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Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +00001
2Received: from www.crouse-house.com ([199.45.160.146]
3 for coreboot@coreboot.org; Fri, 19 Dec 2008 23:11:59 +0100
4From: Jordan Crouse <jordan@cosmicpenguin.net>
5
6
7Greetings. I apologize for the incompleteness of what I am about to
8discuss. I was planning on working on it leisurely, but my employment
9circumstances changed and I've been trying to get it completed in a
10hurry before I had to leave it behind.
11
12I've been thinking a lot about LAR lately, and ways to make it more
13extensible and robust. Marc and I have been trading ideas back and
14forth for a number of months, and over time a clear idea of what I
15wanted to do started to take shape.
16
17My goal was to add small things to LAR while retaining the overall
18scheme. Over time, the scheme evolved slightly, but I think you'll find
19that it remains true to the original idea. Below is the beginnings of
20an architecture document - I did it in text form, but if met with
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +000021aclaim, it should be wikified. This presents what I call CBFS - the
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +000022next generation LAR for next generation Coreboot. Its easier to
23describe what it is by describing what changed:
24
25A header has been added somewhere in the bootblock similar to Carl
26Daniel's scheme. In addition to the coreboot information, the header
27reports the size of the ROM, the alignment of the blocks, and the offset
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +000028of the first component in the CBFS. The master header provides all
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +000029the information LAR needs plus the magic number information flashrom needs.
30
31Each "file" (or component, as I style them) now has a type associated
32with it. The type is used by coreboot to identify the type of file that
33it is loading, and it can also be used by payloads to group items in the
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +000034CBFS by type (i.e - bayou can ask for all components that are payloads).
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +000035
36The header on each "file" (or component, as I like to style them) has
37been simplified - We now only store the length, the type, the checksum,
38and the offset to the data. The name scheme remains the same. The
39addtional information, which is component specific, has been moved to
40the component itself (see below).
41
42The components are arranged in the ROM aligned along the specified
43alignment from the master header - this is to facilitate partial re-write.
44
45Other then that, the LAR ideas remain pretty much the same.
46
47The plan for moving the metadata to the components is to allow many
48different kinds of components, not all of which are groked by coreboot.
49 However, there are three essential component types that are groked by
50coreboot, and they are defined:
51
52stage - the stage is being parsed from the original ELF, and stored in
53the ROM as a single blob of binary data. The load address, start
54address, compression type and length are stored in the component sub-header.
55
56payload - this is essentially SELF in different clothing - same idea as
57SELF, with the sub-header as above.
58
59optionrom - This is in flux - right now, the optionrom is stored
60unadulterated and uncompressed, but that is likely to be changed.
61
62Following this email are two replies containing the v3 code and a new
63ROM tool to implement this respectively. I told you that I was trying
64to get this out before I disappear, and I'm not kidding - the code is
65compile tested and not run-tested. I hope that somebody will embrace
66this code and take it the rest of the way, otherwise it will die a
67pretty short death.
68
69I realize that this will start an awesome flamewar, and I'm looking
70forward to it. Thanks for listening to me over the years - and good
71luck with coreboot. When you all make a million dollars, send me a few
72bucks, will you?
73
74Jordan
75
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +000076Coreboot CBFS Specification
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +000077Jordan Crouse <jordan@cosmicpenguin.net>
78
79= Introduction =
80
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +000081This document describes the coreboot CBFS specification (from here
82referred to as CBFS). CBFS is a scheme for managing independent chunks
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +000083of data in a system ROM. Though not a true filesystem, the style and
84concepts are similar.
85
86
87= Architecture =
88
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +000089The CBFS architecture looks like the following:
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +000090
91/---------------\ <-- Start of ROM
92| /-----------\ | --|
93| | Header | | |
94| |-----------| | |
95| | Name | | |-- Component
96| |-----------| | |
97| |Data | | |
98| |.. | | |
99| \-----------/ | --|
100| |
101| /-----------\ |
102| | Header | |
103| |-----------| |
104| | Name | |
105| |-----------| |
106| |Data | |
107| |.. | |
108| \-----------/ |
109| |
110| ... |
111| /-----------\ |
112| | | |
113| | Bootblock | |
114| | --------- | |
115| | Reset | | <- 0xFFFFFFF0
116| \-----------/ |
117\---------------/
118
119
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000120The CBFS architecture consists of a binary associated with a physical
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000121ROM disk referred hereafter as the ROM. A number of independent of
122components, each with a header prepended on to data are located within
123the ROM. The components are nominally arranged sequentially, though they
124are aligned along a pre-defined boundary.
125
126The bootblock occupies the last 20k of the ROM. Within
127the bootblock is a master header containing information about the ROM
128including the size, alignment of the components, and the offset of the
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000129start of the first CBFS component within the ROM.
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000130
131= Master Header =
132
133The master header contains essential information about the ROM that is
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000134used by both the CBFS implementation within coreboot at runtime as well
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000135as host based utilities to create and manage the ROM. The master header
136will be located somewhere within the bootblock (last 20k of the ROM). A
137pointer to the location of the header will be located at offset
Stefan Reinauer48ca7b22009-12-17 09:42:30 +0000138-4 from the end of the ROM. This translates to address 0xFFFFFFFC on a
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000139normal x86 system. The pointer will be to physical memory somewhere
140between - 0xFFFFB000 and 0xFFFFFFF0. This makes it easier for coreboot
141to locate the header at run time. Build time utilities will
142need to read the pointer and do the appropriate math to locate the header.
143
144The following is the structure of the master header:
145
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000146struct cbfs_header {
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000147 unsigned int magic;
148 unsigned int size;
149 unsigned int align;
150 unsigned int offset;
151};
152
153The meaning of each member is as follows:
154
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000155'magic' is a 32 bit number that identifies the ROM as a CBFS type. The
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000156magic
157number is 0x4F524243, which is 'ORBC' in ASCII.
158
159'size' is the size of the ROM in bytes. Coreboot will subtract 'size' from
1600xFFFFFFFF to locate the beginning of the ROM in memory.
161
162'align' is the number of bytes that each component is aligned to within the
163ROM. This is used to make sure that each component is aligned correctly
164with
165regards to the erase block sizes on the ROM - allowing one to replace a
166component at runtime without disturbing the others.
167
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000168'offset' is the offset of the the first CBFS component (from the start of
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000169the ROM). This is to allow for arbitrary space to be left at the beginning
170of the ROM for things like embedded controller firmware.
171
172= Bootblock =
173The bootblock is a mandatory component in the ROM. It is located in the
174last
17520k of the ROM space, and contains, among other things, the location of the
176master header and the entry point for the loader firmware. The bootblock
177does not have a component header attached to it.
178
179= Components =
180
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000181CBFS components are placed in the ROM starting at 'offset' specified in
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000182the master header and ending at the bootblock. Thus the total size
183available
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000184for components in the ROM is (ROM size - 20k - 'offset'). Each CBFS
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000185component is to be aligned according to the 'align' value in the header.
186Thus, if a component of size 1052 is located at offset 0 with an 'align'
187value
188of 1024, the next component will be located at offset 2048.
189
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000190Each CBFS component will be indexed with a unique ASCII string name of
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000191unlimited size.
192
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000193Each CBFS component starts with a header:
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000194
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000195struct cbfs_file {
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000196 char magic[8];
197 unsigned int len;
198 unsigned int type;
199 unsigned int checksum;
200 unsigned int offset;
201};
202
203'magic' is a magic value used to identify the header. During runtime,
204coreboot will scan the ROM looking for this value. The default magic is
205the string 'LARCHIVE'.
206
207'len' is the length of the data, not including the size of the header and
208the size of the name.
209
210'type' is a 32 bit number indicating the type of data that is attached.
211The data type is used in a number of ways, as detailed in the section
212below.
213
214'checksum' is a 32bit checksum of the entire component, including the
215header and name.
216
217'offset' is the start of the component data, based off the start of the
218header.
219The difference between the size of the header and offset is the size of the
220component name.
221
222Immediately following the header will be the name of the component,
223which will
224null terminated and 16 byte aligned. The following picture shows the
225structure of the header:
226
227/--------\ <- start
228| Header |
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000229|--------| <- sizeof(struct cbfs_file)
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000230| Name |
231|--------| <- 'offset'
232| Data |
233| ... |
234\--------/ <- start + 'offset' + 'len'
235
236== Searching Alogrithm ==
237
238To locate a specific component in the ROM, one starts at the 'offset'
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000239specified in the CBFS master header. For this example, the offset will
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000240be 0.
241
242 From that offset, the code should search for the magic string on the
243component, jumping 'align' bytes each time. So, assuming that 'align' is
24416, the code will search for the string 'LARCHIVE' at offset 0, 16, 32, etc.
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000245If the offset ever exceeds the allowable range for CBFS components, then no
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000246component was found.
247
248Upon recognizing a component, the software then has to search for the
249specific name of the component. This is accomplished by comparing the
250desired name with the string on the component located at
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000251offset + sizeof(struct cbfs_file). If the string matches, then the
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000252component
253has been located, otherwise the software should add 'offset' + 'len' to
254the offset and resume the search for the magic value.
255
256== Data Types ==
257
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000258The 'type' member of struct cbfs_file is used to identify the content
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000259of the component data, and is used by coreboot and other
260run-time entities to make decisions about how to handle the data.
261
262There are three component types that are essential to coreboot, and so
263are defined here.
264
265=== Stages ===
266
267Stages are code loaded by coreboot during the boot process. They are
268essential to a successful boot. Stages are comprised of a single blob
269of binary data that is to be loaded into a particular location in memory
270and executed. The uncompressed header contains information about how
271large the data is, and where it should be placed, and what additional memory
272needs to be cleared.
273
274Stages are assigned a component value of 0x10. When coreboot sees this
275component type, it knows that it should pass the data to a sub-function
276that will process the stage.
277
278The following is the format of a stage component:
279
280/--------\
281| Header |
282|--------|
283| Binary |
284| .. |
285\--------/
286
287The header is defined as:
288
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000289struct cbfs_stage {
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000290 unsigned int compression;
291 unsigned long long entry;
292 unsigned long long load;
293 unsigned int len;
294 unsigned int memlen;
295};
296
297'compression' is an integer defining how the data is compressed. There
298are three compression types defined by this version of the standard:
299none (0x0), lzma (0x1), and nrv2b (0x02), though additional types may be
300added assuming that coreboot understands how to handle the scheme.
301
302'entry' is a 64 bit value indicating the location where the program
303counter should jump following the loading of the stage. This should be
304an absolute physical memory address.
305
306'load' is a 64 bit value indicating where the subsequent data should be
307loaded. This should be an absolute physical memory address.
308
309'len' is the length of the compressed data in the component.
310
311'memlen' is the amount of memory that will be used by the component when
312it is loaded.
313
314The component data will start immediately following the header.
315
316When coreboot loads a stage, it will first zero the memory from 'load' to
317'memlen'. It will then decompress the component data according to the
318specified scheme and place it in memory starting at 'load'. Following that,
319it will jump execution to the address specified by 'entry'.
320Some components are designed to execute directly from the ROM - coreboot
321knows which components must do that and will act accordingly.
322
323=== Payloads ===
324
325Payloads are loaded by coreboot following the boot process.
326
327Stages are assigned a component value of 0x20. When coreboot sees this
328component type, it knows that it should pass the data to a sub-function
329that will process the payload. Furthermore, other run time
330applications such as 'bayou' may easily index all available payloads
331on the system by searching for the payload type.
332
333
334The following is the format of a stage component:
335
336/-----------\
337| Header |
338| Segment 1 |
339| Segment 2 |
340| ... |
341|-----------|
342| Binary |
343| .. |
344\-----------/
345
346The header is as follows:
347
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000348struct cbfs_payload {
349 struct cbfs_payload_segment segments;
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000350}
351
352The header contains a number of segments corresponding to the segments
353that need to be loaded for the payload.
354
355The following is the structure of each segment header:
356
Peter Stuge450b23f2009-04-14 00:01:34 +0000357struct cbfs_payload_segment {
Stefan Reinauer013c7cf2009-04-08 07:47:01 +0000358 unsigned int type;
359 unsigned int compression;
360 unsigned int offset;
361 unsigned long long load_addr;
362 unsigned int len;
363 unsigned int mem_len;
364};
365
366'type' is the type of segment, one of the following:
367
368PAYLOAD_SEGMENT_CODE 0x45444F43 The segment contains executable code
369PAYLOAD_SEGMENT_DATA 0x41544144 The segment contains data
370PAYLOAD_SEGMENT_BSS 0x20535342 The memory speicfied by the segment
371 should be zeroed
372PAYLOAD_SEGMENT_PARAMS 0x41524150 The segment contains information for
373 the payload
374PAYLOAD_SEGMENT_ENTRY 0x52544E45 The segment contains the entry point
375 for the payload
376
377'compression' is the compression scheme for the segment. Each segment can
378be independently compressed. There are three compression types defined by
379this version of the standard: none (0x0), lzma (0x1), and nrv2b (0x02),
380though additional types may be added assuming that coreboot understands
381how to handle the scheme.
382
383'offset' is the address of the data within the component, starting from
384the component header.
385
386'load_addr' is a 64 bit value indicating where the segment should be placed
387in memory.
388
389'len' is a 32 bit value indicating the size of the segment within the
390component.
391
392'mem_len' is the size of the data when it is placed into memory.
393
394The data will located immediately following the last segment.
395
396=== Option ROMS ===
397
398The third specified component type will be Option ROMs. Option ROMS will
399have component type '0x30'. They will have no additional header, the
400uncompressed binary data will be located in the data portion of the
401component.
402
403=== NULL ===
404
405There is a 4th component type ,defined as NULL (0xFFFFFFFF). This is
406the "don't care" component type. This can be used when the component
407type is not necessary (such as when the name of the component is unique.
408i.e. option_table). It is recommended that all components be assigned a
409unique type, but NULL can be used when the type does not matter.