| The PowerPC boot wrapper |
| ------------------------ |
| Copyright (C) Secret Lab Technologies Ltd. |
| |
| PowerPC image targets compresses and wraps the kernel image (vmlinux) with |
| a boot wrapper to make it usable by the system firmware. There is no |
| standard PowerPC firmware interface, so the boot wrapper is designed to |
| be adaptable for each kind of image that needs to be built. |
| |
| The boot wrapper can be found in the arch/powerpc/boot/ directory. The |
| Makefile in that directory has targets for all the available image types. |
| The different image types are used to support all of the various firmware |
| interfaces found on PowerPC platforms. OpenFirmware is the most commonly |
| used firmware type on general purpose PowerPC systems from Apple, IBM and |
| others. U-Boot is typically found on embedded PowerPC hardware, but there |
| are a handful of other firmware implementations which are also popular. Each |
| firmware interface requires a different image format. |
| |
| The boot wrapper is built from the makefile in arch/powerpc/boot/Makefile and |
| it uses the wrapper script (arch/powerpc/boot/wrapper) to generate target |
| image. The details of the build system is discussed in the next section. |
| Currently, the following image format targets exist: |
| |
| cuImage.%: Backwards compatible uImage for older version of |
| U-Boot (for versions that don't understand the device |
| tree). This image embeds a device tree blob inside |
| the image. The boot wrapper, kernel and device tree |
| are all embedded inside the U-Boot uImage file format |
| with boot wrapper code that extracts data from the old |
| bd_info structure and loads the data into the device |
| tree before jumping into the kernel. |
| Because of the series of #ifdefs found in the |
| bd_info structure used in the old U-Boot interfaces, |
| cuImages are platform specific. Each specific |
| U-Boot platform has a different platform init file |
| which populates the embedded device tree with data |
| from the platform specific bd_info file. The platform |
| specific cuImage platform init code can be found in |
| arch/powerpc/boot/cuboot.*.c. Selection of the correct |
| cuImage init code for a specific board can be found in |
| the wrapper structure. |
| dtbImage.%: Similar to zImage, except device tree blob is embedded |
| inside the image instead of provided by firmware. The |
| output image file can be either an elf file or a flat |
| binary depending on the platform. |
| dtbImages are used on systems which do not have an |
| interface for passing a device tree directly. |
| dtbImages are similar to simpleImages except that |
| dtbImages have platform specific code for extracting |
| data from the board firmware, but simpleImages do not |
| talk to the firmware at all. |
| PlayStation 3 support uses dtbImage. So do Embedded |
| Planet boards using the PlanetCore firmware. Board |
| specific initialization code is typically found in a |
| file named arch/powerpc/boot/<platform>.c; but this |
| can be overridden by the wrapper script. |
| simpleImage.%: Firmware independent compressed image that does not |
| depend on any particular firmware interface and embeds |
| a device tree blob. This image is a flat binary that |
| can be loaded to any location in RAM and jumped to. |
| Firmware cannot pass any configuration data to the |
| kernel with this image type and it depends entirely on |
| the embedded device tree for all information. |
| The simpleImage is useful for booting systems with |
| an unknown firmware interface or for booting from |
| a debugger when no firmware is present (such as on |
| the Xilinx Virtex platform). The only assumption that |
| simpleImage makes is that RAM is correctly initialized |
| and that the MMU is either off or has RAM mapped to |
| base address 0. |
| simpleImage also supports inserting special platform |
| specific initialization code to the start of the bootup |
| sequence. The virtex405 platform uses this feature to |
| ensure that the cache is invalidated before caching |
| is enabled. Platform specific initialization code is |
| added as part of the wrapper script and is keyed on |
| the image target name. For example, all |
| simpleImage.virtex405-* targets will add the |
| virtex405-head.S initialization code (This also means |
| that the dts file for virtex405 targets should be |
| named (virtex405-<board>.dts). Search the wrapper |
| script for 'virtex405' and see the file |
| arch/powerpc/boot/virtex405-head.S for details. |
| treeImage.%; Image format for used with OpenBIOS firmware found |
| on some ppc4xx hardware. This image embeds a device |
| tree blob inside the image. |
| uImage: Native image format used by U-Boot. The uImage target |
| does not add any boot code. It just wraps a compressed |
| vmlinux in the uImage data structure. This image |
| requires a version of U-Boot that is able to pass |
| a device tree to the kernel at boot. If using an older |
| version of U-Boot, then you need to use a cuImage |
| instead. |
| zImage.%: Image format which does not embed a device tree. |
| Used by OpenFirmware and other firmware interfaces |
| which are able to supply a device tree. This image |
| expects firmware to provide the device tree at boot. |
| Typically, if you have general purpose PowerPC |
| hardware then you want this image format. |
| |
| Image types which embed a device tree blob (simpleImage, dtbImage, treeImage, |
| and cuImage) all generate the device tree blob from a file in the |
| arch/powerpc/boot/dts/ directory. The Makefile selects the correct device |
| tree source based on the name of the target. Therefore, if the kernel is |
| built with 'make treeImage.walnut simpleImage.virtex405-ml403', then the |
| build system will use arch/powerpc/boot/dts/walnut.dts to build |
| treeImage.walnut and arch/powerpc/boot/dts/virtex405-ml403.dts to build |
| the simpleImage.virtex405-ml403. |
| |
| Two special targets called 'zImage' and 'zImage.initrd' also exist. These |
| targets build all the default images as selected by the kernel configuration. |
| Default images are selected by the boot wrapper Makefile |
| (arch/powerpc/boot/Makefile) by adding targets to the $image-y variable. Look |
| at the Makefile to see which default image targets are available. |
| |
| How it is built |
| --------------- |
| arch/powerpc is designed to support multiplatform kernels, which means |
| that a single vmlinux image can be booted on many different target boards. |
| It also means that the boot wrapper must be able to wrap for many kinds of |
| images on a single build. The design decision was made to not use any |
| conditional compilation code (#ifdef, etc) in the boot wrapper source code. |
| All of the boot wrapper pieces are buildable at any time regardless of the |
| kernel configuration. Building all the wrapper bits on every kernel build |
| also ensures that obscure parts of the wrapper are at the very least compile |
| tested in a large variety of environments. |
| |
| The wrapper is adapted for different image types at link time by linking in |
| just the wrapper bits that are appropriate for the image type. The 'wrapper |
| script' (found in arch/powerpc/boot/wrapper) is called by the Makefile and |
| is responsible for selecting the correct wrapper bits for the image type. |
| The arguments are well documented in the script's comment block, so they |
| are not repeated here. However, it is worth mentioning that the script |
| uses the -p (platform) argument as the main method of deciding which wrapper |
| bits to compile in. Look for the large 'case "$platform" in' block in the |
| middle of the script. This is also the place where platform specific fixups |
| can be selected by changing the link order. |
| |
| In particular, care should be taken when working with cuImages. cuImage |
| wrapper bits are very board specific and care should be taken to make sure |
| the target you are trying to build is supported by the wrapper bits. |