions
 255U-BOOT> gpt verify mmc 0 $current_partitions
 256
 257Partition type GUID:
 258====================
 259
 260For created partition, the used partition type GUID is
 261PARTITION_BASIC_DATA_GUID (EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7).
 262
 263If you define 'CONFIG_PARTITION_TYPE_GUID', a optionnal parameter 'type'
 264can specify a other partition type guid:
 265
 266     "uuid_disk=...;name=u-boot,size=60MiB,uuid=...;
 267        name=kernel,size=60MiB,uuid=...,
 268        type=0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4;"
 269
 270Some strings can be also used at the place of known GUID :
 271        "system"          = PARTITION_SYSTEM_GUID
 272                            (C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B)
 273        "mbr"             = LEGACY_MBR_PARTITION_GUID
 274                            (024DEE41-33E7-11D3-9D69-0008C781F39F)
 275        "msft"            = PARTITION_MSFT_RESERVED_GUID
 276                            (E3C9E316-0B5C-4DB8-817D-F92DF00215AE)
 277        "data"            = PARTITION_BASIC_DATA_GUID
 278                             (EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7)
 279        "linux"           = PARTITION_LINUX_FILE_SYSTEM_DATA_GUID
 280                            (0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4)
 281        "raid"            = PARTITION_LINUX_RAID_GUID
 282                            (A19D880F-05FC-4D3B-A006-743F0F84911E)
 283        "swap"            = PARTITION_LINUX_SWAP_GUID
 284                            (0657FD6D-A4AB-43C4-84E5-0933C84B4F4F)
 285        "lvm"             = PARTITION_LINUX_LVM_GUID
 286                            (E6D6D379-F507-44C2-A23C-238F2A3DF928)
 287        "u-boot-env"      = PARTITION_U_BOOT_ENVIRONMENT
 288                            (3DE21764-95BD-54BD-A5C3-4ABE786F38A8)
 289
 290    "uuid_disk=...;name=u-boot,size=60MiB,uuid=...;
 291        name=kernel,size=60MiB,uuid=...,type=linux;"
 292
 293They are also used to display the type of partition in "part list" command.
 294
 295
 296Useful info:
 297============
 298
 299Two programs, namely: 'gdisk' and 'parted' are recommended to work with GPT
 300recovery. Both are able to handle GUID partitions.
 301Please, pay attention at -l switch for parted.
 302
 303"uuid" program is recommended to generate UUID string. Moreover it can decode
 304(-d switch) passed in UUID string. It can be used to generate partitions UUID
 305passed to u-boot environment variables.
 306If optional CONFIG_RANDOM_UUID is defined then for any partition which environment
 307uuid is unset, uuid is randomly generated and stored in correspond environment
 308variable.
 309
 310note:
 311Each string block of UUID generated by program "uuid" is in big endian and it is
 312also stored in big endian in disk GPT.
 313Partitions layout can be printed by typing "mmc part". Note that each partition
 314GUID has different byte order than UUID generated before, this is because first
 315three blocks of GUID string are in Little Endian.
 316