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2% This document is released under the GPL
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00003% Initially written by Stefan Reinauer, <stepan@coresystems.de>
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00004%
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00005
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Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000021 pdftitle={coreboot on AMD64},
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000022 pdfauthor={Stefan Reinauer},
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000023 pdfsubject={coreboot configuration and build process},
24 pdfkeywords={coreboot, Opteron, AMD64, configuration, Build}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000025}
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Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000033\title{coreboot on AMD64}
34\author{Stefan Reinauer $<$stepan@coresystems.de$>$}
35\date{April 19th, 2009}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000036
37\begin{document}
38
39\maketitle
40
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +000041\thispagestyle{empty}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000042
43\tableofcontents
44
45\newpage
46
47%
48% 1 Abstract
49%
50
51\section{Abstract}
52
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000053This document targets porting coreboot to new mainboards and creating
54custom firmware images using coreboot. It describes how to build
55coreboot images for the AMD64 platform, including hypertransport
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000056configuration and pertinent utilities. If you are missing information or
57find errors in the following descriptions, contact
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000058\href{mailto:stepan@coresystems.de}{\textit{Stefan Reinauer $<$stepan@coresystems.de$>$}}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000059
60
61%
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +000062% 2 Changes
63%
64
65\section{Changes}
66 \begin{itemize}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000067 \item 2009/04/19 replace LinuxBIOS with coreboot
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +000068 \item 2004/06/02 url and language fixes from Ken Fuchs $<$kfuchs@winternet.com$>$
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +000069 \item 2004/02/10 acpi and option rom updates
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +000070 \item 2003/11/18 initial release
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +000071 \end{itemize}
72
73
74
75%
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000076% 3 What is coreboot
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000077%
78
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000079\section{What is coreboot?}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000080
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +000081coreboot aims to replace the normal BIOS found on x86, AMD64, PPC,
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000082Alpha, and other machines with a Linux kernel that can boot Linux from a cold
83start. The startup code of an average coreboot port is about 500 lines of
84assembly and 5000 lines of C. It executes 16 instructions to get into 32bit
85protected mode and then performs DRAM and other hardware initializations
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000086required before Linux can take over.
87
88The projects primary motivation initially was maintenance of large
89clusters. Not surprisingly interest and contributions have come from
90people with varying backgrounds. Nowadays a large and growing number of
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000091Systems can be booted with coreboot, including embedded systems,
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000092Desktop PCs and Servers.
93
94%
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +000095% 4 Build Requirements
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +000096%
97
98\section{Build Requirements}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +000099To build coreboot for AMD64 from the sources you need a recent Linux
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000100system for x86 or AMD64. SUSE Linux 8.2 or 9.0 are known to work fine.
101The following toolchain is recommended:
102
103 \begin{itemize}
104 \item GCC 3.3.1
105 \item binutils 2.14.90.0.5
106 \item Python 2.3
107 \item CVS 1.11.6
108 \end{itemize}
109
110\textbf{NOTE:} Later versions should also work. Prior versions might lead to problems.
111
112\newpage
113
114%
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000115% 5 Getting the Sources
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000116%
117
118\section{Getting the Sources}
119
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000120The latest coreboot sources are available via subversion. The subversion
121repository is maintained at SourceForge.net (the project name is
122\emph{FreeBIOS}). First you should create a directory for your
123coreboot trees:
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000124
125{ \small
126\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000127$ mkdir coreboot
128$ cd coreboot
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000129\end{verbatim}
130}
131
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000132You can get the entire source tree via SVN:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000133
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000134{ \small
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000135\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000136$ svn co svn://coreboot.org/repos/trunk/coreboot-v2
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000137\end{verbatim}
138}
139
140Once the source tree is checked out, it can be updated with:
141
142{ \small
143\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000144% svn update
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000145\end{verbatim}
146}
147
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000148For the case your corporate firewall blocks port 3690 (subversion) we set up a
149snapshot site that keeps the last few hundred source code revisions. It
150is available at \url{http://qa.coreboot.org/}.
151Due to major structural enhancements to \hbox{coreboot}, AMD64 support
152is only available in the \texttt{coreboot-v2} tree. This tree reflects (as
153of November 2003) coreboot version 1.1.5 and will lead to coreboot 2.0
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000154when finished. Most x86 hardware is currently only supported by the
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000155coreboot 1.0 tree.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000156
157%
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000158% 6 coreboot configuration overview
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000159%
160
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000161\section{coreboot configuration overview}
162To support a large variety of existing hardware coreboot allows for a
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000163lot of configuration options that can be tweaked in several ways:
164
165\begin{itemize}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000166\item
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000167Firmware image specific configuration options can be set in the image
168configuration file which is usually found in
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000169\texttt{coreboot-v2/targets/$<$vendor$>$/$<$mainboard$>$/}. Such
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000170options are the default amount of output verbosity during bootup, image
171size, use of fallback mechanisms, firmware image size and payloads
172(Linux Kernel, Bootloader...) The default configuration file name is
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000173\texttt{Config.lb}, but coreboot allows multiple configurations to
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000174reside in that directory.
175
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000176\item Mainboard specific configuration options can be set in the
177mainboard configuration file placed in
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000178\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/$<$vendor$>$/$<$mainboard$>$}. The
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000179mainboard configuration file is always called \texttt{Config.lb}. It
180contains information on the onboard components of the mainboard like
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000181CPU type, northbridge, southbridge, hypertransport configuration and
182SuperIO configuration. This configuration file also allows to include
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000183addon code to hook into the coreboot initialization mechanism at
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000184basically any point.
185
186\end{itemize}
187
188This document describes different approaches of changing and configuring the
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000189coreboot source tree when building for AMD64.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000190
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000191%
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000192% 7 Building coreboot
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000193%
194
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000195\section{Building coreboot}
196One of the design goals for building coreboot was to keep object files
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000197out of the source tree in a separate place. This is mandatory for
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000198building parallel coreboot images for several distinct mainboards
199and/or platforms. Therefore building coreboot consists of two steps:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000200\begin{itemize}
201\item
202creating a build tree which holds all files automatically created by the
203configuration utility and the object files
204\item
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000205compiling the coreboot code and creating a flashable firmware image.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000206\end{itemize}
207
208The first of these two steps is accomplished by the \texttt{buildtarget}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000209script found in \texttt{coreboot-v2/targets/}. To build coreboot for
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000210instance for the AMD Solo Athlon64 mainboard enter:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000211
212\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000213% cd coreboot-v2/targets
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000214% ./buildtarget amd/solo
215\end{verbatim}
216
217This will create a directory containing a Makefile and other software
218components needed for this build. The directory name is defined in the
219firmware image specific configuration file. In the case of AMD's Solo
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000220mainboard the default directory resides in
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000221\texttt{coreboot-v2/targets/amd/solo/solo}. To build the coreboot image, do
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000222
223\begin{verbatim}
224% cd amd/solo/solo
225% make
226\end{verbatim}
227
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000228The coreboot image filename is specified in the firmware image specific
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000229configuration file. The default filename for AMD's Solo mainboard is
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000230\texttt{solo.rom}.
231
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000232%
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000233% 8 Programming coreboot to flash memory
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000234%
235
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000236\section{Programming coreboot to flash memory}
237The image resulting from a coreboot build can be directly programmed to
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000238a flash device, either using a hardware flash programmer or by using the
239Linux flash driver devbios or mtd. This document assumes that you use a
240hardware flash programmer. If you are interested in doing in-system
241software flash programming, find detailed information:
242
243\begin{itemize}
244\item \url{http://www.openbios.org/development/devbios.html} (/dev/bios)
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000245\item \url{http://www.linux-mtd.infradead.org/} (Memory Technology Device Subsystem MTD)
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000246\end{itemize}
247
248\newpage
249
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000250%
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000251% 9 coreboot configuration
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000252%
253
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000254\section{coreboot configuration}
255The following chapters will cope with configuring coreboot. All
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000256configuration files share some basic rules
257\begin{itemize}
258\item
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000259The default configuration file name in coreboot is \texttt{Config.lb}.
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000260\item
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000261All variables used in a configuration file have to be declared in this
262file with \texttt{uses VARNAME} before usage.
263\item
264Comments can be added on a new line by using the comment identifier
265\texttt{\#} at the beginning of the line.
266\item
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000267coreboot distinguishes between statements and options. Statements cause
268the coreboot configuration mechanism to act, whereas options set
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000269variables that are used by the build scripts or source code.
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000270\item
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000271Default configuration values can be set in the mainboard configuration
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000272files (keyword default)
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000273\item
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000274Option overrides to the default configuration can only be specified in
275the build target configuration file
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000276\texttt{coreboot-v2/targets/$<$vendor$>$/$<$mainboard$>$/Config.lb}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000277(keyword option)
278\end{itemize}
279
280\subsection{Common Configuration Statements}
281
282\begin{itemize}
283
284\item \begin{verbatim}uses\end{verbatim}
285
286All local configuration variables have to be declared before they can be
287used. Example:
288\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000289 uses CONFIG_ROM_IMAGE_SIZE
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000290\end{verbatim}
291
292\textbf{NOTE:} Only configuration variables known to the configuration
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000293system can be used in configuration files. coreboot checks
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000294\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/config/Options.lb} to see whether a configuration
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000295variable is known.
296
297\item \begin{verbatim}default\end{verbatim}
298
299The \texttt{default} statement is used to set a configuration variable
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000300with an overridable default value. It is commonly used in mainboard
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000301configuration files.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000302
303Example:
304
305\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000306 default CONFIG_ROM_IMAGE_SIZE=0x10000
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000307\end{verbatim}
308
309It is also possible to assign the value of one configuration variable to
310another one, i.e.:
311
312\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000313 default CONFIG_FALLBACK_SIZE=CONFIG_ROM_SIZE
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000314\end{verbatim}
315
316Also, simple expressions are allowed:
317
318\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000319 default CONFIG_FALLBACK_SIZE=(CONFIG_ROM_SIZE - NORMAL_SIZE)
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000320\end{verbatim}
321
322If an option contains a string, this string has to be protected with
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000323quotation marks:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000324
325\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauere4ff2a512006-08-23 10:52:12 +0000326 default CC="gcc -m32"
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000327\end{verbatim}
328
329\item \begin{verbatim}option\end{verbatim}
330
331The \texttt{option} statement basically behaves identically to the
332\texttt{default} statement. But unlike default it can only be used in
333build target configuration files
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000334(\texttt{coreboot-v2/targets/$<$vendor$>$/$<$mainboard$>$}). The option
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000335statement allows either to set new options or to override default values
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000336set with the default statement in a mainboard configuration file.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000337Syntax and application are the same as with default.
338
339\end{itemize}
340
341\subsection{Firmware image specific configuration}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000342coreboot allows to create different firmware images for the same
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000343hardware. Such images can differ in the amount of output they produce,
344the payload, the number of subimages they consist of etc.
345
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000346The firmware image specific configuration file can be found in \\
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000347\texttt{coreboot-v2/targets/$<$vendor$>$/<mainboard$>$}.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000348
349\subsubsection{Firmware image specific keywords}
350In addition to the above described keywords the following statements are
351available in firmware image specific configuration files:
352
353\begin{itemize}
354\item \begin{verbatim}romimage\end{verbatim}
355
356The \texttt{romimage} definition describes a single rom build within the
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000357final coreboot image. Normally there are two romimage definitions per
358coreboot build: \texttt{normal} and \texttt{fallback}.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000359
360Each \texttt{romimage} section needs to specify a mainboard directory and a
361payload. The mainboard directory contains the mainboard specific
362configuration file and source code. It is specified relatively to
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000363\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard}. The payload definition is an absolute
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000364path to a static elf binary (i.e Linux kernel or etherboot)
365
366\begin{verbatim}
367romimage "normal"
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000368 option CONFIG_USE_FALLBACK_IMAGE=0
369 option CONFIG_ROM_IMAGE_SIZE=0x10000
Stefan Reinauerf8ee1802008-01-18 15:08:58 +0000370 option COREBOOT_EXTRA_VERSION=".0Normal"
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000371 mainboard amd/solo
372 payload /suse/stepan/tg3ide_
373 disk.zelf
374end
375\end{verbatim}
376
377\item \begin{verbatim}buildrom\end{verbatim}
378
379The \texttt{buildrom} statement is used to determine which of the
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000380coreboot image builds (created using \texttt{romimage}) are packed
381together to the final coreboot image. It also specifies the order of
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000382the images and the final image size:
383
384\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000385 buildrom ./solo.rom CONFIG_ROM_SIZE "normal" "fallback"
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000386\end{verbatim}
387
388\end{itemize}
389
390
391\subsubsection{Firmware image configuration options}
392In addition to the definitions described above there are a number of
393commonly used options. Configuration options set in the firmware image
394specific configuration file can override default selections from the
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000395Mainboard specific configuration. See above examples about
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000396option on how to set them.
397
398\begin{itemize}
399
400\item \begin{verbatim}CC\end{verbatim}
401
402Target C Compiler. Default is \texttt{\$(CROSS\_COMPILE)gcc}. Set to
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000403\texttt{gcc -m32} for compiling AMD64 coreboot images on an AMD64
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000404machine.
405
406\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_CHIP_CONFIGURE \end{verbatim}
407
408Use new \textit{chip\_configure} method for configuring (nonpci)
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000409devices. Set to \texttt{1} for all AMD64 mainboards.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000410
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000411\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_MAXIMUM_CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000412
413Errors or log messages up to this level can be printed. Default is
414\texttt{8}, minimum is \texttt{0}, maximum is \texttt{10}.
415
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000416\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_DEFAULT_CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000417
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000418Console will log at this level unless changed. Default is \texttt{7},
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000419minimum is \texttt{0}, maximum is \texttt{10}.
420
421\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_CONSOLE_SERIAL8250\end{verbatim}
422
423Log messages to 8250 uart based serial console. Default is \texttt{0}
424(don't log to serial console). This value should be set to \texttt{1}
425for all AMD64 builds.
426
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000427\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_ROM_SIZE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000428
429Size of final ROM image. This option has no default value.
430
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000431\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_FALLBACK_SIZE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000432
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000433Fallback image size. Defaults to \texttt{65536} bytes. \textbf{NOTE:}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000434This does not include the fallback payload.
435
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000436\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_HAVE_OPTION_TABLE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000437
438Export CMOS option table. Default is \texttt{0}. Set to \texttt{1} if
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000439your mainboard has CMOS memory and you want to use it to store
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000440coreboot parameters (Loglevel, serial line speed, ...)
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000441
Ed Swierkbe13dc72006-12-15 12:56:28 +0000442\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_ROM_PAYLOAD\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000443
Ed Swierkbe13dc72006-12-15 12:56:28 +0000444Boot image is located in ROM (as opposed to \texttt{CONFIG\_IDE\_PAYLOAD}, which
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000445will boot from an IDE disk)
446
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000447\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_HAVE_FALLBACK_BOOT\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000448
449Set to \texttt{1} if fallback booting is required. Defaults to
450\texttt{0}.
451
452\end{itemize}
453
454
455The following options should be used within a romimage section:
456
457\begin{itemize}
458
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000459\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_USE_FALLBACK_IMAGE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000460
461Set to \texttt{1} to build a fallback image. Defaults to \texttt{0}
462
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000463\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_ROM_IMAGE_SIZE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000464
465Default image size. Defaults to \texttt{65535} bytes.
466
Stefan Reinauerf8ee1802008-01-18 15:08:58 +0000467\item \begin{verbatim}COREBOOT_EXTRA_VERSION\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000468
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000469coreboot extra version. This option has an empty string as default. Set
470to any string to add an extra version string to your coreboot build.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000471
472\end{itemize}
473
474\newpage
475
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000476\subsection{Mainboard specific configuration}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000477
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000478Mainboard specific configuration files describe the onboard
479mainboard components, i.e. bridges, number and type of CPUs. They also
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000480contain rules for building the low level start code which is translated
481using romcc and/or the GNU assembler. This code enables caches and
482registers, early mtrr settings, fallback mechanisms, dram init and
483possibly more.
484
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000485\textbf{NOTE:} The \texttt{option} keyword can not be used in mainboard
486specific configuration files. Options shall instead be set using the
487\texttt{default} keyword so that they can be overridden by the image
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000488specific configuration files if needed.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000489
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000490\subsubsection{Mainboard specific keywords}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000491
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000492The following statements are used in mainboard specific configuration
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000493files:
494
495\begin{itemize}
496\item \begin{verbatim}arch\end{verbatim}
497
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000498Sets the CPU architecture. This should be \texttt{i386} for AMD64 boards.\\
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000499Example:
500
501\begin{verbatim}
502 arch i386 end
503\end{verbatim}
504
505\item \begin{verbatim}cpu\end{verbatim}
506
507The cpu statement is needed once per possibly available CPU. In a
508one-node system, write:
509
510\begin{verbatim}
511 cpu k8 "cpu0" end
512\end{verbatim}
513
514\item \begin{verbatim}driver\end{verbatim}
515
516The \texttt{driver} keyword adds an object file to the driver section of a
Stefan Reinauer236d1022009-04-21 22:05:50 +0000517coreboot image. This means it can be used by the PCI device
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000518initialization code. Example:
519
520\begin{verbatim}
521 driver mainboard.o
522\end{verbatim}
523
524\item \begin{verbatim}object\end{verbatim}
525
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000526The \texttt{object} keyword adds an object file to the coreboot image.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000527Per default the object file will be compiled from a \texttt{.c} file
528with the same name. Symbols defined in such an object file can be used
529in other object files and drivers. Example:
530
531\begin{verbatim}
532 object reset.o
533\end{verbatim}
534
535\item \begin{verbatim}makerule\end{verbatim}
536
537This keyword can be used to extend the existing file creation rules
538during the build process. This is useful if external utilities have to
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000539be used for the build. coreboot on AMD64 uses romcc for it's early
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000540startup code placed in auto.c.
541
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000542To tell the configuration mechanism how to build \texttt{romcc} files,
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000543do:
544
545\begin{verbatim}
546makerule ./auto.E
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000547 depends "$(CONFIG_MAINBOARD)/auto.c option_table.h ./romcc"
Stefan Reinauere4ff2a512006-08-23 10:52:12 +0000548 action "./romcc -E -mcpu=k8 -O2 -I$(TOP)/src -I. $(CPPFLAGS) \
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000549 $(CONFIG_MAINBOARD)/auto.c -o $@"
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000550end
551makerule ./auto.inc
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000552 depends "$(CONFIG_MAINBOARD)/auto.c option_table.h ./romcc"
Stefan Reinauere4ff2a512006-08-23 10:52:12 +0000553 action "./romcc -mcpu=k8 -O2 -I$(TOP)/src -I. $(CPPFLAGS) \
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000554 $(CONFIG_MAINBOARD)/auto.c -o $@"
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000555end
556\end{verbatim}
557
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000558Each \texttt{makerule} section contains file dependencies (using the
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000559texttt{depends} keyword) and an action that is taken when the dependencies
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000560are satisfied (using the \texttt{action} keyword).
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000561
562\item \begin{verbatim}mainboardinit\end{verbatim}
563
564With the mainboardinit keyword it's possible to include assembler code
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000565directly into the coreboot image. This is used for early infrastructure
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000566initialization, i.e. to switch to protected mode. Example:
567
568\begin{verbatim}
569 mainboardinit cpu/i386/entry16.inc
570\end{verbatim}
571
572\item \begin{verbatim}ldscript\end{verbatim}
573
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000574The GNU linker ld is used to link object files together to a coreboot
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000575ROM image.
576
577Since it is a lot more comfortable and flexible to use the GNU linker
578with linker scripts (ldscripts) than to create complex command line
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000579calls, coreboot features including linker scripts to control image
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000580creation. Example:
581
582\begin{verbatim}
583 ldscript /cpu/i386/entry16.lds
584\end{verbatim}
585
586
587\item \begin{verbatim}dir\end{verbatim}
588
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000589coreboot reuses as much code between the different ports as possible.
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000590To achieve this, commonly used code can be stored in a separate
591directory. For a new mainboard, it is enough to know that the code in
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000592that directory can be used as is.
593
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000594coreboot will also read a \texttt{Config.lb} file stored in that
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000595directory. This happens with:
596
597\begin{verbatim}
598 dir /pc80
599\end{verbatim}
600
601
602\item \begin{verbatim}config\end{verbatim}
603
604This keyword is needed by the new chip configuration scheme. Should be
605used as:
606
607\begin{verbatim}
608 config chip.h
609\end{verbatim}
610
611\item \begin{verbatim}register\end{verbatim}
612The \texttt{register} keyword can occur in any section, passing
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000613additional \\
614parameters to the code handling the associated device.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000615Example:
616
617\begin{verbatim}
618 register "com1" = "{1, 0, 0x3f8, 4}"
619\end{verbatim}
620
621\item \begin{verbatim}northbridge\end{verbatim}
622
623The \texttt{northbridge} keyword describes a system northbridge. Some
624systems, like AMD64, can have more than one northbridge, i.e. one per
625CPU node. Each northbridge is described by the path to the northbridge
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000626code in coreboot (relative to \texttt{coreboot-v2/src/northbridge}), i.e.
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000627\texttt{amd/amdk8} and a unique name (i.e \texttt{mc0}) \\
628Example:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000629
630\begin{verbatim}
631 northbridge amd/amdk8 "mc0"
632 [..]
633 end
634\end{verbatim}
635
636\item \begin{verbatim}southbridge\end{verbatim}
637
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000638To simplify the handling of bus bridges in a coreboot system, all
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000639bridges available in a system that are not northbridges (i.e AGP, IO,
640PCIX) are seen as southbridges.
641
642Since from the CPUs point of view any southbridge is connected via the
643northbridge, a southbridge section is declared within the northbridge
644section of the north bridge it is attached to.
645
646Like the northbridge, any other bridge is described by the path to it's
647driver code, and a unique name. If the described bridge is a
648hypertransport device, the northbridge's hypertransport link it connects
649to can be specified using the \texttt{link} keyword. Example:
650
651\begin{verbatim}
652northbridge amd/amdk8 "mc0"
653 [..]
654 southbridge amd/amd8111 "amd8111" link 0
655 [..]
656 end
657 [..]
658end
659\end{verbatim}
660
661\item \begin{verbatim}pci\end{verbatim}
662
663The \texttt{pci} keyword can only occur within a \texttt{northbridge} or
664\texttt{southbridge} section. It is used to describe the PCI devices
665that are provided by the bridge. Generally all bridge sections have a
666couple of \texttt{pci} keywords.
667
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000668The first occurrence of the \texttt{pci} keyword tells coreboot where
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000669the bridge devices start, relative to the PCI configuration space used
670by the bridge. The following occurences of the \texttt{pci} keyword
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000671describe the provided devices.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000672
673Adding the option \texttt{on} or \texttt{off} to a PCI device will
674enable or disable this device. This feature can be used if some bridge
675devices are not wired to hardware outputs and thus are not used.
676
677Example:
678
679\begin{verbatim}
680northbridge amd/amdk8 "mc1"
681 pci 0:19.0
682 pci 0:19.0
683 pci 0:19.0
684 pci 0:19.1
685 pci 0:19.2
686 pci 0:19.3
687end
688\end{verbatim}
689
690or
691
692\begin{verbatim}
693southbridge amd/amd8111 "amd8111" link 0
694 pci 0:0.0
695 pci 0:1.0 on
696 pci 0:1.1 on
697 pci 0:1.2 on
698 pci 0:1.3 on
699 pci 0:1.5 off
700 pci 0:1.6 off
701 pci 1:0.0 on
702 pci 1:0.1 on
703 pci 1:0.2 on
704 pci 1:1.0 off
705 [..]
706end
707\end{verbatim}
708
709\item \begin{verbatim}superio\end{verbatim}
710
711SuperIO devices are basically handled like brigdes. They are taking
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000712their driver code from \texttt{coreboot-v2/src/superio/}. They don't
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000713provide a PCI compatible configuration interface, but instead are ISA
714PnP devices. Normally they are connected to a southbridge. If this is
715the case, the \texttt{superio} section will be a subsection of the
716\texttt{southbridge} section of the southbridge it is connected to.
717Example:
718
719\begin{verbatim}
Uwe Hermannd86417b2006-10-24 23:00:42 +0000720superio nsc/pc87360 link 1
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000721 pnp 2e.0
722 pnp 2e.1
723 pnp 2e.2
724 pnp 2e.3
725 pnp 2e.4
726 pnp 2e.5
727 pnp 2e.6
728 pnp 2e.7
729 pnp 2e.8
730 pnp 2e.9
731 pnp 2e.a
732 register "com1" = "{1, 0, 0x3f8, 4}"
733 register "lpt" = "{1}"
734end
735\end{verbatim}
736
737\end{itemize}
738
739\newpage
740
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000741\subsubsection{Mainboard specific configuration options}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000742
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000743The following options are commonly used in mainboard specific
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000744configuration files.
745
746They should be set using the \texttt{default} keyword:
747
748\begin{itemize}
749
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000750\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_HAVE_HARD_RESET\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000751
752If set to \texttt{1}, this option defines that there is a hard reset
753function for this mainboard. This option is not defined per default.
754
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000755\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_HAVE_PIRQ_TABLE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000756
757If set to \texttt{1}, this option defines that there is an IRQ Table for
758this mainboard. This option is not defined per default.
759
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000760\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_IRQ_SLOT_COUNT\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000761
762Number of IRQ slots. This option is not defined per default.
763
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000764\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_HAVE_MP_TABLE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000765
766Define this option to build an MP table (v1.4). The default is not to
767build an MP table.
768
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000769\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_HAVE_OPTION_TABLE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000770
771Define this option to export a CMOS option table. The default is not to
772export a CMOS option table.
773
774\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_SMP\end{verbatim}
775
776Set this option to \texttt{1} if the mainboard supports symmetric
777multiprocessing (SMP). This option defaults to \texttt{0} (no SMP).
778
779\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_MAX_CPUS\end{verbatim}
780
781If \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_SMP\end{verbatim} is set, this option defines
782the maximum number of CPUs (i.e. the number of CPU sockets) in the
783system. Defaults to \texttt{1}.
784
785\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_IOAPIC\end{verbatim}
786
787Set this option to \texttt{1} to enable IOAPIC support. This is
788mandatory if you want to boot a 64bit Linux kernel on an AMD64 system.
789
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000790\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_STACK_SIZE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000791
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000792coreboot stack size. The size of the function call stack defaults to
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000793\texttt{0x2000} (8k).
794
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000795\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_HEAP_SIZE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000796
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000797coreboot heap size. The heap is used when coreboot allocates memory
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000798with malloc(). The default heap size is \texttt{0x2000}, but AMD64 boards
799generally set it to \texttt{0x4000} (16k)
800
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000801\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_XIP_ROM_BASE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000802
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000803Start address of area to cache during coreboot execution directly from
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000804ROM.
805
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +0000806\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_XIP_ROM_SIZE\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000807
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000808Size of area to cache during coreboot execution directly from ROM
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000809
810\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_COMPRESS\end{verbatim}
811
812Set this option to \texttt{1} for a compressed image. If set to
813\texttt{0}, the image is bigger but will start slightly faster (since no
814decompression is needed).
815
816\end{itemize}
817
818
819\newpage
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000820
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000821%
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000822% 10. Tweaking the source code
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +0000823%
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +0000824
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000825\section{Tweaking the source code}
826Besides configuring the existing code it is sometimes necessary or
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000827desirable to tweak certain parts of coreboot by direct changes to the
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000828code. This chapter covers some possible enhancements and changes that
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000829are needed when porting coreboot to a new mainboard or just come
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000830handy now and then.
831
832\subsection{Hypertransport configuration}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000833Before coreboot is able to activate all CPUs and detect bridges
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000834attached to these CPUs (and thus, see all devices attached to the
835system) it has to initialize the coherent hypertransport devices.
836
837The current algorithms to do coherent hypertransport initialization are
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000838not fully, automatically evaluating the hypertransport chain graph.
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000839Therefore the code needs to be adapted when porting coreboot to a new
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000840AMD64 mainboard. An example arrangement of hypertransport devices
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000841looks like this:
842
843\begin{figure}[htb]
844\centering
845\includegraphics[scale=1.0]{hypertransport.pdf}
846\caption{Example: Hypertransport Link Connections}
847\label{fix:hypertransport}
848\end{figure}
849
850Each hypertransport device has one to three hypertransport links that
851are used for device interconnection. These links are called LDT$[$012$]$, or
852accordingly UP, ACROSS, DOWN. Communication between the hypertransport
853devices can be freely routed, honoring the physical wiring. Teaching the
854coherent hypertransport initialization algorithm this wiring happens in
855two steps.
856
857\newpage
858
859\begin{enumerate}
860\item Setting outgoing connections
861The algorithm needs to know which outgoing port of a CPU node is
862connected to the directly succeeding node. This is done in
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000863\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/$<$vendor$>$/$<$mainboard$>$/auto.c}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000864with a number of preprocessor defines (one define for two-node systems,
865three defines for four-node systems).
866
867The ports in question are flagged with a circle in the graph for
868illustration. For the example graph above (all outgoing connections are
869realized using LDT1/ACROSS) the defines are:
870
871\begin{verbatim}
872#define CONNECTION_0_1 ACROSS
873#define CONNECTION_0_2 ACROSS
874#define CONNECTION_1_3 ACROSS
875\end{verbatim}
876
877\item Describing routing information between CPUs.
878
879There are basically three different message types for hypertransport
880communication:
881\begin{enumerate}
882\item request packages
883\item response packages
884\item broadcast packages
885\end{enumerate}
886
887These three message types are routed using different hypertransport
888ports. The routing information is written to the AMD K8 routing table.
889In an Nnode system this routing table consists of 3*N*N entries , one
890for each message type and for each possible CPU --> CPU communication. For
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000891simplicity coreboot keeps the 3 routing entries for each CPU --> CPU
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000892communication in one machine word. The routing table of each node looks
893like this:
894
895\begin{verbatim}
896/* Routing Table for Node i
897 *
898 * F0: 0x40, 0x44, 0x48, 0x4c, 0x50, 0x54, 0x58, 0x5c
899 * i: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
900 *
901 * [ 0: 3] Request Route
902 * [0] Route to this node
903 * [1] Route to Link 0
904 * [2] Route to Link 1
905 * [3] Route to Link 2
906 * [11: 8] Response Route
907 * [0] Route to this node
908 * [1] Route to Link 0
909 * [2] Route to Link 1
910 * [3] Route to Link 2
911 * [19:16] Broadcast route
912 * [0] Route to this node
913 * [1] Route to Link 0
914 * [2] Route to Link 1
915 * [3] Route to Link 2
916 */
917\end{verbatim}
918
919The routing table is passed to the coherent hypertransport
920initialization algorithm by defining a function called
921\texttt{generate\_row()} in \texttt{auto.c}:
922
923\begin{verbatim}
924static unsigned int generate_row
925 (uint8_t node, uint8_t row, uint8_t maxnodes)
926\end{verbatim}
927
928This function is trivial if there is only one CPU in the system, since
929no routing has to be done:
930
931\begin{verbatim}
932static unsigned int generate_row
933 (uint8_t node, uint8_t row, uint8_t maxnodes)
934{
935 return 0x00010101; /* default row entry */
936}
937\end{verbatim}
938
939On a two-node system things look slightly more complicated. Since the
940coherent hypertransport initialization algorithm works by consecutively
941enabling CPUs, it contains routing information for driving the system
942with one node and two nodes:
943
944\begin{verbatim}
945static unsigned int generate_row
946 (uint8_t node, uint8_t row, uint8_t maxnodes)
947{
948 uint32_t ret=0x00010101; /* default row entry */
949 static const unsigned int rows_2p[2][2] = {
950 { 0x00050101, 0x00010404 },
951 { 0x00010404, 0x00050101 }
952 };
953 if(maxnodes>2) maxnodes=2;
954 if (!(node>=maxnodes || row>=maxnodes)) {
955 ret=rows_2p[node][row];
956 }
957 return ret;
958}
959\end{verbatim}
960
961Systems with four nodes have to contain routing information for one, two
962and four-node setups:
963
964\begin{verbatim}
965static unsigned int generate_row
966 (uint8_t node, uint8_t row, uint8_t maxnodes)
967{
968 uint32_t ret=0x00010101; /* default row entry */
969 static const unsigned int rows_2p[2][2] = {
970 { 0x00030101, 0x00010202 },
971 { 0x00010202, 0x00030101 }
972 };
973 static const unsigned int rows_4p[4][4] = {
974 { 0x00070101, 0x00010202, 0x00030404, 0x00010204 },
975 { 0x00010202, 0x000b0101, 0x00010208, 0x00030808 },
976 { 0x00030808, 0x00010208, 0x000b0101, 0x00010202 },
977 { 0x00010204, 0x00030404, 0x00010202, 0x00070101 }
978 };
979 if (!(node>=maxnodes || row>=maxnodes)) {
980 if (maxnodes==2)
981 ret=rows_2p[node][row];
982 if (maxnodes==4)
983 ret=rows_4p[node][row];
984 }
985 return ret;
986}
987\end{verbatim}
988\end{enumerate}
989
990\subsection{DRAM configuration}
991Setting up the RAM controller(s) is probably the most complex part of
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +0000992coreboot. Basically coreboot serially initializes all RAM controllers
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000993in the system, using SPDROM (serial presence detect) data to set
994timings, size and other properties. The SPD data is usually read
995utilizing the I2C SMBUS interface of the southbridge.
996
997There is one central data structure that describes the RAM controllers
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +0000998available on an AMD64 system and the associated devices:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +0000999
1000\begin{verbatim}
1001struct mem_controller {
1002 unsigned node_id;
1003 device_t f0, f1, f2, f3;
1004 uint8_t channel0[4];
1005 uint8_t channel1[4];
1006};
1007\end{verbatim}
1008
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001009Available mainboard implementations and CPUs create the need to add
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001010special setup code to RAM initialization in a number of places.
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001011coreboot provides hooks to easily add code in these places without
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001012having to change the generic code. Whether these hooks have to be used
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001013depends on the mainboard design. In many cases the functions executed
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001014by the hooks just carry out trivial default settings or they are even
1015empty.
1016
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001017Some mainboard/CPU combinations need to trigger an additional memory
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001018controller reset before the memory can be initialized properly. This is,
1019for example, used to get memory working on preC stepping AMD64
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001020processors. coreboot provides two hooks for triggering onboard memory
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001021reset logic:
1022
1023\begin{itemize}
1024\item \begin{verbatim}static void memreset_setup(void)\end{verbatim}
1025\item \begin{verbatim}static void memreset(int controllers, const struct
1026 mem_controller *ctrl)\end{verbatim}
1027\end{itemize}
1028
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001029Some mainboards utilize an SMBUS hub or possibly other mechanisms to
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001030allow using a large number of SPDROMs and thus ram sockets. The result
1031is that only the SPDROM information of one cpu node is visible at a
1032time. The following function, defined in \texttt{auto.c}, is called every time
1033before a memory controller is initialized and gets the memory controller
1034information of the next controller as a parameter:
1035
1036\begin{verbatim}
1037static inline void activate_spd_rom (const struct mem_controller *ctrl)
1038\end{verbatim}
1039
1040The way SMBUS hub information is coded into the \texttt{mem\_controller}
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001041structure is mainboard implementation specific and not
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001042described here. See \texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/amd/quartet/auto.c}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001043for an example.
1044
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001045coreboot folks have agreed on SPD data being the central information
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001046source for RAM specific information. But not all mainboards/RAM
1047modules feature a physical SPD ROM. To still allow an easy to use SPD
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001048driven setup, there is a hook that abstracts reading the SPD ROM
1049ingredients that are used by the memory initialization mechanism:
1050
1051\begin{verbatim}
1052static inline int spd_read_byte(unsigned device, unsigned address)
1053\end{verbatim}
1054
1055This function, defined in \texttt{auto.c}, directly maps it's calls to
1056\texttt{smbus\_read\_byte()} calls if SPD ROM information is read via
1057the I2C SMBUS:
1058
1059\begin{verbatim}
1060static inline int spd_read_byte(unsigned device, unsigned address)
1061{
1062 return smbus_read_byte(device & 0xff, address);
1063}
1064\end{verbatim}
1065
1066If there is no SPD ROM available in the system design, this function
1067keeps an array of SPD ROM information hard coded per logical RAM module.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001068It returns the faked' SPD ROM information using device and address
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001069as indices to this array.
1070
1071
1072\subsection {IRQ Tables}
1073
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001074Mainboards that provide an IRQ table should have the following two
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001075variables set in their \texttt{Config.lb} file:
1076
1077\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001078default CONFIG_HAVE_PIRQ_TABLE=1
1079default CONFIG_IRQ_SLOT_COUNT=7
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001080\end{verbatim}
1081
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001082This will make coreboot look for the file \\
1083\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/<vendor>/<mainboard>/irq\_tables.c} which
1084contains the source code definition of the IRQ table. coreboot corrects
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001085small inconsistencies in the IRQ table during startup (checksum and
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001086number of entries), but it is not yet writing IRQ tables in a completely
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001087dynamic way.
1088
1089\textbf{NOTE:} To get Linux to understand and actually use the IRQ
1090table, it is not always a good idea to specify the vendor and device id
1091of the actually present interrupt router device. Linux 2.4 for example
1092does not know about the interrupt router of the AMD8111 southbridge. In
1093such cases it is advised to choose the vendor/device id of a compatible
1094device that is supported by the Linux kernel. In case of the AMD8111
1095interrupt router it is advised to specify the AMD768/Opus interrupt
1096controller instead (vendor id=\texttt{0x1022}, device id=\texttt{0x7443})
1097
1098\subsection {MP Tables}
1099
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001100coreboot contains code to create MP tables conforming the
1101Multiprocessor Specification V1.4. To include an MP Table in a coreboot
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001102image, the following configuration variables have to be set (in the
1103mainboard specific configuration file
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001104\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/<vendor><mainboard>/Config.lb}):
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001105
1106\begin{verbatim}
1107default CONFIG_SMP=1
1108default CONFIG_MAX_CPUS=1 # 2,4,..
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001109default CONFIG_HAVE_MP_TABLE=1
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001110\end{verbatim}
1111
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001112coreboot will then look for a function for setting up the MP table in
1113the file \texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard<vendor>/<mainboard>/mptable.c}:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001114
1115\begin{verbatim}
1116void *smp_write_config_table(void *v, unsigned long * processor_map)
1117\end{verbatim}
1118
1119MP Table generation is still somewhat static, i.e. changing the bus
1120numbering will force
1121you to adopt the code in mptable.c. This is subject to change in future
1122revisions.
1123
Stefan Reinauerc0f4e2a2004-02-10 16:53:55 +00001124\subsection {ACPI Tables}
1125
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001126There is initial ACPI support in coreboot now. Currently the only gain with
Stefan Reinauerc0f4e2a2004-02-10 16:53:55 +00001127this is the ability to use HPET timers in Linux. To achieve this, there is a
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001128framework that can generate the following tables:
Stefan Reinauerc0f4e2a2004-02-10 16:53:55 +00001129\begin{itemize}
1130\item RSDP
1131\item RSDT
1132\item MADT
1133\item HPET
1134\end{itemize}
1135
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001136To enable ACPI in your coreboot build, add the following lines to your
Stefan Reinauerc0f4e2a2004-02-10 16:53:55 +00001137configuration files:
1138\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001139uses CONFIG_HAVE_ACPI_TABLES
Stefan Reinauerc0f4e2a2004-02-10 16:53:55 +00001140[..]
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001141option CONFIG_HAVE_ACPI_TABLES=1
Stefan Reinauerc0f4e2a2004-02-10 16:53:55 +00001142\end{verbatim}
1143
1144To keep Linux doing it's pci ressource allocation based on IRQ tables and MP
1145tables, you have to specify the kernel parameter \texttt{pci=noacpi} otherwise
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001146your PCI devices won't get interrupts.
Stefan Reinauerc0f4e2a2004-02-10 16:53:55 +00001147It's likely that more ACPI support will follow, when there is need for certain
1148features.
1149
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001150\subsection{POST}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001151coreboot has three different methods of handling POST codes. They can
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001152be triggered using configuration file options.
1153\begin{itemize}
1154\item
1155\emph{Ignore POST completely}. No early code debugging is possible with
1156this setting. Set the configuration variable \texttt{NO\_POST} to
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001157\texttt{1} to switch off all POST handling in coreboot.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001158\item
1159\emph{Normal IO port 80 POST}. This is the default behavior of
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001160coreboot. No configuration variables have to be set. To be able to see
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001161port 80 POST output, you need a POST expansion card for ISA or PCI. Port
116280 POST allows simple debugging without any other output method
1163available (serial interface or VGA display)
1164\item
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001165\emph{Serial POST}.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001166This option allows to push POST messages to the serial interface instead
1167of using IO ports. \textbf{NOTE:} The serial interface has to be
1168initialized before serial POST can work. To use serial POST, set the
1169configuration variable \texttt{CONFIG\_SERIAL\_POST} to the value 1.
1170\end{itemize}
1171
1172
1173\subsection{HDT Debugging}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001174If you are debugging your coreboot code with a Hardware Debug Tool
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001175(HDT), you can find the source code line for a given physical EIP
1176address as follows: Look the address up in the file linuxbios.map. Then
1177search the label Lxx in the file auto.inc created by romcc. The original
1178source code file and line number is mentioned in auto.inc.
1179
1180
1181\subsection{Device Drivers}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001182With only a few data structures coreboot features a simple but flexible
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001183device driver interface. This interface is not intended for autonomously
1184driving the devices but to initialize all system components so that they
1185can be used by the booted operating system.
1186
1187Since nowadays most systems are PCI centric, the data structures used
1188are tuned towards (onboard and expansion bus) PCI devices. Each driver
1189consists of at least two structures.
1190
1191The \texttt{pci\_driver} structure maps PCI vendor/device id pairs to a
1192second structure that describes a set of functions that together
1193initialize and operate the device:
1194
1195\begin{verbatim}
1196 static void adaptec_scsi_init(struct device *dev)
1197 {
1198 [..]
1199 }
1200 static struct device_operations lsi_scsi_ops = {
1201 .read_resources = pci_dev_read_resources,
1202 .set_resources = pci_dev_set_resources,
1203 .enable_resources = pci_dev_enable_resources,
1204 .init = lsi_scsi_init,
1205 .scan_bus = 0,
1206 };
Stefan Reinauer8e96ba22010-03-16 23:33:29 +00001207 static const struct pci_driver lsi_scsi_driver __pci_driver = {
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001208 .ops = &lsi_scsi_ops,
1209 .vendor = 0xXXXX,
1210 .device = 0xXXXX,
1211 };
1212\end{verbatim}
1213
1214By separating the two structures above, M:N relations between compatible
1215devices and drivers can be described. The driver source code containing
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001216above data structures and code have to be added to a coreboot image
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001217using the driver keyword in the mainboard specific configuration file \\
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001218\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/<vendor>/<mainboard>/Config.lb}:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001219
1220\begin{verbatim}
1221 driver lsi_scsi.o
1222\end{verbatim}
1223
1224\subsection{Bus Bridges}
1225
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001226Currently all bridges supported in the coreboot-v2 tree are transparent
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001227bridges. This means, once the bridge is initialized, it's remote devices
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001228are visible on one of the PCI buses without special probing. coreboot
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001229supports also bridges that are nontransparent. The driver support code
1230can provide a \texttt{scan\_bus} function to scan devices behind the bridge.
1231
1232\subsection{CPU Reset}
1233When changing speed and width of hypertransport chain connections
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001234coreboot has to either assert an LDTSTOP or a reset to make the changes
1235become active. Additionally Linux can do a firmware reset, if coreboot
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001236provides the needed infrastructure. To use this capability, define the
Uwe Hermann105c1552009-09-04 19:25:51 +00001237option \texttt{CONFIG\_HAVE\_HARD\_RESET} and add an object file specifying the
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001238reset code in your mainboard specific configuration file
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001239\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/$<$vendor$>$/$<$mainboard$>$/Config.lb}:
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001240
1241\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001242 default CONFIG_HAVE_HARD_RESET=1
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001243 object reset.o
1244\end{verbatim}
1245
1246The C source file \texttt{reset.c} (resulting in \texttt{reset.o}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001247during compilation) shall define the following function to take care
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001248of the system reset:
1249
1250\begin{verbatim}
1251 void hard_reset(void);
1252\end{verbatim}
1253
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001254See \texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/arima/hdama/reset.c} for an example
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001255implementation.
1256
1257\newpage
1258
1259%
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001260% 11. coreboot Internals
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001261%
1262
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001263\section{coreboot Internals}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001264This chapter covers some of the internal structures and algorithms of
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001265coreboot that have not been mentioned so far.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001266
1267\subsection{Code Flow}
1268
1269\begin{figure}[htb]
1270\centering
1271\includegraphics[scale=0.7]{codeflow.pdf}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001272\caption{coreboot rough Code Flow}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001273\label{fix:codeflow}
1274\end{figure}
1275
1276\newpage
1277
1278\subsection{Fallback mechanism}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001279coreboot provides a mechanism to pack two different coreboot builds
1280within one coreboot ROM image. Using the system CMOS memory coreboot
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001281determines whether the last boot with a default image succeeded and
1282boots a failsafe image on failure. This allows insystem testing without
1283the risk to render the system unusable. See
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001284\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/arima/hdama/failover.c} for example
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001285code. The fallback mechanism can be used with the \texttt{cmos\_util}.
1286
1287\subsection{(Un) Supported Standards}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001288coreboot supports the following standards
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001289\begin{itemize}
1290\item Multiprocessing Specification (MPSPEC) 1.4
Stefan Reinauerc0f4e2a2004-02-10 16:53:55 +00001291\item IRQ Tables (PIRQ)
1292\item ACPI (initial support on AMD64)
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001293\item Elf Booting
1294\end{itemize}
1295However, the following standards are not supported until now, and will
1296probably not be supported in future revisions:
1297\begin{itemize}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001298\item APM
1299\end{itemize}
1300
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001301\subsection{coreboot table}
1302coreboot stores information about the system in a data structure called
1303the coreboot table. This table can be read under Linux using the tool
1304nvramtool from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001305
1306Get more information about lxbios and the utility itself at
1307\url{http://www.llnl.gov/linux/lxbios/lxbios.html}
1308
1309\subsection{ROMCC limitations}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001310ROMCC, part of the coreboot project, is a C compiler that translates to
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001311completely rommable code. This means the resulting code does not need
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001312any memory to work. This is one of the major improvements in coreboot
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001313V2, since it allows almost all code to be written in C. DRAM
1314initialization can be factored and reused more easily among mainboards
1315and platforms.
1316
1317Since no memory is available during this early initialization point,
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001318romcc has to map all used variables in registers for the time being.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001319Same applies for their stack usage. Generally the less registers are
1320used up by the algorithms, the better code can be factored, resulting in
1321a smaller object size. Since getting the best register usage is an NP
1322hard problem, some heuristics are used to get reasonable translation
1323time. If you run out of registers during compilation, try to refactor
1324your code.
1325
1326\subsection{CMOS handling}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001327coreboot can use the mainboard's CMOS memory to store information
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001328defined in a data structure called the CMOS table . This information
1329contains serial line speed, fallback boot control, output verbosity,
1330default boot device, ECC control, and more. It can be easily enhanced by
1331enhancing the CMOS table. This table, if present, is found at
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001332\texttt{coreboot-v2/src/mainboard/$<$vendor$>$/$<$mainboard$>$/cmos.layout}.
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001333It describes the available options, their possible values and their
1334position within the CMOS memory. The layout file looks as follows:
1335\begin{verbatim}
1336 # startbit length config configID name
1337 [..]
1338 392 3 e 5 baud_rate
1339 [..]
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001340
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001341 # configid value human readable description
1342 5 0 115200
1343 5 1 57600
1344 5 2 38400
1345 5 3 19200
1346 5 4 9600
1347 5 5 4800
1348 5 6 2400
1349 5 7 1200
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001350
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001351\end{verbatim}
1352
1353To change CMOS values from a running Linux system, use the
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001354\texttt{cmos\_util}, provided by Linux Networks as part of the coreboot
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001355utilities suite. Get it at
1356\textit{ftp://ftp.lnxi.com/pub/linuxbios/utilities/}
1357
1358\subsection {Booting Payloads}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001359coreboot can load a payload binary from a Flash device or IDE. This
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001360payload can be a boot loader, like FILO or Etherboot, a kernel image, or
1361any other static ELF binary.
1362
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001363To create a Linux kernel image, that is bootable in coreboot, you have
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001364to use mkelfImage. The command line I used, looks like follows:
1365
1366\begin{verbatim}
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001367 objdir/sbin/mkelfImage t bzImagei386 kernel /boot/vmlinuz \
1368 commandline="console=ttyS0,115200 root=/dev/hda3" \
1369 initrd=/boot/initrd output vmlinuz.elf
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001370\end{verbatim}
1371
1372
1373This will create the file \texttt{vmlinuz.elf} from a distribution
1374kernel, console redirected to the serial port and using an initial
1375ramdisk.
1376
1377\subsection{Kernel on dhcp/tftp}
1378
1379One possible scenario during testing is that you keep your kernel (or
1380any additional payload) on a different machine on the network. This can
1381quickly be done using a DHCP and TFTP server.
1382
1383Use for example following \texttt{/etc/dhcpd.conf} (adapt to your
1384network):
1385
1386\begin{verbatim}
1387 subnet 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
1388 range 192.168.1.0 192.168.1.31;
1389 option broadcastaddress 192.168.1.255;
1390 }
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001391
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001392 ddnsupdatestyle adhoc;
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001393
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001394 host hammer12 {
1395 hardware ethernet 00:04:76:EA:64:31;
1396 fixedaddress 192.168.1.24;
1397 filename "vmlinuz.elf";
1398 }
1399\end{verbatim}
1400
1401
1402Additionally you have to run a \texttt{tftp} server. You can start one
1403using \texttt{inetd}. To do this, you have to remove the comment from
1404the following line in \texttt{/etc/inetd.conf}:
1405
1406\begin{verbatim}
1407 tftp dgram udp wait root /usr/sbin/in.tftpd in.tftpd -s /tftpboot
1408\end{verbatim}
1409
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001410Then put your kernel image \texttt{vmlinuz.elf} in \texttt{/tftpboot} on
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001411the \texttt{tftp} server.
1412
1413
1414\newpage
1415
1416%
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001417% 12. Advanced Device Initialization Mechanisms
1418%
1419
1420\section{Advanced Device Initialization Mechanisms}
1421
1422Like software, today's hardware is getting more and more complex. To
1423stay flexible many hardware vendors start breaking hardware
Stefan Reinauer2c83b272004-06-02 11:25:31 +00001424compatibility to old standards like VGA. Thus, VGA is still supported by
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001425most cards, but emulation has to be enabled by the firmware for the
1426device to operate properly. Also, many expansion cards are small
1427discrete systems that have to initialize attached ram, download
1428controller firmware and similar. Without this initialization, an
1429operating system can not take advantage of the hardware, so there needs
1430to be a way to address this issue. There are several alternatives:
1431
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001432\subsection{Native coreboot Support}
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001433
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001434For some devices (ie Trident Cyberblade 3d) there is native coreboot
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001435support This means there is a small driver bound to the PCI id of the
1436device that is called after PCI device ressources are allotted.
1437
1438PROs:
1439 \begin{itemize}
1440 \item open source
1441 \item minimal driver
1442 \item early control
1443 \end{itemize}
1444
1445CONs:
1446 \begin{itemize}
1447 \item need an additional driver
1448 \item viable for onboard devices only
1449 \item not flexible for pci cards
1450 \end{itemize}
1451
1452\subsection{Using Native Linux Support}
1453
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001454A simple way of getting a whole lot of drivers available for coreboot
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001455is to reuse Linux drivers by putting a Linux kernel to flash. This
1456works, because no drivers are needed to get the Linux kernel (as opposed
1457to store the kernel on a harddisk connected to isa/scsi/raid storage)
1458
1459PROs:
1460 \begin{itemize}
1461 \item large number of open source drivers
1462 \end{itemize}
1463
1464CONs:
1465 \begin{itemize}
1466 \item need Linux in Flash (BLOAT!)
1467 \item drivers expect devices to be initialized (LSI1020/1030)
1468 \item Linux only
1469 \item large flash needed (4MBit minimum, normal operations 8+ MBit)
1470 \end{itemize}
1471
1472
1473\subsection{Running X86 Option ROMs}
1474
1475Especially SCSI/RAID controllers and graphics adapters come with a
1476special option rom. This option rom usually contains x86 binary code
1477that uses a legacy PCBIOS interface for device interaction. If this code
1478gets executed, the device becomes operable in Linux and other operating
1479systems.
1480
1481PROs:
1482 \begin{itemize}
1483 \item really flexible
1484 \item no need for additional drivers on firmware layer
1485 \item large number of supported devices
1486 \end{itemize}
1487
1488CONs:
1489 \begin{itemize}
1490 \item non-x86 platforms need complex emulation
1491 \item x86 platforms need legacy API
1492 \item outdated concept
1493 \end{itemize}
1494
1495
1496\subsection{Running Open Firmware Option ROMs}
1497
1498Some PCI devices come with open firmware option roms. These devices are
1499normally found in computers from SUN, Apple or IBM. Open Firmware is a
1500instruction set architecture independent firmware standard that allows
1501device specific initialization using simple, small, but flexible
1502bytecode that runs with minimal footprint on all architectures that have
1503an Open Firmware implementation.
1504
1505There is a free Open Firmware implementation available, called OpenBIOS,
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001506that runs on top of coreboot. See www.openbios.org
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001507
1508PROs:
1509 \begin{itemize}
1510 \item architecture independence
1511 \item small footprint
1512 \item clean concept, less bugs
1513 \end{itemize}
1514
1515CONs:
1516 \begin{itemize}
1517 \item only small number of devices come with OpenFirmware capable option roms
1518 \end{itemize}
1519
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001520%
1521% 13 image types
1522%
1523
1524\section{Image types}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001525There used to be one image type for coreboot, as described above. Since this paper was written (2004) there have been many changes. First, the name
Stefan Reinauer236d1022009-04-21 22:05:50 +00001526was changed to coreboot, for many reasons. Second, Cache As Ram support (CAR)
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001527was added for many AMD CPUs, which both simplified and complicated things. Simplification came with the removal of romcc; complication came with the addition of new ways to build.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001528
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001529There are two big additions to the build process and, furthermore, more than two new CONFIG variables to control them.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001530
1531\begin{itemize}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001532\item \begin{verbatim}CONFIG_USE_DCACHE_RAM\end{verbatim}
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001533
1534Set to \texttt{1} to use Cache As Ram (CAR). Defaults to \texttt{0}
1535
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001536\end{itemize}
1537
1538Before going over the new image types, derived from v3, we will quickly review the standard v2 image types. We are hoping this review will
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001539aid comprehension.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001540
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001541A coreboot rom file consists of one or more \textit{images}. All images consist of a part that runs in ROM, and a part that runs in RAM. The RAM can be in compressed form and is decompressed when needed by the ROM code. The main function of the ROM code is to get memory working. Both ROM and RAM consist of a very small amount of assembly code and mostly C code.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001542
Ronald G. Minnich2cecce52009-04-20 15:36:57 +00001543\subsection{romcc images (from emulation/qemu)}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001544ROMCC images are so-called because C code for the ROM part is compiled with romcc. romcc is an optimizing C compiler which compiles one, and only
1545one file; to get more than one file, one must include the C code via include statements. The main ROM code .c file is usually called auto.c.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001546\subsubsection{How it is built}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001547Romcc compiles auto.c to produce auto.inc. auto.inc is included in the main crt0.S, which is then preprocessed to produce crt0.s. The inclusion of files into crt0.S is controlled by the CONFIG\_CRT0\_INCLUDES variable. crt0.s is then assembled.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001548
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001549File for the ram part are compiled in a conventional manner.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001550
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001551The final step is linking. The use of named sections is used very heavily in coreboot to control where different bits of code go. The reset vector must go in the top 16 bytes. The start portion of the ROM code must go in the top 64K bytes, since most chipsets only enable this much ROM at startup time. Here is a quick look at a typical image:
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001552\begin{verbatim}
1553 [Nr] Name Type Addr Off Size ES Flg Lk Inf Al
1554 [ 0] NULL 00000000 000000 000000 00 0 0 0
1555 [ 1] .ram PROGBITS ffff0000 001000 005893 00 WA 0 0 1
1556 [ 2] .rom PROGBITS ffff5893 006893 00029d 00 AX 0 0 16
1557 [ 3] .reset PROGBITS fffffff0 006ff0 000010 00 A 0 0 1
1558 [ 4] .id PROGBITS ffffffd1 006fd1 00001f 00 A 0 0 1
1559 [ 5] .shstrtab STRTAB 00000000 007000 000030 00 0 0 1
1560 [ 6] .symtab SYMTAB 00000000 007170 000c30 10 7 37 4
1561 [ 7] .strtab STRTAB 00000000 007da0 000bfd 00 0 0 1
1562\end{verbatim}
1563
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001564The only sections that get loaded into a ROM are the Allocated ones. We can see the .ram, .rom, .reset and .id sections.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001565\subsubsection{layout}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001566As we mentioned, the ROM file consists of multiple images. In the basic file, there are two full coreboot rom images. The build sequence for each is the same, and in fact the ldscript.ld files are almost identical. The only difference is in a few makefile variables, generated by the config tool.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001567
1568\begin{itemize}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001569\item CONFIG\_PAYLOAD\_SIZE. Each image may have a different payload size.
1570\item CONFIG\_ROMBASE Each image must have a different base in rom.
1571\item CONFIG\_RESET Unclear what this is used for.
Uwe Hermann105c1552009-09-04 19:25:51 +00001572\item CONFIG\_EXCEPTION\_VECTORS where an optional IDT might go.
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001573\item CONFIG\_USE\_OPTION\_TABLE if set, an option table section will be linked in.
1574\item CONFIG\_ROM\_PAYLOAD\_START This is the soon-to-be-deprecated way of locating a payload. cbfs eliminates this.
Uwe Hermann105c1552009-09-04 19:25:51 +00001575\item CONFIG\_USE\_FALLBACK\_IMAGE Whether this is a fallback or normal image
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001576\item CONFIG\_ROM\_SECTION\_SIZE Essentially, the payload size. Soon to be deprecated.
Uwe Hermann105c1552009-09-04 19:25:51 +00001577\item CONFIG\_ROM\_IMAGE\_SIZE Size of this image (i.e. fallback or normal image)
1578\item CONFIG\_ROM\_SIZE Total size of the ROM
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001579\item CONFIG\_XIP\_RAM\_BASE The start of eXecute In Place code. XIP allows for not copying code to ram, but just running it from ROM.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001580\end{itemize}
1581
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001582Each image (normal or fallback) is built completely independently and does not get linked to the other. They are assembled into one ROM image by the (soon to be deprecated) buildrom tool, or by the cbfs tool.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001583
1584\subsubsection{boot sequence}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001585We boot and start at fffffff0. We then jump to the entry point at \_start. \_start does some machine init and an lgdt and jumps to \_\_protected\_start, at which point we are in protected mode. The code does a bit more machine setup and then starts executing the romcc code.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001586
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001587If fallback has been built in, some setup needs to be done. On some machines, it is extensive. Full rom decoding must be enabled. This may in turn require additional PCI setup to enable decoding to be enabled (!). To decided which image to use, hardware registers (cold boot on the Opteron) or CMOS are checked. Finally, once the image to use has been decided, a jmp is performed, viz:
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001588\begin{verbatim}
1589 /* This is the primary cpu how should I boot? */
1590 else if (do_normal_boot()) {
1591 goto normal_image;
1592 }
1593 else {
1594 goto fallback_image;
1595 }
1596 normal_image:
1597 __asm__ volatile ("jmp __normal_image"
1598 : /* outputs */
1599 : "a" (bist), "b" (cpu_init_detectedx) /* inputs */
1600 );
1601
1602 fallback_image:
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001603#if CONFIG_HAVE_FAILOVER_BOOT==1
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001604 __asm__ volatile ("jmp __fallback_image"
1605 : /* outputs */
1606 : "a" (bist), "b" (cpu_init_detectedx) /* inputs */
1607 )
1608#endif
1609 ;
1610\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001611How does the fallback image get the symbol for normal entry? Via magic in the ldscript.ld -- remember, the images are not linked to each other.
1612Finally, we can see this in the Config.lb for most mainboards:
Ronald G. Minnich2cecce52009-04-20 15:36:57 +00001613\begin{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001614if CONFIG_USE_FALLBACK_IMAGE
Ronald G. Minnich2cecce52009-04-20 15:36:57 +00001615 mainboardinit cpu/x86/16bit/reset16.inc
1616 ldscript /cpu/x86/16bit/reset16.lds
1617else
1618 mainboardinit cpu/x86/32bit/reset32.inc
1619 ldscript /cpu/x86/32bit/reset32.lds
1620end
1621\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001622What does this mean? the non-fallback image has a 32-bit entry point; fallback has a 16-bit entry point. The reason for this is that some code from fallback always runs, so as to pick fallback or normal; but the normal is always called from 32-bit code.
Ronald G. Minnich2cecce52009-04-20 15:36:57 +00001623\subsection{car images (from lippert/roadrunner-lx)}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001624CAR images in their simplest form are modified romcc images. The file is usually cache\_as\_ram\_auto.c. C inclusion is still used. The main difference is in the build sequence. The compiler command line is a very slight changed: instead of using romcc to generate an auto.inc include file, gcc us used. Then, two perl scripts are used to rename the .text and .data sections to .rom.text and .rom.data respectively.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001625\subsubsection{How it is built}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001626The build is almost identical to the romcc build. Since the auto.inc file exists, it can be included as before. The crt0\_includes.h file has one addition: a file that enables CAR, in this case it is \textit{src/cpu/amd/model\_lx/cache\_as\_ram.inc}.
Ronald G. Minnich2cecce52009-04-20 15:36:57 +00001627\subsubsection{layout}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001628No significant change from romcc code.
Ronald G. Minnich2cecce52009-04-20 15:36:57 +00001629\subsubsection{boot sequence}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001630No significant change from romcc code, except that the CAR code has to set up a stack.
Ronald G. Minnich2cecce52009-04-20 15:36:57 +00001631
Ronald G. Minnichb88a1fc2009-04-20 22:10:34 +00001632\subsection{car + CONFIG\_USE\_INIT images (new emulation/qemu}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001633This type of image makes more use of the C compiler. In this type of image, in fact,
1634seperate compilation is possible but is not always used. Oddly enough, this option is only used in PPC boards. That said, we need to move to this way of building. Including C code is poor style.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001635\subsubsection{How it is built}
Ronald G. Minnichb88a1fc2009-04-20 22:10:34 +00001636There is a make variable, INIT-OBJECTS, that for all our other targets is empty. In this type of build, INIT-OBJECTS is a list of C files that are created from the config tool initobject command. Again, with INIT-OBJECTS we can finally stop including .c files and go with seperate compilation.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001637\subsubsection{layout}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001638No significant change from romcc code.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001639\subsubsection{boot sequence}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001640No significant change from romcc code, except that the CAR code has to set up a stack.
Ronald G. Minnichb88a1fc2009-04-20 22:10:34 +00001641
1642\subsubsection{layout}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001643No significant change from romcc code.
Ronald G. Minnichb88a1fc2009-04-20 22:10:34 +00001644\subsubsection{boot sequence}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001645No significant change from romcc code, except that the CAR code has to set up a stack.
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001646\subsection{failover}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001647Failover is the newest way to lay out a ROM. The choice of which image to run is removed from the fallback image and moved into a small, standalone piece of code. The code is simple enough to show here:
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001648\begin{verbatim}
1649static unsigned long main(unsigned long bist)
1650{
1651 if (do_normal_boot())
1652 goto normal_image;
1653 else
1654 goto fallback_image;
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001655
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001656normal_image:
1657 __asm__ __volatile__("jmp __normal_image" : : "a" (bist) : );
1658
1659cpu_reset:
1660 __asm__ __volatile__("jmp __cpu_reset" : : "a" (bist) : );
1661
1662fallback_image:
1663 return bist;
1664}
1665
1666\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001667Some motherboards have a more complex bus structure (e.g. Opteron). In those cases, the failover can be more complex, as it requires some hardware initialization to work correctly. As of this writing (April 2009), these boards have their own failover:
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001668\begin{quote}
1669./src/mainboard/iei/nova4899r/failover.c
1670./src/mainboard/emulation/qemu-x86/failover.c
Uwe Hermann503959c2009-05-12 14:01:14 +00001671./src/mainboard/supermicro/x6dhr\_ig/failover.c
1672./src/mainboard/supermicro/x6dai\_g/failover.c
1673./src/mainboard/supermicro/x6dhe\_g2/failover.c
1674./src/mainboard/supermicro/x6dhr\_ig2/failover.c
1675./src/mainboard/supermicro/x6dhe\_g/failover.c
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001676./src/mainboard/dell/s1850/failover.c
1677./src/mainboard/intel/xe7501devkit/failover.c
1678./src/mainboard/intel/jarrell/failover.c
1679./src/mainboard/olpc/btest/failover.c
Uwe Hermann503959c2009-05-12 14:01:14 +00001680./src/mainboard/olpc/rev\_a/failover.c
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001681./src/mainboard/via/epia-m/failover.c
1682\end{quote}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001683Here is one of the more complicated ones:
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001684\begin{verbatim}
1685static unsigned long main(unsigned long bist)
1686{
1687 /* Did just the cpu reset? */
1688 if (memory_initialized()) {
1689 if (last_boot_normal()) {
1690 goto normal_image;
1691 } else {
1692 goto cpu_reset;
1693 }
1694 }
1695
1696 /* This is the primary cpu how should I boot? */
1697 else if (do_normal_boot()) {
1698 goto normal_image;
1699 }
1700 else {
1701 goto fallback_image;
1702 }
1703 normal_image:
1704 asm volatile ("jmp __normal_image"
1705 : /* outputs */
1706 : "a" (bist) /* inputs */
1707 : /* clobbers */
1708 );
1709 cpu_reset:
1710 asm volatile ("jmp __cpu_reset"
1711 : /* outputs */
1712 : "a"(bist) /* inputs */
1713 : /* clobbers */
1714 );
1715 fallback_image:
1716 return bist;
1717}
1718
1719\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001720They're not that different, in fact. So why are there different copies all over the tree? Simple: code inclusion. Most of the failover.c are different because they include different bits of code. Here is a key reason for killing C code inclusion in the tree.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001721\subsubsection{How it is built}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001722There two additional config variables:
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001723\begin{itemize}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001724\item HAVE\_FAILOVER\_IMAGE Has to be defined when certain files are included.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001725\item USE\_FAILOVER\_IMAGE Enables the use of the failover image
1726\end{itemize}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001727Confusingly enough, almost all the uses of these two variables are either nested or both required to be set, e.g.
1728The fallback and normal builds are the same. The target config has a new clause that looks like this:
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001729\begin{verbatim}
1730romimage "failover"
Stefan Reinauer08670622009-06-30 15:17:49 +00001731 option CONFIG_USE_FAILOVER_IMAGE=1
1732 option CONFIG_USE_FALLBACK_IMAGE=0
1733 option CONFIG_ROM_IMAGE_SIZE=CONFIG_FAILOVER_SIZE
1734 option CONFIG_XIP_ROM_SIZE=CONFIG_FAILOVER_SIZE
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001735 option COREBOOT_EXTRA_VERSION="\$(shell cat ../../VERSION)\_Failover"
1736end
1737\end{verbatim}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001738This new section uses some constructs not yet discussed in detail. XIP\_ROM\_SIZE just refers to the
1739fact that the failover code is eXecute In Place, i.e. not copied to RAM. Of course, the ROM part of normal/fallback is as well, so the usage of XIP here is somewhat confusing. Finally, the USE\_FAILOVER\_IMAGE variable is set, which changes code compilation in a few places. If we just consider non-mainbard files, there are:
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001740\begin{verbatim}
1741src/cpu/amd/car/cache_as_ram.inc
1742src/arch/i386/Config.lb
1743\end{verbatim}
1744For the cache\_as\_ram.inc file, the changes relate to the fact that failover code sets up CAR, so that fallback code need not.
1745
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001746For the Config.lb, several aspects of build change.
1747When USE\_FAILOVER\_IMAGE, entry into both normal and fallback bios images is via a 32-bit entry point (when not defined, entry into fallback is a 16-entry point at the power-on reset vector).
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001748\subsubsection{layout}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001749Failover.c becomes the new bootblock at the top of memory. It calls either normal or fallback. The address of normal and fallback is determined by ldscript magic.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001750\subsubsection{boot sequence}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001751failover.c tests a few variables and the calls the normal or fallback payload depending on those variables; usually they are CMOS settings.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001752\subsection{Proposed new image forat}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001753The new image format will use seperate compilation -- no C code included! -- on all files.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001754
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001755The new design has a few key goals:
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001756\begin{itemize}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001757\item Always use a bootblock (currently called failover).
1758The name failover.c, being utterly obscure, will not be used; instead, we will name the file bootblock.c. Instead of having a different copy for each mainboard, we can have just one copy.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001759\item Always use seperate compilation
1760\item Always use printk etc. in the ROM code
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001761\item (longer term) from the bootblock, always use cbfs to locate the normal/fallback etc. code. This code will be XIP.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001762\end{itemize}
1763
1764\subsubsection{How it is built}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001765For now, since we are still using the config tool, we'll need a new command: bootblockobject, which creates a list of files to be included in the bootblock. Not a lot else will have to change. We are going to move to using the v3 CAR code assembly code (one or two files at most, instead of many) and, instead of the thicket of little ldscript files, one ldscript file. This strategy is subject to modification as events dictate.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001766\subsubsection{layout}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001767Almost the same, for now, as the current failover code.
Ronald G. Minnich2c245ff2009-04-23 03:59:33 +00001768\subsubsection{boot sequence}
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001769%
Ronald G. Minnichef5f8a72009-04-17 16:18:02 +00001770% 14 Glossary
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001771%
1772
1773\section{Glossary}
1774\begin{itemize}
1775\item payload
1776
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001777coreboot only cares about low level machine initialization, but also has
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001778very simple mechanisms to boot a file either from FLASHROM or IDE. That
1779file, possibly a Linux Kernel, a boot loader or Etherboot, are called
1780payload, since it is the first software executed that does not cope with
1781pure initialization.
1782
1783\item flash device
1784
1785Flash devices are commonly used in all different computers since unlike
1786ROMs they can be electronically erased and reprogrammed.
1787\end{itemize}
1788
1789\newpage
1790
1791%
Stefan Reinauerf69f7e22004-02-10 17:30:04 +00001792% 14 Bibliography
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001793%
1794
1795\section{Bibliography}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001796\subsection{Additional Papers on coreboot}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001797
1798\begin{itemize}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001799 \item
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001800 \textit{\url{http://www.coreboot.org/Documentation}}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001801 \item
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001802 \textit{\url{http://www.lysator.liu.se/upplysning/fa/linuxbios.pdf}}
Stefan Reinauer14e22772010-04-27 06:56:47 +00001803 \item
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001804 \textit{\url{http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=512627}}
1805\end{itemize}
1806
1807\subsection {Links}
1808
1809\begin{itemize}
1810 \item Etherboot: \textit{\url{http://www.etherboot.org/}}
Stefan Reinauerebf25892009-04-21 21:45:11 +00001811 \item Filo: \textit{\url{http://www.coreboot.org/FILO}}
Stefan Reinauer37414ca2003-11-22 15:15:47 +00001812 \item OpenBIOS: \textit{\url{http://www.openbios.org/}}
1813\end{itemize}
1814
1815\end{document}