1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ 2# 3# (C) Copyright 2000 - 2013 4# Wolfgang Denk, DENX Software Engineering, wd@denx.de. 5 6Summary: 7======== 8 9This directory contains the source code for U-Boot, a boot loader for 10Embedded boards based on PowerPC, ARM, MIPS and several other 11processors, which can be installed in a boot ROM and used to 12initialize and test the hardware or to download and run application 13code. 14 15The development of U-Boot is closely related to Linux: some parts of 16the source code originate in the Linux source tree, we have some 17header files in common, and special provision has been made to 18support booting of Linux images. 19 20Some attention has been paid to make this software easily 21configurable and extendable. For instance, all monitor commands are 22implemented with the same call interface, so that it's very easy to 23add new commands. Also, instead of permanently adding rarely used 24code (for instance hardware test utilities) to the monitor, you can 25load and run it dynamically. 26 27 28Status: 29======= 30 31In general, all boards for which a configuration option exists in the 32Makefile have been tested to some extent and can be considered 33"working". In fact, many of them are used in production systems. 34 35In case of problems see the CHANGELOG file to find out who contributed 36the specific port. In addition, there are various MAINTAINERS files 37scattered throughout the U-Boot source identifying the people or 38companies responsible for various boards and subsystems. 39 40Note: As of August, 2010, there is no longer a CHANGELOG file in the 41actual U-Boot source tree; however, it can be created dynamically 42from the Git log using: 43 44 make CHANGELOG 45 46 47Where to get help: 48================== 49 50In case you have questions about, problems with or contributions for 51U-Boot, you should send a message to the U-Boot mailing list at 52<u-boot@lists.denx.de>. There is also an archive of previous traffic 53on the mailing list - please search the archive before asking FAQ's. 54Please see https://lists.denx.de/pipermail/u-boot and 55https://marc.info/?l=u-boot 56 57Where to get source code: 58========================= 59 60The U-Boot source code is maintained in the Git repository at 61https://source.denx.de/u-boot/u-boot.git ; you can browse it online at 62https://source.denx.de/u-boot/u-boot 63 64The "Tags" links on this page allow you to download tarballs of 65any version you might be interested in. Official releases are also 66available from the DENX file server through HTTPS or FTP. 67https://ftp.denx.de/pub/u-boot/ 68ftp://ftp.denx.de/pub/u-boot/ 69 70 71Where we come from: 72=================== 73 74- start from 8xxrom sources 75- create PPCBoot project (https://sourceforge.net/projects/ppcboot) 76- clean up code 77- make it easier to add custom boards 78- make it possible to add other [PowerPC] CPUs 79- extend functions, especially: 80 * Provide extended interface to Linux boot loader 81 * S-Record download 82 * network boot 83 * ATA disk / SCSI ... boot 84- create ARMBoot project (https://sourceforge.net/projects/armboot) 85- add other CPU families (starting with ARM) 86- create U-Boot project (https://sourceforge.net/projects/u-boot) 87- current project page: see https://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot 88 89 90Names and Spelling: 91=================== 92 93The "official" name of this project is "Das U-Boot". The spelling 94"U-Boot" shall be used in all written text (documentation, comments 95in source files etc.). Example: 96 97 This is the README file for the U-Boot project. 98 99File names etc. shall be based on the string "u-boot". Examples: 100 101 include/asm-ppc/u-boot.h 102 103 #include <asm/u-boot.h> 104 105Variable names, preprocessor constants etc. shall be either based on 106the string "u_boot" or on "U_BOOT". Example: 107 108 U_BOOT_VERSION u_boot_logo 109 IH_OS_U_BOOT u_boot_hush_start 110 111 112Versioning: 113=========== 114 115Starting with the release in October 2008, the names of the releases 116were changed from numerical release numbers without deeper meaning 117into a time stamp based numbering. Regular releases are identified by 118names consisting of the calendar year and month of the release date. 119Additional fields (if present) indicate release candidates or bug fix 120releases in "stable" maintenance trees. 121 122Examples: 123 U-Boot v2009.11 - Release November 2009 124 U-Boot v2009.11.1 - Release 1 in version November 2009 stable tree 125 U-Boot v2010.09-rc1 - Release candidate 1 for September 2010 release 126 127 128Directory Hierarchy: 129==================== 130 131/arch Architecture specific files 132 /arc Files generic to ARC architecture 133 /arm Files generic to ARM architecture 134 /m68k Files generic to m68k architecture 135 /microblaze Files generic to microblaze architecture 136 /mips Files generic to MIPS architecture 137 /nds32 Files generic to NDS32 architecture 138 /nios2 Files generic to Altera NIOS2 architecture 139 /powerpc Files generic to PowerPC architecture 140 /riscv Files generic to RISC-V architecture 141 /sandbox Files generic to HW-independent "sandbox" 142 /sh Files generic to SH architecture 143 /x86 Files generic to x86 architecture 144 /xtensa Files generic to Xtensa architecture 145/api Machine/arch independent API for external apps 146/board Board dependent files 147/cmd U-Boot commands functions 148/common Misc architecture independent functions 149/configs Board default configuration files 150/disk Code for disk drive partition handling 151/doc Documentation (don't expect too much) 152/drivers Commonly used device drivers 153/dts Contains Makefile for building internal U-Boot fdt. 154/env Environment files 155/examples Example code for standalone applications, etc. 156/fs Filesystem code (cramfs, ext2, jffs2, etc.) 157/include Header Files 158/lib Library routines generic to all architectures 159/Licenses Various license files 160/net Networking code 161/post Power On Self Test 162/scripts Various build scripts and Makefiles 163/test Various unit test files 164/tools Tools to build S-Record or U-Boot images, etc. 165 166Software Configuration: 167======================= 168 169Configuration is usually done using C preprocessor defines; the 170rationale behind that is to avoid dead code whenever possible. 171 172There are two classes of configuration variables: 173 174* Configuration _OPTIONS_: 175 These are selectable by the user and have names beginning with 176 "CONFIG_". 177 178* Configuration _SETTINGS_: 179 These depend on the hardware etc. and should not be meddled with if 180 you don't know what you're doing; they have names beginning with 181 "CONFIG_SYS_". 182 183Previously, all configuration was done by hand, which involved creating 184symbolic links and editing configuration files manually. More recently, 185U-Boot has added the Kbuild infrastructure used by the Linux kernel, 186allowing you to use the "make menuconfig" command to configure your 187build. 188 189 190Selection of Processor Architecture and Board Type: 191--------------------------------------------------- 192 193For all supported boards there are ready-to-use default 194configurations available; just type "make <board_name>_defconfig". 195 196Example: For a TQM823L module type: 197 198 cd u-boot 199 make TQM823L_defconfig 200 201Note: If you're looking for the default configuration file for a board 202you're sure used to be there but is now missing, check the file 203doc/README.scrapyard for a list of no longer supported boards. 204 205Sandbox Environment: 206-------------------- 207 208U-Boot can be built natively to run on a Linux host using the 'sandbox' 209board. This allows feature development which is not board- or architecture- 210specific to be undertaken on a native platform. The sandbox is also used to 211run some of U-Boot's tests. 212 213See doc/arch/sandbox.rst for more details. 214 215 216Board Initialisation Flow: 217-------------------------- 218 219This is the intended start-up flow for boards. This should apply for both 220SPL and U-Boot proper (i.e. they both follow the same rules). 221 222Note: "SPL" stands for "Secondary Program Loader," which is explained in 223more detail later in this file. 224 225At present, SPL mostly uses a separate code path, but the function names 226and roles of each function are the same. Some boards or architectures 227may not conform to this. At least most ARM boards which use 228CONFIG_SPL_FRAMEWORK conform to this. 229 230Execution typically starts with an architecture-specific (and possibly 231CPU-specific) start.S file, such as: 232 233 - arch/arm/cpu/armv7/start.S 234 - arch/powerpc/cpu/mpc83xx/start.S 235 - arch/mips/cpu/start.S 236 237and so on. From there, three functions are called; the purpose and 238limitations of each of these functions are described below. 239 240lowlevel_init(): 241 - purpose: essential init to permit execution to reach board_init_f() 242 - no global_data or BSS 243 - there is no stack (ARMv7 may have one but it will soon be removed) 244 - must not set up SDRAM or use console 245 - must only do the bare minimum to allow execution to continue to 246 board_init_f() 247 - this is almost never needed 248 - return normally from this function 249 250board_init_f(): 251 - purpose: set up the machine ready for running board_init_r(): 252 i.e. SDRAM and serial UART 253 - global_data is available 254 - stack is in SRAM 255 - BSS is not available, so you cannot use global/static variables, 256 only stack variables and global_data 257 258 Non-SPL-specific notes: 259 - dram_init() is called to set up DRAM. If already done in SPL this 260 can do nothing 261 262 SPL-specific notes: 263 - you can override the entire board_init_f() function with your own 264 version as needed. 265 - preloader_console_init() can be called here in extremis 266 - should set up SDRAM, and anything needed to make the UART work 267 - there is no need to clear BSS, it will be done by crt0.S 268 - for specific scenarios on certain architectures an early BSS *can* 269 be made available (via CONFIG_SPL_EARLY_BSS by moving the clearing 270 of BSS prior to entering board_init_f()) but doing so is discouraged. 271 Instead it is strongly recommended to architect any code changes 272 or additions such to not depend on the availability of BSS during 273 board_init_f() as indicated in other sections of this README to 274 maintain compatibility and consistency across the entire code base. 275 - must return normally from this function (don't call board_init_r() 276 directly) 277 278Here the BSS is cleared. For SPL, if CONFIG_SPL_STACK_R is defined, then at 279this point the stack and global_data are relocated to below 280CONFIG_SPL_STACK_R_ADDR. For non-SPL, U-Boot is relocated to run at the top of 281memory. 282 283board_init_r(): 284 - purpose: main execution, common code 285 - global_data is available 286 - SDRAM is available 287 - BSS is available, all static/global variables can be used 288 - execution eventually continues to main_loop() 289 290 Non-SPL-specific notes: 291 - U-Boot is relocated to the top of memory and is now running from 292 there. 293 294 SPL-specific notes: 295 - stack is optionally in SDRAM, if CONFIG_SPL_STACK_R is defined and 296 CONFIG_SPL_STACK_R_ADDR points into SDRAM 297 - preloader_console_init() can be called here - typically this is 298 done by selecting CONFIG_SPL_BOARD_INIT and then supplying a 299 spl_board_init() function containing this call 300 - loads U-Boot or (in falcon mode) Linux 301 302 303 304Configuration Options: 305---------------------- 306 307Configuration depends on the combination of board and CPU type; all 308such information is kept in a configuration file 309"include/configs/<board_name>.h". 310 311Example: For a TQM823L module, all configuration settings are in 312"include/configs/TQM823L.h". 313 314 315Many of the options are named exactly as the corresponding Linux 316kernel configuration options. The intention is to make it easier to 317build a config tool - later. 318 319- ARM Platform Bus Type(CCI): 320 CoreLink Cache Coherent Interconnect (CCI) is ARM BUS which 321 provides full cache coherency between two clusters of multi-core 322 CPUs and I/O coherency for devices and I/O masters 323 324 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_HAS_CCI400 325 326 Defined For SoC that has cache coherent interconnect 327 CCN-400 328 329 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_HAS_CCN504 330 331 Defined for SoC that has cache coherent interconnect CCN-504 332 333The following options need to be configured: 334 335- CPU Type: Define exactly one, e.g. CONFIG_MPC85XX. 336 337- Board Type: Define exactly one, e.g. CONFIG_MPC8540ADS. 338 339- 85xx CPU Options: 340 CONFIG_SYS_PPC64 341 342 Specifies that the core is a 64-bit PowerPC implementation (implements 343 the "64" category of the Power ISA). This is necessary for ePAPR 344 compliance, among other possible reasons. 345 346 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_TBCLK_DIV 347 348 Defines the core time base clock divider ratio compared to the 349 system clock. On most PQ3 devices this is 8, on newer QorIQ 350 devices it can be 16 or 32. The ratio varies from SoC to Soc. 351 352 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_PCIE_COMPAT 353 354 Defines the string to utilize when trying to match PCIe device 355 tree nodes for the given platform. 356 357 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_ERRATUM_A004510 358 359 Enables a workaround for erratum A004510. If set, 360 then CONFIG_SYS_FSL_ERRATUM_A004510_SVR_REV and 361 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_CORENET_SNOOPVEC_COREONLY must be set. 362 363 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_ERRATUM_A004510_SVR_REV 364 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_ERRATUM_A004510_SVR_REV2 (optional) 365 366 Defines one or two SoC revisions (low 8 bits of SVR) 367 for which the A004510 workaround should be applied. 368 369 The rest of SVR is either not relevant to the decision 370 of whether the erratum is present (e.g. p2040 versus 371 p2041) or is implied by the build target, which controls 372 whether CONFIG_SYS_FSL_ERRATUM_A004510 is set. 373 374 See Freescale App Note 4493 for more information about 375 this erratum. 376 377 CONFIG_A003399_NOR_WORKAROUND 378 Enables a workaround for IFC erratum A003399. It is only 379 required during NOR boot. 380 381 CONFIG_A008044_WORKAROUND 382 Enables a workaround for T1040/T1042 erratum A008044. It is only 383 required during NAND boot and valid for Rev 1.0 SoC revision 384 385 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_CORENET_SNOOPVEC_COREONLY 386 387 This is the value to write into CCSR offset 0x18600 388 according to the A004510 workaround. 389 390 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DSP_DDR_ADDR 391 This value denotes start offset of DDR memory which is 392 connected exclusively to the DSP cores. 393 394 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DSP_M2_RAM_ADDR 395 This value denotes start offset of M2 memory 396 which is directly connected to the DSP core. 397 398 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DSP_M3_RAM_ADDR 399 This value denotes start offset of M3 memory which is directly 400 connected to the DSP core. 401 402 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DSP_CCSRBAR_DEFAULT 403 This value denotes start offset of DSP CCSR space. 404 405 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_SINGLE_SOURCE_CLK 406 Single Source Clock is clocking mode present in some of FSL SoC's. 407 In this mode, a single differential clock is used to supply 408 clocks to the sysclock, ddrclock and usbclock. 409 410 CONFIG_SYS_CPC_REINIT_F 411 This CONFIG is defined when the CPC is configured as SRAM at the 412 time of U-Boot entry and is required to be re-initialized. 413 414 CONFIG_DEEP_SLEEP 415 Indicates this SoC supports deep sleep feature. If deep sleep is 416 supported, core will start to execute uboot when wakes up. 417 418- Generic CPU options: 419 CONFIG_SYS_BIG_ENDIAN, CONFIG_SYS_LITTLE_ENDIAN 420 421 Defines the endianess of the CPU. Implementation of those 422 values is arch specific. 423 424 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR 425 Freescale DDR driver in use. This type of DDR controller is 426 found in mpc83xx, mpc85xx, mpc86xx as well as some ARM core 427 SoCs. 428 429 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR_ADDR 430 Freescale DDR memory-mapped register base. 431 432 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR_EMU 433 Specify emulator support for DDR. Some DDR features such as 434 deskew training are not available. 435 436 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDRC_GEN1 437 Freescale DDR1 controller. 438 439 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDRC_GEN2 440 Freescale DDR2 controller. 441 442 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDRC_GEN3 443 Freescale DDR3 controller. 444 445 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDRC_GEN4 446 Freescale DDR4 controller. 447 448 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDRC_ARM_GEN3 449 Freescale DDR3 controller for ARM-based SoCs. 450 451 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR1 452 Board config to use DDR1. It can be enabled for SoCs with 453 Freescale DDR1 or DDR2 controllers, depending on the board 454 implemetation. 455 456 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR2 457 Board config to use DDR2. It can be enabled for SoCs with 458 Freescale DDR2 or DDR3 controllers, depending on the board 459 implementation. 460 461 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR3 462 Board config to use DDR3. It can be enabled for SoCs with 463 Freescale DDR3 or DDR3L controllers. 464 465 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR3L 466 Board config to use DDR3L. It can be enabled for SoCs with 467 DDR3L controllers. 468 469 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR4 470 Board config to use DDR4. It can be enabled for SoCs with 471 DDR4 controllers. 472 473 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_IFC_BE 474 Defines the IFC controller register space as Big Endian 475 476 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_IFC_LE 477 Defines the IFC controller register space as Little Endian 478 479 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_IFC_CLK_DIV 480 Defines divider of platform clock(clock input to IFC controller). 481 482 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_LBC_CLK_DIV 483 Defines divider of platform clock(clock input to eLBC controller). 484 485 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_PBL_PBI 486 It enables addition of RCW (Power on reset configuration) in built image. 487 Please refer doc/README.pblimage for more details 488 489 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_PBL_RCW 490 It adds PBI(pre-boot instructions) commands in u-boot build image. 491 PBI commands can be used to configure SoC before it starts the execution. 492 Please refer doc/README.pblimage for more details 493 494 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR_BE 495 Defines the DDR controller register space as Big Endian 496 497 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR_LE 498 Defines the DDR controller register space as Little Endian 499 500 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR_SDRAM_BASE_PHY 501 Physical address from the view of DDR controllers. It is the 502 same as CONFIG_SYS_DDR_SDRAM_BASE for all Power SoCs. But 503 it could be different for ARM SoCs. 504 505 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR_INTLV_256B 506 DDR controller interleaving on 256-byte. This is a special 507 interleaving mode, handled by Dickens for Freescale layerscape 508 SoCs with ARM core. 509 510 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_DDR_MAIN_NUM_CTRLS 511 Number of controllers used as main memory. 512 513 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_OTHER_DDR_NUM_CTRLS 514 Number of controllers used for other than main memory. 515 516 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_HAS_DP_DDR 517 Defines the SoC has DP-DDR used for DPAA. 518 519 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_SEC_BE 520 Defines the SEC controller register space as Big Endian 521 522 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_SEC_LE 523 Defines the SEC controller register space as Little Endian 524 525- MIPS CPU options: 526 CONFIG_SYS_INIT_SP_OFFSET 527 528 Offset relative to CONFIG_SYS_SDRAM_BASE for initial stack 529 pointer. This is needed for the temporary stack before 530 relocation. 531 532 CONFIG_XWAY_SWAP_BYTES 533 534 Enable compilation of tools/xway-swap-bytes needed for Lantiq 535 XWAY SoCs for booting from NOR flash. The U-Boot image needs to 536 be swapped if a flash programmer is used. 537 538- ARM options: 539 CONFIG_SYS_EXCEPTION_VECTORS_HIGH 540 541 Select high exception vectors of the ARM core, e.g., do not 542 clear the V bit of the c1 register of CP15. 543 544 COUNTER_FREQUENCY 545 Generic timer clock source frequency. 546 547 COUNTER_FREQUENCY_REAL 548 Generic timer clock source frequency if the real clock is 549 different from COUNTER_FREQUENCY, and can only be determined 550 at run time. 551 552- Tegra SoC options: 553 CONFIG_TEGRA_SUPPORT_NON_SECURE 554 555 Support executing U-Boot in non-secure (NS) mode. Certain 556 impossible actions will be skipped if the CPU is in NS mode, 557 such as ARM architectural timer initialization. 558 559- Linux Kernel Interface: 560 CONFIG_MEMSIZE_IN_BYTES [relevant for MIPS only] 561 562 When transferring memsize parameter to Linux, some versions 563 expect it to be in bytes, others in MB. 564 Define CONFIG_MEMSIZE_IN_BYTES to make it in bytes. 565 566 CONFIG_OF_LIBFDT 567 568 New kernel versions are expecting firmware settings to be 569 passed using flattened device trees (based on open firmware 570 concepts). 571 572 CONFIG_OF_LIBFDT 573 * New libfdt-based support 574 * Adds the "fdt" command 575 * The bootm command automatically updates the fdt 576 577 OF_TBCLK - The timebase frequency. 578 579 boards with QUICC Engines require OF_QE to set UCC MAC 580 addresses 581 582 CONFIG_OF_BOARD_SETUP 583 584 Board code has addition modification that it wants to make 585 to the flat device tree before handing it off to the kernel 586 587 CONFIG_OF_SYSTEM_SETUP 588 589 Other code has addition modification that it wants to make 590 to the flat device tree before handing it off to the kernel. 591 This causes ft_system_setup() to be called before booting 592 the kernel. 593 594 CONFIG_OF_IDE_FIXUP 595 596 U-Boot can detect if an IDE device is present or not. 597 If not, and this new config option is activated, U-Boot 598 removes the ATA node from the DTS before booting Linux, 599 so the Linux IDE driver does not probe the device and 600 crash. This is needed for buggy hardware (uc101) where 601 no pull down resistor is connected to the signal IDE5V_DD7. 602 603 CONFIG_MACH_TYPE [relevant for ARM only][mandatory] 604 605 This setting is mandatory for all boards that have only one 606 machine type and must be used to specify the machine type 607 number as it appears in the ARM machine registry 608 (see https://www.arm.linux.org.uk/developer/machines/). 609 Only boards that have multiple machine types supported 610 in a single configuration file and the machine type is 611 runtime discoverable, do not have to use this setting. 612 613- vxWorks boot parameters: 614 615 bootvx constructs a valid bootline using the following 616 environments variables: bootdev, bootfile, ipaddr, netmask, 617 serverip, gatewayip, hostname, othbootargs. 618 It loads the vxWorks image pointed bootfile. 619 620 Note: If a "bootargs" environment is defined, it will override 621 the defaults discussed just above. 622 623- Cache Configuration: 624 CONFIG_SYS_L2CACHE_OFF- Do not enable L2 cache in U-Boot 625 626- Cache Configuration for ARM: 627 CONFIG_SYS_L2_PL310 - Enable support for ARM PL310 L2 cache 628 controller 629 CONFIG_SYS_PL310_BASE - Physical base address of PL310 630 controller register space 631 632- Serial Ports: 633 CONFIG_PL010_SERIAL 634 635 Define this if you want support for Amba PrimeCell PL010 UARTs. 636 637 CONFIG_PL011_SERIAL 638 639 Define this if you want support for Amba PrimeCell PL011 UARTs. 640 641 CONFIG_PL011_CLOCK 642 643 If you have Amba PrimeCell PL011 UARTs, set this variable to 644 the clock speed of the UARTs. 645 646 CONFIG_PL01x_PORTS 647 648 If you have Amba PrimeCell PL010 or PL011 UARTs on your board, 649 define this to a list of base addresses for each (supported) 650 port. See e.g. include/configs/versatile.h 651 652 CONFIG_SERIAL_HW_FLOW_CONTROL 653 654 Define this variable to enable hw flow control in serial driver. 655 Current user of this option is drivers/serial/nsl16550.c driver 656 657- Autoboot Command: 658 CONFIG_BOOTCOMMAND 659 Only needed when CONFIG_BOOTDELAY is enabled; 660 define a command string that is automatically executed 661 when no character is read on the console interface 662 within "Boot Delay" after reset. 663 664 CONFIG_RAMBOOT and CONFIG_NFSBOOT 665 The value of these goes into the environment as 666 "ramboot" and "nfsboot" respectively, and can be used 667 as a convenience, when switching between booting from 668 RAM and NFS. 669 670- Serial Download Echo Mode: 671 CONFIG_LOADS_ECHO 672 If defined to 1, all characters received during a 673 serial download (using the "loads" command) are 674 echoed back. This might be needed by some terminal 675 emulations (like "cu"), but may as well just take 676 time on others. This setting #define's the initial 677 value of the "loads_echo" environment variable. 678 679- Kgdb Serial Baudrate: (if CONFIG_CMD_KGDB is defined) 680 CONFIG_KGDB_BAUDRATE 681 Select one of the baudrates listed in 682 CONFIG_SYS_BAUDRATE_TABLE, see below. 683 684- Removal of commands 685 If no commands are needed to boot, you can disable 686 CONFIG_CMDLINE to remove them. In this case, the command line 687 will not be available, and when U-Boot wants to execute the 688 boot command (on start-up) it will call board_run_command() 689 instead. This can reduce image size significantly for very 690 simple boot procedures. 691 692- Regular expression support: 693 CONFIG_REGEX 694 If this variable is defined, U-Boot is linked against 695 the SLRE (Super Light Regular Expression) library, 696 which adds regex support to some commands, as for 697 example "env grep" and "setexpr". 698 699- Device tree: 700 CONFIG_OF_CONTROL 701 If this variable is defined, U-Boot will use a device tree 702 to configure its devices, instead of relying on statically 703 compiled #defines in the board file. This option is 704 experimental and only available on a few boards. The device 705 tree is available in the global data as gd->fdt_blob. 706 707 U-Boot needs to get its device tree from somewhere. This can 708 be done using one of the three options below: 709 710 CONFIG_OF_EMBED 711 If this variable is defined, U-Boot will embed a device tree 712 binary in its image. This device tree file should be in the 713 board directory and called <soc>-<board>.dts. The binary file 714 is then picked up in board_init_f() and made available through 715 the global data structure as gd->fdt_blob. 716 717 CONFIG_OF_SEPARATE 718 If this variable is defined, U-Boot will build a device tree 719 binary. It will be called u-boot.dtb. Architecture-specific 720 code will locate it at run-time. Generally this works by: 721 722 cat u-boot.bin u-boot.dtb >image.bin 723 724 and in fact, U-Boot does this for you, creating a file called 725 u-boot-dtb.bin which is useful in the common case. You can 726 still use the individual files if you need something more 727 exotic. 728 729 CONFIG_OF_BOARD 730 If this variable is defined, U-Boot will use the device tree 731 provided by the board at runtime instead of embedding one with 732 the image. Only boards defining board_fdt_blob_setup() support 733 this option (see include/fdtdec.h file). 734 735- Watchdog: 736 CONFIG_WATCHDOG 737 If this variable is defined, it enables watchdog 738 support for the SoC. There must be support in the SoC 739 specific code for a watchdog. For the 8xx 740 CPUs, the SIU Watchdog feature is enabled in the SYPCR 741 register. When supported for a specific SoC is 742 available, then no further board specific code should 743 be needed to use it. 744 745 CONFIG_HW_WATCHDOG 746 When using a watchdog circuitry external to the used 747 SoC, then define this variable and provide board 748 specific code for the "hw_watchdog_reset" function. 749 750- Real-Time Clock: 751 752 When CONFIG_CMD_DATE is selected, the type of the RTC 753 has to be selected, too. Define exactly one of the 754 following options: 755 756 CONFIG_RTC_PCF8563 - use Philips PCF8563 RTC 757 CONFIG_RTC_MC13XXX - use MC13783 or MC13892 RTC 758 CONFIG_RTC_MC146818 - use MC146818 RTC 759 CONFIG_RTC_DS1307 - use Maxim, Inc. DS1307 RTC 760 CONFIG_RTC_DS1337 - use Maxim, Inc. DS1337 RTC 761 CONFIG_RTC_DS1338 - use Maxim, Inc. DS1338 RTC 762 CONFIG_RTC_DS1339 - use Maxim, Inc. DS1339 RTC 763 CONFIG_RTC_DS164x - use Dallas DS164x RTC 764 CONFIG_RTC_ISL1208 - use Intersil ISL1208 RTC 765 CONFIG_RTC_MAX6900 - use Maxim, Inc. MAX6900 RTC 766 CONFIG_RTC_DS1337_NOOSC - Turn off the OSC output for DS1337 767 CONFIG_SYS_RV3029_TCR - enable trickle charger on 768 RV3029 RTC. 769 770 Note that if the RTC uses I2C, then the I2C interface 771 must also be configured. See I2C Support, below. 772 773- GPIO Support: 774 CONFIG_PCA953X - use NXP's PCA953X series I2C GPIO 775 776 The CONFIG_SYS_I2C_PCA953X_WIDTH option specifies a list of 777 chip-ngpio pairs that tell the PCA953X driver the number of 778 pins supported by a particular chip. 779 780 Note that if the GPIO device uses I2C, then the I2C interface 781 must also be configured. See I2C Support, below. 782 783- I/O tracing: 784 When CONFIG_IO_TRACE is selected, U-Boot intercepts all I/O 785 accesses and can checksum them or write a list of them out 786 to memory. See the 'iotrace' command for details. This is 787 useful for testing device drivers since it can confirm that 788 the driver behaves the same way before and after a code 789 change. Currently this is supported on sandbox and arm. To 790 add support for your architecture, add '#include <iotrace.h>' 791 to the bottom of arch/<arch>/include/asm/io.h and test. 792 793 Example output from the 'iotrace stats' command is below. 794 Note that if the trace buffer is exhausted, the checksum will 795 still continue to operate. 796 797 iotrace is enabled 798 Start: 10000000 (buffer start address) 799 Size: 00010000 (buffer size) 800 Offset: 00000120 (current buffer offset) 801 Output: 10000120 (start + offset) 802 Count: 00000018 (number of trace records) 803 CRC32: 9526fb66 (CRC32 of all trace records) 804 805- Timestamp Support: 806 807 When CONFIG_TIMESTAMP is selected, the timestamp 808 (date and time) of an image is printed by image 809 commands like bootm or iminfo. This option is 810 automatically enabled when you select CONFIG_CMD_DATE . 811 812- Partition Labels (disklabels) Supported: 813 Zero or more of the following: 814 CONFIG_MAC_PARTITION Apple's MacOS partition table. 815 CONFIG_ISO_PARTITION ISO partition table, used on CDROM etc. 816 CONFIG_EFI_PARTITION GPT partition table, common when EFI is the 817 bootloader. Note 2TB partition limit; see 818 disk/part_efi.c 819 CONFIG_SCSI) you must configure support for at 820 least one non-MTD partition type as well. 821 822- IDE Reset method: 823 CONFIG_IDE_RESET_ROUTINE - this is defined in several 824 board configurations files but used nowhere! 825 826 CONFIG_IDE_RESET - is this is defined, IDE Reset will 827 be performed by calling the function 828 ide_set_reset(int reset) 829 which has to be defined in a board specific file 830 831- ATAPI Support: 832 CONFIG_ATAPI 833 834 Set this to enable ATAPI support. 835 836- LBA48 Support 837 CONFIG_LBA48 838 839 Set this to enable support for disks larger than 137GB 840 Also look at CONFIG_SYS_64BIT_LBA. 841 Whithout these , LBA48 support uses 32bit variables and will 'only' 842 support disks up to 2.1TB. 843 844 CONFIG_SYS_64BIT_LBA: 845 When enabled, makes the IDE subsystem use 64bit sector addresses. 846 Default is 32bit. 847 848- SCSI Support: 849 CONFIG_SYS_SCSI_MAX_LUN [8], CONFIG_SYS_SCSI_MAX_SCSI_ID [7] and 850 CONFIG_SYS_SCSI_MAX_DEVICE [CONFIG_SYS_SCSI_MAX_SCSI_ID * 851 CONFIG_SYS_SCSI_MAX_LUN] can be adjusted to define the 852 maximum numbers of LUNs, SCSI ID's and target 853 devices. 854 855 The environment variable 'scsidevs' is set to the number of 856 SCSI devices found during the last scan. 857 858- NETWORK Support (PCI): 859 CONFIG_E1000 860 Support for Intel 8254x/8257x gigabit chips. 861 862 CONFIG_E1000_SPI 863 Utility code for direct access to the SPI bus on Intel 8257x. 864 This does not do anything useful unless you set at least one 865 of CONFIG_CMD_E1000 or CONFIG_E1000_SPI_GENERIC. 866 867 CONFIG_E1000_SPI_GENERIC 868 Allow generic access to the SPI bus on the Intel 8257x, for 869 example with the "sspi" command. 870 871 CONFIG_NATSEMI 872 Support for National dp83815 chips. 873 874 CONFIG_NS8382X 875 Support for National dp8382[01] gigabit chips. 876 877- NETWORK Support (other): 878 879 CONFIG_DRIVER_AT91EMAC 880 Support for AT91RM9200 EMAC. 881 882 CONFIG_RMII 883 Define this to use reduced MII inteface 884 885 CONFIG_DRIVER_AT91EMAC_QUIET 886 If this defined, the driver is quiet. 887 The driver doen't show link status messages. 888 889 CONFIG_CALXEDA_XGMAC 890 Support for the Calxeda XGMAC device 891 892 CONFIG_LAN91C96 893 Support for SMSC's LAN91C96 chips. 894 895 CONFIG_LAN91C96_USE_32_BIT 896 Define this to enable 32 bit addressing 897 898 CONFIG_SMC91111 899 Support for SMSC's LAN91C111 chip 900 901 CONFIG_SMC91111_BASE 902 Define this to hold the physical address 903 of the device (I/O space) 904 905 CONFIG_SMC_USE_32_BIT 906 Define this if data bus is 32 bits 907 908 CONFIG_SMC_USE_IOFUNCS 909 Define this to use i/o functions instead of macros 910 (some hardware wont work with macros) 911 912 CONFIG_SYS_DAVINCI_EMAC_PHY_COUNT 913 Define this if you have more then 3 PHYs. 914 915 CONFIG_FTGMAC100 916 Support for Faraday's FTGMAC100 Gigabit SoC Ethernet 917 918 CONFIG_FTGMAC100_EGIGA 919 Define this to use GE link update with gigabit PHY. 920 Define this if FTGMAC100 is connected to gigabit PHY. 921 If your system has 10/100 PHY only, it might not occur 922 wrong behavior. Because PHY usually return timeout or 923 useless data when polling gigabit status and gigabit 924 control registers. This behavior won't affect the 925 correctnessof 10/100 link speed update. 926 927 CONFIG_SH_ETHER 928 Support for Renesas on-chip Ethernet controller 929 930 CONFIG_SH_ETHER_USE_PORT 931 Define the number of ports to be used 932 933 CONFIG_SH_ETHER_PHY_ADDR 934 Define the ETH PHY's address 935 936 CONFIG_SH_ETHER_CACHE_WRITEBACK 937 If this option is set, the driver enables cache flush. 938 939- TPM Support: 940 CONFIG_TPM 941 Support TPM devices. 942 943 CONFIG_TPM_TIS_INFINEON 944 Support for Infineon i2c bus TPM devices. Only one device 945 per system is supported at this time. 946 947 CONFIG_TPM_TIS_I2C_BURST_LIMITATION 948 Define the burst count bytes upper limit 949 950 CONFIG_TPM_ST33ZP24 951 Support for STMicroelectronics TPM devices. Requires DM_TPM support. 952 953 CONFIG_TPM_ST33ZP24_I2C 954 Support for STMicroelectronics ST33ZP24 I2C devices. 955 Requires TPM_ST33ZP24 and I2C. 956 957 CONFIG_TPM_ST33ZP24_SPI 958 Support for STMicroelectronics ST33ZP24 SPI devices. 959 Requires TPM_ST33ZP24 and SPI. 960 961 CONFIG_TPM_ATMEL_TWI 962 Support for Atmel TWI TPM device. Requires I2C support. 963 964 CONFIG_TPM_TIS_LPC 965 Support for generic parallel port TPM devices. Only one device 966 per system is supported at this time. 967 968 CONFIG_TPM_TIS_BASE_ADDRESS 969 Base address where the generic TPM device is mapped 970 to. Contemporary x86 systems usually map it at 971 0xfed40000. 972 973 CONFIG_TPM 974 Define this to enable the TPM support library which provides 975 functional interfaces to some TPM commands. 976 Requires support for a TPM device. 977 978 CONFIG_TPM_AUTH_SESSIONS 979 Define this to enable authorized functions in the TPM library. 980 Requires CONFIG_TPM and CONFIG_SHA1. 981 982- USB Support: 983 At the moment only the UHCI host controller is 984 supported (PIP405, MIP405); define 985 CONFIG_USB_UHCI to enable it. 986 define CONFIG_USB_KEYBOARD to enable the USB Keyboard 987 and define CONFIG_USB_STORAGE to enable the USB 988 storage devices. 989 Note: 990 Supported are USB Keyboards and USB Floppy drives 991 (TEAC FD-05PUB). 992 993 CONFIG_USB_EHCI_TXFIFO_THRESH enables setting of the 994 txfilltuning field in the EHCI controller on reset. 995 996 CONFIG_USB_DWC2_REG_ADDR the physical CPU address of the DWC2 997 HW module registers. 998 999- USB Device: 1000 Define the below if you wish to use the USB console. 1001 Once firmware is rebuilt from a serial console issue the 1002 command "setenv stdin usbtty; setenv stdout usbtty" and 1003 attach your USB cable. The Unix command "dmesg" should print 1004 it has found a new device. The environment variable usbtty 1005 can be set to gserial or cdc_acm to enable your device to 1006 appear to a USB host as a Linux gserial device or a 1007 Common Device Class Abstract Control Model serial device. 1008 If you select usbtty = gserial you should be able to enumerate 1009 a Linux host by 1010 # modprobe usbserial vendor=0xVendorID product=0xProductID 1011 else if using cdc_acm, simply setting the environment 1012 variable usbtty to be cdc_acm should suffice. The following 1013 might be defined in YourBoardName.h 1014 1015 CONFIG_USB_DEVICE 1016 Define this to build a UDC device 1017 1018 CONFIG_USB_TTY 1019 Define this to have a tty type of device available to 1020 talk to the UDC device 1021 1022 CONFIG_USBD_HS 1023 Define this to enable the high speed support for usb 1024 device and usbtty. If this feature is enabled, a routine 1025 int is_usbd_high_speed(void) 1026 also needs to be defined by the driver to dynamically poll 1027 whether the enumeration has succeded at high speed or full 1028 speed. 1029 1030 CONFIG_SYS_CONSOLE_IS_IN_ENV 1031 Define this if you want stdin, stdout &/or stderr to 1032 be set to usbtty. 1033 1034 If you have a USB-IF assigned VendorID then you may wish to 1035 define your own vendor specific values either in BoardName.h 1036 or directly in usbd_vendor_info.h. If you don't define 1037 CONFIG_USBD_MANUFACTURER, CONFIG_USBD_PRODUCT_NAME, 1038 CONFIG_USBD_VENDORID and CONFIG_USBD_PRODUCTID, then U-Boot 1039 should pretend to be a Linux device to it's target host. 1040 1041 CONFIG_USBD_MANUFACTURER 1042 Define this string as the name of your company for 1043 - CONFIG_USBD_MANUFACTURER "my company" 1044 1045 CONFIG_USBD_PRODUCT_NAME 1046 Define this string as the name of your product 1047 - CONFIG_USBD_PRODUCT_NAME "acme usb device" 1048 1049 CONFIG_USBD_VENDORID 1050 Define this as your assigned Vendor ID from the USB 1051 Implementors Forum. This *must* be a genuine Vendor ID 1052 to avoid polluting the USB namespace. 1053 - CONFIG_USBD_VENDORID 0xFFFF 1054 1055 CONFIG_USBD_PRODUCTID 1056 Define this as the unique Product ID 1057 for your device 1058 - CONFIG_USBD_PRODUCTID 0xFFFF 1059 1060- ULPI Layer Support: 1061 The ULPI (UTMI Low Pin (count) Interface) PHYs are supported via 1062 the generic ULPI layer. The generic layer accesses the ULPI PHY 1063 via the platform viewport, so you need both the genric layer and 1064 the viewport enabled. Currently only Chipidea/ARC based 1065 viewport is supported. 1066 To enable the ULPI layer support, define CONFIG_USB_ULPI and 1067 CONFIG_USB_ULPI_VIEWPORT in your board configuration file. 1068 If your ULPI phy needs a different reference clock than the 1069 standard 24 MHz then you have to define CONFIG_ULPI_REF_CLK to 1070 the appropriate value in Hz. 1071 1072- MMC Support: 1073 The MMC controller on the Intel PXA is supported. To 1074 enable this define CONFIG_MMC. The MMC can be 1075 accessed from the boot prompt by mapping the device 1076 to physical memory similar to flash. Command line is 1077 enabled with CONFIG_CMD_MMC. The MMC driver also works with 1078 the FAT fs. This is enabled with CONFIG_CMD_FAT. 1079 1080 CONFIG_SH_MMCIF 1081 Support for Renesas on-chip MMCIF controller 1082 1083 CONFIG_SH_MMCIF_ADDR 1084 Define the base address of MMCIF registers 1085 1086 CONFIG_SH_MMCIF_CLK 1087 Define the clock frequency for MMCIF 1088 1089- USB Device Firmware Update (DFU) class support: 1090 CONFIG_DFU_OVER_USB 1091 This enables the USB portion of the DFU USB class 1092 1093 CONFIG_DFU_NAND 1094 This enables support for exposing NAND devices via DFU. 1095 1096 CONFIG_DFU_RAM 1097 This enables support for exposing RAM via DFU. 1098 Note: DFU spec refer to non-volatile memory usage, but 1099 allow usages beyond the scope of spec - here RAM usage, 1100 one that would help mostly the developer. 1101 1102 CONFIG_SYS_DFU_DATA_BUF_SIZE 1103 Dfu transfer uses a buffer before writing data to the 1104 raw storage device. Make the size (in bytes) of this buffer 1105 configurable. The size of this buffer is also configurable 1106 through the "dfu_bufsiz" environment variable. 1107 1108 CONFIG_SYS_DFU_MAX_FILE_SIZE 1109 When updating files rather than the raw storage device, 1110 we use a static buffer to copy the file into and then write 1111 the buffer once we've been given the whole file. Define 1112 this to the maximum filesize (in bytes) for the buffer. 1113 Default is 4 MiB if undefined. 1114 1115 DFU_DEFAULT_POLL_TIMEOUT 1116 Poll timeout [ms], is the timeout a device can send to the 1117 host. The host must wait for this timeout before sending 1118 a subsequent DFU_GET_STATUS request to the device. 1119 1120 DFU_MANIFEST_POLL_TIMEOUT 1121 Poll timeout [ms], which the device sends to the host when 1122 entering dfuMANIFEST state. Host waits this timeout, before 1123 sending again an USB request to the device. 1124 1125- Journaling Flash filesystem support: 1126 CONFIG_JFFS2_NAND 1127 Define these for a default partition on a NAND device 1128 1129 CONFIG_SYS_JFFS2_FIRST_SECTOR, 1130 CONFIG_SYS_JFFS2_FIRST_BANK, CONFIG_SYS_JFFS2_NUM_BANKS 1131 Define these for a default partition on a NOR device 1132 1133- Keyboard Support: 1134 See Kconfig help for available keyboard drivers. 1135 1136 CONFIG_KEYBOARD 1137 1138 Define this to enable a custom keyboard support. 1139 This simply calls drv_keyboard_init() which must be 1140 defined in your board-specific files. This option is deprecated 1141 and is only used by novena. For new boards, use driver model 1142 instead. 1143 1144- Video support: 1145 CONFIG_FSL_DIU_FB 1146 Enable the Freescale DIU video driver. Reference boards for 1147 SOCs that have a DIU should define this macro to enable DIU 1148 support, and should also define these other macros: 1149 1150 CONFIG_SYS_DIU_ADDR 1151 CONFIG_VIDEO 1152 CONFIG_CFB_CONSOLE 1153 CONFIG_VIDEO_SW_CURSOR 1154 CONFIG_VGA_AS_SINGLE_DEVICE 1155 CONFIG_VIDEO_LOGO 1156 CONFIG_VIDEO_BMP_LOGO 1157 1158 The DIU driver will look for the 'video-mode' environment 1159 variable, and if defined, enable the DIU as a console during 1160 boot. See the documentation file doc/README.video for a 1161 description of this variable. 1162 1163- LCD Support: CONFIG_LCD 1164 1165 Define this to enable LCD support (for output to LCD 1166 display); also select one of the supported displays 1167 by defining one of these: 1168 1169 CONFIG_ATMEL_LCD: 1170 1171 HITACHI TX09D70VM1CCA, 3.5", 240x320. 1172 1173 CONFIG_NEC_NL6448AC33: 1174 1175 NEC NL6448AC33-18. Active, color, single scan. 1176 1177 CONFIG_NEC_NL6448BC20 1178 1179 NEC NL6448BC20-08. 6.5", 640x480. 1180 Active, color, single scan. 1181 1182 CONFIG_NEC_NL6448BC33_54 1183 1184 NEC NL6448BC33-54. 10.4", 640x480. 1185 Active, color, single scan. 1186 1187 CONFIG_SHARP_16x9 1188 1189 Sharp 320x240. Active, color, single scan. 1190 It isn't 16x9, and I am not sure what it is. 1191 1192 CONFIG_SHARP_LQ64D341 1193 1194 Sharp LQ64D341 display, 640x480. 1195 Active, color, single scan. 1196 1197 CONFIG_HLD1045 1198 1199 HLD1045 display, 640x480. 1200 Active, color, single scan. 1201 1202 CONFIG_OPTREX_BW 1203 1204 Optrex CBL50840-2 NF-FW 99 22 M5 1205 or 1206 Hitachi LMG6912RPFC-00T 1207 or 1208 Hitachi SP14Q002 1209 1210 320x240. Black & white. 1211 1212 CONFIG_LCD_ALIGNMENT 1213 1214 Normally the LCD is page-aligned (typically 4KB). If this is 1215 defined then the LCD will be aligned to this value instead. 1216 For ARM it is sometimes useful to use MMU_SECTION_SIZE 1217 here, since it is cheaper to change data cache settings on 1218 a per-section basis. 1219 1220 1221 CONFIG_LCD_ROTATION 1222 1223 Sometimes, for example if the display is mounted in portrait 1224 mode or even if it's mounted landscape but rotated by 180degree, 1225 we need to rotate our content of the display relative to the 1226 framebuffer, so that user can read the messages which are 1227 printed out. 1228 Once CONFIG_LCD_ROTATION is defined, the lcd_console will be 1229 initialized with a given rotation from "vl_rot" out of 1230 "vidinfo_t" which is provided by the board specific code. 1231 The value for vl_rot is coded as following (matching to 1232 fbcon=rotate:<n> linux-kernel commandline): 1233 0 = no rotation respectively 0 degree 1234 1 = 90 degree rotation 1235 2 = 180 degree rotation 1236 3 = 270 degree rotation 1237 1238 If CONFIG_LCD_ROTATION is not defined, the console will be 1239 initialized with 0degree rotation. 1240 1241 CONFIG_LCD_BMP_RLE8 1242 1243 Support drawing of RLE8-compressed bitmaps on the LCD. 1244 1245 CONFIG_I2C_EDID 1246 1247 Enables an 'i2c edid' command which can read EDID 1248 information over I2C from an attached LCD display. 1249 1250- MII/PHY support: 1251 CONFIG_PHY_CLOCK_FREQ (ppc4xx) 1252 1253 The clock frequency of the MII bus 1254 1255 CONFIG_PHY_RESET_DELAY 1256 1257 Some PHY like Intel LXT971A need extra delay after 1258 reset before any MII register access is possible. 1259 For such PHY, set this option to the usec delay 1260 required. (minimum 300usec for LXT971A) 1261 1262 CONFIG_PHY_CMD_DELAY (ppc4xx) 1263 1264 Some PHY like Intel LXT971A need extra delay after 1265 command issued before MII status register can be read 1266 1267- IP address: 1268 CONFIG_IPADDR 1269 1270 Define a default value for the IP address to use for 1271 the default Ethernet interface, in case this is not 1272 determined through e.g. bootp. 1273 (Environment variable "ipaddr") 1274 1275- Server IP address: 1276 CONFIG_SERVERIP 1277 1278 Defines a default value for the IP address of a TFTP 1279 server to contact when using the "tftboot" command. 1280 (Environment variable "serverip") 1281 1282 CONFIG_KEEP_SERVERADDR 1283 1284 Keeps the server's MAC address, in the env 'serveraddr' 1285 for passing to bootargs (like Linux's netconsole option) 1286 1287- Gateway IP address: 1288 CONFIG_GATEWAYIP 1289 1290 Defines a default value for the IP address of the 1291 default router where packets to other networks are 1292 sent to. 1293 (Environment variable "gatewayip") 1294 1295- Subnet mask: 1296 CONFIG_NETMASK 1297 1298 Defines a default value for the subnet mask (or 1299 routing prefix) which is used to determine if an IP 1300 address belongs to the local subnet or needs to be 1301 forwarded through a router. 1302 (Environment variable "netmask") 1303 1304- BOOTP Recovery Mode: 1305 CONFIG_BOOTP_RANDOM_DELAY 1306 1307 If you have many targets in a network that try to 1308 boot using BOOTP, you may want to avoid that all 1309 systems send out BOOTP requests at precisely the same 1310 moment (which would happen for instance at recovery 1311 from a power failure, when all systems will try to 1312 boot, thus flooding the BOOTP server. Defining 1313 CONFIG_BOOTP_RANDOM_DELAY causes a random delay to be 1314 inserted before sending out BOOTP requests. The 1315 following delays are inserted then: 1316 1317 1st BOOTP request: delay 0 ... 1 sec 1318 2nd BOOTP request: delay 0 ... 2 sec 1319 3rd BOOTP request: delay 0 ... 4 sec 1320 4th and following 1321 BOOTP requests: delay 0 ... 8 sec 1322 1323 CONFIG_BOOTP_ID_CACHE_SIZE 1324 1325 BOOTP packets are uniquely identified using a 32-bit ID. The 1326 server will copy the ID from client requests to responses and 1327 U-Boot will use this to determine if it is the destination of 1328 an incoming response. Some servers will check that addresses 1329 aren't in use before handing them out (usually using an ARP 1330 ping) and therefore take up to a few hundred milliseconds to 1331 respond. Network congestion may also influence the time it 1332 takes for a response to make it back to the client. If that 1333 time is too long, U-Boot will retransmit requests. In order 1334 to allow earlier responses to still be accepted after these 1335 retransmissions, U-Boot's BOOTP client keeps a small cache of 1336 IDs. The CONFIG_BOOTP_ID_CACHE_SIZE controls the size of this 1337 cache. The default is to keep IDs for up to four outstanding 1338 requests. Increasing this will allow U-Boot to accept offers 1339 from a BOOTP client in networks with unusually high latency. 1340 1341- DHCP Advanced Options: 1342 You can fine tune the DHCP functionality by defining 1343 CONFIG_BOOTP_* symbols: 1344 1345 CONFIG_BOOTP_NISDOMAIN 1346 CONFIG_BOOTP_BOOTFILESIZE 1347 CONFIG_BOOTP_NTPSERVER 1348 CONFIG_BOOTP_TIMEOFFSET 1349 CONFIG_BOOTP_VENDOREX 1350 CONFIG_BOOTP_MAY_FAIL 1351 1352 CONFIG_BOOTP_SERVERIP - TFTP server will be the serverip 1353 environment variable, not the BOOTP server. 1354 1355 CONFIG_BOOTP_MAY_FAIL - If the DHCP server is not found 1356 after the configured retry count, the call will fail 1357 instead of starting over. This can be used to fail over 1358 to Link-local IP address configuration if the DHCP server 1359 is not available. 1360 1361 CONFIG_BOOTP_DHCP_REQUEST_DELAY 1362 1363 A 32bit value in microseconds for a delay between 1364 receiving a "DHCP Offer" and sending the "DHCP Request". 1365 This fixes a problem with certain DHCP servers that don't 1366 respond 100% of the time to a "DHCP request". E.g. On an 1367 AT91RM9200 processor running at 180MHz, this delay needed 1368 to be *at least* 15,000 usec before a Windows Server 2003 1369 DHCP server would reply 100% of the time. I recommend at 1370 least 50,000 usec to be safe. The alternative is to hope 1371 that one of the retries will be successful but note that 1372 the DHCP timeout and retry process takes a longer than 1373 this delay. 1374 1375 - Link-local IP address negotiation: 1376 Negotiate with other link-local clients on the local network 1377 for an address that doesn't require explicit configuration. 1378 This is especially useful if a DHCP server cannot be guaranteed 1379 to exist in all environments that the device must operate. 1380 1381 See doc/README.link-local for more information. 1382 1383 - MAC address from environment variables 1384 1385 FDT_SEQ_MACADDR_FROM_ENV 1386 1387 Fix-up device tree with MAC addresses fetched sequentially from 1388 environment variables. This config work on assumption that 1389 non-usable ethernet node of device-tree are either not present 1390 or their status has been marked as "disabled". 1391 1392 - CDP Options: 1393 CONFIG_CDP_DEVICE_ID 1394 1395 The device id used in CDP trigger frames. 1396 1397 CONFIG_CDP_DEVICE_ID_PREFIX 1398 1399 A two character string which is prefixed to the MAC address 1400 of the device. 1401 1402 CONFIG_CDP_PORT_ID 1403 1404 A printf format string which contains the ascii name of 1405 the port. Normally is set to "eth%d" which sets 1406 eth0 for the first Ethernet, eth1 for the second etc. 1407 1408 CONFIG_CDP_CAPABILITIES 1409 1410 A 32bit integer which indicates the device capabilities; 1411 0x00000010 for a normal host which does not forwards. 1412 1413 CONFIG_CDP_VERSION 1414 1415 An ascii string containing the version of the software. 1416 1417 CONFIG_CDP_PLATFORM 1418 1419 An ascii string containing the name of the platform. 1420 1421 CONFIG_CDP_TRIGGER 1422 1423 A 32bit integer sent on the trigger. 1424 1425 CONFIG_CDP_POWER_CONSUMPTION 1426 1427 A 16bit integer containing the power consumption of the 1428 device in .1 of milliwatts. 1429 1430 CONFIG_CDP_APPLIANCE_VLAN_TYPE 1431 1432 A byte containing the id of the VLAN. 1433 1434- Status LED: CONFIG_LED_STATUS 1435 1436 Several configurations allow to display the current 1437 status using a LED. For instance, the LED will blink 1438 fast while running U-Boot code, stop blinking as 1439 soon as a reply to a BOOTP request was received, and 1440 start blinking slow once the Linux kernel is running 1441 (supported by a status LED driver in the Linux 1442 kernel). Defining CONFIG_LED_STATUS enables this 1443 feature in U-Boot. 1444 1445 Additional options: 1446 1447 CONFIG_LED_STATUS_GPIO 1448 The status LED can be connected to a GPIO pin. 1449 In such cases, the gpio_led driver can be used as a 1450 status LED backend implementation. Define CONFIG_LED_STATUS_GPIO 1451 to include the gpio_led driver in the U-Boot binary. 1452 1453 CONFIG_GPIO_LED_INVERTED_TABLE 1454 Some GPIO connected LEDs may have inverted polarity in which 1455 case the GPIO high value corresponds to LED off state and 1456 GPIO low value corresponds to LED on state. 1457 In such cases CONFIG_GPIO_LED_INVERTED_TABLE may be defined 1458 with a list of GPIO LEDs that have inverted polarity. 1459 1460- I2C Support: CONFIG_SYS_I2C 1461 1462 This enable the NEW i2c subsystem, and will allow you to use 1463 i2c commands at the u-boot command line (as long as you set 1464 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT_SPEED and CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT_SLAVE 1465 for defining speed and slave address 1466 - activate second bus with I2C_SOFT_DECLARATIONS2 define 1467 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT_SPEED_2 and CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT_SLAVE_2 1468 for defining speed and slave address 1469 - activate third bus with I2C_SOFT_DECLARATIONS3 define 1470 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT_SPEED_3 and CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT_SLAVE_3 1471 for defining speed and slave address 1472 - activate fourth bus with I2C_SOFT_DECLARATIONS4 define 1473 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT_SPEED_4 and CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT_SLAVE_4 1474 for defining speed and slave address 1475 1476 - drivers/i2c/fsl_i2c.c: 1477 - activate i2c driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_FSL 1478 define CONFIG_SYS_FSL_I2C_OFFSET for setting the register 1479 offset CONFIG_SYS_FSL_I2C_SPEED for the i2c speed and 1480 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_I2C_SLAVE for the slave addr of the first 1481 bus. 1482 - If your board supports a second fsl i2c bus, define 1483 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_I2C2_OFFSET for the register offset 1484 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_I2C2_SPEED for the speed and 1485 CONFIG_SYS_FSL_I2C2_SLAVE for the slave address of the 1486 second bus. 1487 1488 - drivers/i2c/tegra_i2c.c: 1489 - activate this driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_TEGRA 1490 - This driver adds 4 i2c buses with a fix speed from 1491 100000 and the slave addr 0! 1492 1493 - drivers/i2c/ppc4xx_i2c.c 1494 - activate this driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_PPC4XX 1495 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_PPC4XX_CH0 activate hardware channel 0 1496 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_PPC4XX_CH1 activate hardware channel 1 1497 1498 - drivers/i2c/i2c_mxc.c 1499 - activate this driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MXC 1500 - enable bus 1 with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MXC_I2C1 1501 - enable bus 2 with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MXC_I2C2 1502 - enable bus 3 with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MXC_I2C3 1503 - enable bus 4 with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MXC_I2C4 1504 - define speed for bus 1 with CONFIG_SYS_MXC_I2C1_SPEED 1505 - define slave for bus 1 with CONFIG_SYS_MXC_I2C1_SLAVE 1506 - define speed for bus 2 with CONFIG_SYS_MXC_I2C2_SPEED 1507 - define slave for bus 2 with CONFIG_SYS_MXC_I2C2_SLAVE 1508 - define speed for bus 3 with CONFIG_SYS_MXC_I2C3_SPEED 1509 - define slave for bus 3 with CONFIG_SYS_MXC_I2C3_SLAVE 1510 - define speed for bus 4 with CONFIG_SYS_MXC_I2C4_SPEED 1511 - define slave for bus 4 with CONFIG_SYS_MXC_I2C4_SLAVE 1512 If those defines are not set, default value is 100000 1513 for speed, and 0 for slave. 1514 1515 - drivers/i2c/rcar_i2c.c: 1516 - activate this driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_RCAR 1517 - This driver adds 4 i2c buses 1518 1519 - drivers/i2c/sh_i2c.c: 1520 - activate this driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH 1521 - This driver adds from 2 to 5 i2c buses 1522 1523 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_BASE0 for setting the register channel 0 1524 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_SPEED0 for for the speed channel 0 1525 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_BASE1 for setting the register channel 1 1526 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_SPEED1 for for the speed channel 1 1527 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_BASE2 for setting the register channel 2 1528 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_SPEED2 for for the speed channel 2 1529 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_BASE3 for setting the register channel 3 1530 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_SPEED3 for for the speed channel 3 1531 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_BASE4 for setting the register channel 4 1532 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_SPEED4 for for the speed channel 4 1533 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SH_NUM_CONTROLLERS for number of i2c buses 1534 1535 - drivers/i2c/omap24xx_i2c.c 1536 - activate this driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_OMAP24XX 1537 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SPEED speed channel 0 1538 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SLAVE slave addr channel 0 1539 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SPEED1 speed channel 1 1540 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SLAVE1 slave addr channel 1 1541 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SPEED2 speed channel 2 1542 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SLAVE2 slave addr channel 2 1543 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SPEED3 speed channel 3 1544 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SLAVE3 slave addr channel 3 1545 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SPEED4 speed channel 4 1546 - CONFIG_SYS_OMAP24_I2C_SLAVE4 slave addr channel 4 1547 1548 - drivers/i2c/s3c24x0_i2c.c: 1549 - activate this driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_S3C24X0 1550 - This driver adds i2c buses (11 for Exynos5250, Exynos5420 1551 9 i2c buses for Exynos4 and 1 for S3C24X0 SoCs from Samsung) 1552 with a fix speed from 100000 and the slave addr 0! 1553 1554 - drivers/i2c/ihs_i2c.c 1555 - activate this driver with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS 1556 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_CH0 activate hardware channel 0 1557 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SPEED_0 speed channel 0 1558 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SLAVE_0 slave addr channel 0 1559 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_CH1 activate hardware channel 1 1560 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SPEED_1 speed channel 1 1561 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SLAVE_1 slave addr channel 1 1562 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_CH2 activate hardware channel 2 1563 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SPEED_2 speed channel 2 1564 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SLAVE_2 slave addr channel 2 1565 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_CH3 activate hardware channel 3 1566 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SPEED_3 speed channel 3 1567 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SLAVE_3 slave addr channel 3 1568 - activate dual channel with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_DUAL 1569 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SPEED_0_1 speed channel 0_1 1570 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SLAVE_0_1 slave addr channel 0_1 1571 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SPEED_1_1 speed channel 1_1 1572 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SLAVE_1_1 slave addr channel 1_1 1573 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SPEED_2_1 speed channel 2_1 1574 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SLAVE_2_1 slave addr channel 2_1 1575 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SPEED_3_1 speed channel 3_1 1576 - CONFIG_SYS_I2C_IHS_SLAVE_3_1 slave addr channel 3_1 1577 1578 additional defines: 1579 1580 CONFIG_SYS_NUM_I2C_BUSES 1581 Hold the number of i2c buses you want to use. 1582 1583 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_DIRECT_BUS 1584 define this, if you don't use i2c muxes on your hardware. 1585 if CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MAX_HOPS is not defined or == 0 you can 1586 omit this define. 1587 1588 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MAX_HOPS 1589 define how many muxes are maximal consecutively connected 1590 on one i2c bus. If you not use i2c muxes, omit this 1591 define. 1592 1593 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_BUSES 1594 hold a list of buses you want to use, only used if 1595 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_DIRECT_BUS is not defined, for example 1596 a board with CONFIG_SYS_I2C_MAX_HOPS = 1 and 1597 CONFIG_SYS_NUM_I2C_BUSES = 9: 1598 1599 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_BUSES {{0, {I2C_NULL_HOP}}, \ 1600 {0, {{I2C_MUX_PCA9547, 0x70, 1}}}, \ 1601 {0, {{I2C_MUX_PCA9547, 0x70, 2}}}, \ 1602 {0, {{I2C_MUX_PCA9547, 0x70, 3}}}, \ 1603 {0, {{I2C_MUX_PCA9547, 0x70, 4}}}, \ 1604 {0, {{I2C_MUX_PCA9547, 0x70, 5}}}, \ 1605 {1, {I2C_NULL_HOP}}, \ 1606 {1, {{I2C_MUX_PCA9544, 0x72, 1}}}, \ 1607 {1, {{I2C_MUX_PCA9544, 0x72, 2}}}, \ 1608 } 1609 1610 which defines 1611 bus 0 on adapter 0 without a mux 1612 bus 1 on adapter 0 with a PCA9547 on address 0x70 port 1 1613 bus 2 on adapter 0 with a PCA9547 on address 0x70 port 2 1614 bus 3 on adapter 0 with a PCA9547 on address 0x70 port 3 1615 bus 4 on adapter 0 with a PCA9547 on address 0x70 port 4 1616 bus 5 on adapter 0 with a PCA9547 on address 0x70 port 5 1617 bus 6 on adapter 1 without a mux 1618 bus 7 on adapter 1 with a PCA9544 on address 0x72 port 1 1619 bus 8 on adapter 1 with a PCA9544 on address 0x72 port 2 1620 1621 If you do not have i2c muxes on your board, omit this define. 1622 1623- Legacy I2C Support: 1624 If you use the software i2c interface (CONFIG_SYS_I2C_SOFT) 1625 then the following macros need to be defined (examples are 1626 from include/configs/lwmon.h): 1627 1628 I2C_INIT 1629 1630 (Optional). Any commands necessary to enable the I2C 1631 controller or configure ports. 1632 1633 eg: #define I2C_INIT (immr->im_cpm.cp_pbdir |= PB_SCL) 1634 1635 I2C_ACTIVE 1636 1637 The code necessary to make the I2C data line active 1638 (driven). If the data line is open collector, this 1639 define can be null. 1640 1641 eg: #define I2C_ACTIVE (immr->im_cpm.cp_pbdir |= PB_SDA) 1642 1643 I2C_TRISTATE 1644 1645 The code necessary to make the I2C data line tri-stated 1646 (inactive). If the data line is open collector, this 1647 define can be null. 1648 1649 eg: #define I2C_TRISTATE (immr->im_cpm.cp_pbdir &= ~PB_SDA) 1650 1651 I2C_READ 1652 1653 Code that returns true if the I2C data line is high, 1654 false if it is low. 1655 1656 eg: #define I2C_READ ((immr->im_cpm.cp_pbdat & PB_SDA) != 0) 1657 1658 I2C_SDA(bit) 1659 1660 If <bit> is true, sets the I2C data line high. If it 1661 is false, it clears it (low). 1662 1663 eg: #define I2C_SDA(bit) \ 1664 if(bit) immr->im_cpm.cp_pbdat |= PB_SDA; \ 1665 else immr->im_cpm.cp_pbdat &= ~PB_SDA 1666 1667 I2C_SCL(bit) 1668 1669 If <bit> is true, sets the I2C clock line high. If it 1670 is false, it clears it (low). 1671 1672 eg: #define I2C_SCL(bit) \ 1673 if(bit) immr->im_cpm.cp_pbdat |= PB_SCL; \ 1674 else immr->im_cpm.cp_pbdat &= ~PB_SCL 1675 1676 I2C_DELAY 1677 1678 This delay is invoked four times per clock cycle so this 1679 controls the rate of data transfer. The data rate thus 1680 is 1 / (I2C_DELAY * 4). Often defined to be something 1681 like: 1682 1683 #define I2C_DELAY udelay(2) 1684 1685 CONFIG_SOFT_I2C_GPIO_SCL / CONFIG_SOFT_I2C_GPIO_SDA 1686 1687 If your arch supports the generic GPIO framework (asm/gpio.h), 1688 then you may alternatively define the two GPIOs that are to be 1689 used as SCL / SDA. Any of the previous I2C_xxx macros will 1690 have GPIO-based defaults assigned to them as appropriate. 1691 1692 You should define these to the GPIO value as given directly to 1693 the generic GPIO functions. 1694 1695 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_INIT_BOARD 1696 1697 When a board is reset during an i2c bus transfer 1698 chips might think that the current transfer is still 1699 in progress. On some boards it is possible to access 1700 the i2c SCLK line directly, either by using the 1701 processor pin as a GPIO or by having a second pin 1702 connected to the bus. If this option is defined a 1703 custom i2c_init_board() routine in boards/xxx/board.c 1704 is run early in the boot sequence. 1705 1706 CONFIG_I2C_MULTI_BUS 1707 1708 This option allows the use of multiple I2C buses, each of which 1709 must have a controller. At any point in time, only one bus is 1710 active. To switch to a different bus, use the 'i2c dev' command. 1711 Note that bus numbering is zero-based. 1712 1713 CONFIG_SYS_I2C_NOPROBES 1714 1715 This option specifies a list of I2C devices that will be skipped 1716 when the 'i2c probe' command is issued. If CONFIG_I2C_MULTI_BUS 1717 is set, specify a list of bus-device pairs. Otherwise, specify 1718 a 1D array of device addresses 1719 1720 e.g. 1721 #undef CONFIG_I2C_MULTI_BUS 1722 #define CONFIG_SYS_I2C_NOPROBES {0x50,0x68} 1723 1724 will skip addresses 0x50 and 0x68 on a board with one I2C bus 1725 1726 #define CONFIG_I2C_MULTI_BUS 1727 #define CONFIG_SYS_I2C_NOPROBES {{0,0x50},{0,0x68},{1,0x54}} 1728 1729 will skip addresses 0x50 and 0x68 on bus 0 and address 0x54 on bus 1 1730 1731 CONFIG_SYS_SPD_BUS_NUM 1732 1733 If defined, then this indicates the I2C bus number for DDR SPD. 1734 If not defined, then U-Boot assumes that SPD is on I2C bus 0. 1735 1736 CONFIG_SYS_RTC_BUS_NUM 1737 1738 If defined, then this indicates the I2C bus number for the RTC. 1739 If not defined, then U-Boot assumes that RTC is on I2C bus 0. 1740 1741 CONFIG_SOFT_I2C_READ_REPEATED_START 1742 1743 defining this will force the i2c_read() function in 1744 the soft_i2c driver to perform an I2C repeated start 1745 between writing the address pointer and reading the 1746 data. If this define is omitted the default behaviour 1747 of doing a stop-start sequence will be used. Most I2C 1748 devices can use either method, but some require one or 1749 the other. 1750 1751- SPI Support: CONFIG_SPI 1752 1753 Enables SPI driver (so far only tested with 1754 SPI EEPROM, also an instance works with Crystal A/D and 1755 D/As on the SACSng board) 1756 1757 CONFIG_SOFT_SPI 1758 1759 Enables a software (bit-bang) SPI driver rather than 1760 using hardware support. This is a general purpose 1761 driver that only requires three general I/O port pins 1762 (two outputs, one input) to function. If this is 1763 defined, the board configuration must define several 1764 SPI configuration items (port pins to use, etc). For 1765 an example, see include/configs/sacsng.h. 1766 1767 CONFIG_SYS_SPI_MXC_WAIT 1768 Timeout for waiting until spi transfer completed. 1769 default: (CONFIG_SYS_HZ/100) /* 10 ms */ 1770 1771- FPGA Support: CONFIG_FPGA 1772 1773 Enables FPGA subsystem. 1774 1775 CONFIG_FPGA_<vendor> 1776 1777 Enables support for specific chip vendors. 1778 (ALTERA, XILINX) 1779 1780 CONFIG_FPGA_<family> 1781 1782 Enables support for FPGA family. 1783 (SPARTAN2, SPARTAN3, VIRTEX2, CYCLONE2, ACEX1K, ACEX) 1784 1785 CONFIG_FPGA_COUNT 1786 1787 Specify the number of FPGA devices to support. 1788 1789 CONFIG_SYS_FPGA_PROG_FEEDBACK 1790 1791 Enable printing of hash marks during FPGA configuration. 1792 1793 CONFIG_SYS_FPGA_CHECK_BUSY 1794 1795 Enable checks on FPGA configuration interface busy 1796 status by the configuration function. This option 1797 will require a board or device specific function to 1798 be written. 1799 1800 CONFIG_FPGA_DELAY 1801 1802 If defined, a function that provides delays in the FPGA 1803 configuration driver. 1804 1805 CONFIG_SYS_FPGA_CHECK_CTRLC 1806 Allow Control-C to interrupt FPGA configuration 1807 1808 CONFIG_SYS_FPGA_CHECK_ERROR 1809 1810 Check for configuration errors during FPGA bitfile 1811 loading. For example, abort during Virtex II 1812 configuration if the INIT_B line goes low (which 1813 indicated a CRC error). 1814 1815 CONFIG_SYS_FPGA_WAIT_INIT 1816 1817 Maximum time to wait for the INIT_B line to de-assert 1818 after PROB_B has been de-asserted during a Virtex II 1819 FPGA configuration sequence. The default time is 500 1820 ms. 1821 1822 CONFIG_SYS_FPGA_WAIT_BUSY 1823 1824 Maximum time to wait for BUSY to de-assert during 1825 Virtex II FPGA configuration. The default is 5 ms. 1826 1827 CONFIG_SYS_FPGA_WAIT_CONFIG 1828 1829 Time to wait after FPGA configuration. The default is 1830 200 ms. 1831 1832- Configuration Management: 1833 1834 CONFIG_IDENT_STRING 1835 1836 If defined, this string will be added to the U-Boot 1837 version information (U_BOOT_VERSION) 1838 1839- Vendor Parameter Protection: 1840 1841 U-Boot considers the values of the environment 1842 variables "serial#" (Board Serial Number) and 1843 "ethaddr" (Ethernet Address) to be parameters that 1844 are set once by the board vendor / manufacturer, and 1845 protects these variables from casual modification by 1846 the user. Once set, these variables are read-only, 1847 and write or delete attempts are rejected. You can 1848 change this behaviour: 1849 1850 If CONFIG_ENV_OVERWRITE is #defined in your config 1851 file, the write protection for vendor parameters is 1852 completely disabled. Anybody can change or delete 1853 these parameters. 1854 1855 Alternatively, if you define _both_ an ethaddr in the 1856 default env _and_ CONFIG_OVERWRITE_ETHADDR_ONCE, a default 1857 Ethernet address is installed in the environment, 1858 which can be changed exactly ONCE by the user. [The 1859 serial# is unaffected by this, i. e. it remains 1860 read-only.] 1861 1862 The same can be accomplished in a more flexible way 1863 for any variable by configuring the type of access 1864 to allow for those variables in the ".flags" variable 1865 or define CONFIG_ENV_FLAGS_LIST_STATIC. 1866 1867- Protected RAM: 1868 CONFIG_PRAM 1869 1870 Define this variable to enable the reservation of 1871 "protected RAM", i. e. RAM which is not overwritten 1872 by U-Boot. Define CONFIG_PRAM to hold the number of 1873 kB you want to reserve for pRAM. You can overwrite 1874 this default value by defining an environment 1875 variable "pram" to the number of kB you want to 1876 reserve. Note that the board info structure will 1877 still show the full amount of RAM. If pRAM is 1878 reserved, a new environment variable "mem" will 1879 automatically be defined to hold the amount of 1880 remaining RAM in a form that can be passed as boot 1881 argument to Linux, for instance like that: 1882 1883 setenv bootargs ... mem=\${mem} 1884 saveenv 1885 1886 This way you can tell Linux not to use this memory, 1887 either, which results in a memory region that will 1888 not be affected by reboots. 1889 1890 *WARNING* If your board configuration uses automatic 1891 detection of the RAM size, you must make sure that 1892 this memory test is non-destructive. So far, the 1893 following board configurations are known to be 1894 "pRAM-clean": 1895 1896 IVMS8, IVML24, SPD8xx, 1897 HERMES, IP860, RPXlite, LWMON, 1898 FLAGADM 1899 1900- Access to physical memory region (> 4GB) 1901 Some basic support is provided for operations on memory not 1902 normally accessible to U-Boot - e.g. some architectures 1903 support access to more than 4GB of memory on 32-bit 1904 machines using physical address extension or similar. 1905 Define CONFIG_PHYSMEM to access this basic support, which 1906 currently only supports clearing the memory. 1907 1908- Error Recovery: 1909 CONFIG_NET_RETRY_COUNT 1910 1911 This variable defines the number of retries for 1912 network operations like ARP, RARP, TFTP, or BOOTP 1913 before giving up the operation. If not defined, a 1914 default value of 5 is used. 1915 1916 CONFIG_ARP_TIMEOUT 1917 1918 Timeout waiting for an ARP reply in milliseconds. 1919 1920 CONFIG_NFS_TIMEOUT 1921 1922 Timeout in milliseconds used in NFS protocol. 1923 If you encounter "ERROR: Cannot umount" in nfs command, 1924 try longer timeout such as 1925 #define CONFIG_NFS_TIMEOUT 10000UL 1926 1927 Note: 1928 1929 In the current implementation, the local variables 1930 space and global environment variables space are 1931 separated. Local variables are those you define by 1932 simply typing `name=value'. To access a local 1933 variable later on, you have write `$name' or 1934 `${name}'; to execute the contents of a variable 1935 directly type `$name' at the command prompt. 1936 1937 Global environment variables are those you use 1938 setenv/printenv to work with. To run a command stored 1939 in such a variable, you need to use the run command, 1940 and you must not use the '$' sign to access them. 1941 1942 To store commands and special characters in a 1943 variable, please use double quotation marks 1944 surrounding the whole text of the variable, instead 1945 of the backslashes before semicolons and special 1946 symbols. 1947 1948- Command Line Editing and History: 1949 CONFIG_CMDLINE_PS_SUPPORT 1950 1951 Enable support for changing the command prompt string 1952 at run-time. Only static string is supported so far. 1953 The string is obtained from environment variables PS1 1954 and PS2. 1955 1956- Default Environment: 1957 CONFIG_EXTRA_ENV_SETTINGS 1958 1959 Define this to contain any number of null terminated 1960 strings (variable = value pairs) that will be part of 1961 the default environment compiled into the boot image. 1962 1963 For example, place something like this in your 1964 board's config file: 1965 1966 #define CONFIG_EXTRA_ENV_SETTINGS \ 1967 "myvar1=value1\0" \ 1968 "myvar2=value2\0" 1969 1970 Warning: This method is based on knowledge about the 1971 internal format how the environment is stored by the 1972 U-Boot code. This is NOT an official, exported 1973 interface! Although it is unlikely that this format 1974 will change soon, there is no guarantee either. 1975 You better know what you are doing here. 1976 1977 Note: overly (ab)use of the default environment is 1978 discouraged. Make sure to check other ways to preset 1979 the environment like the "source" command or the 1980 boot command first. 1981 1982 CONFIG_DELAY_ENVIRONMENT 1983 1984 Normally the environment is loaded when the board is 1985 initialised so that it is available to U-Boot. This inhibits 1986 that so that the environment is not available until 1987 explicitly loaded later by U-Boot code. With CONFIG_OF_CONTROL 1988 this is instead controlled by the value of 1989 /config/load-environment. 1990 1991- TFTP Fixed UDP Port: 1992 CONFIG_TFTP_PORT 1993 1994 If this is defined, the environment variable tftpsrcp 1995 is used to supply the TFTP UDP source port value. 1996 If tftpsrcp isn't defined, the normal pseudo-random port 1997 number generator is used. 1998 1999 Also, the environment variable tftpdstp is used to supply 2000 the TFTP UDP destination port value. If tftpdstp isn't 2001 defined, the normal port 69 is used. 2002 2003 The purpose for tftpsrcp is to allow a TFTP server to 2004 blindly start the TFTP transfer using the pre-configured 2005 target IP address and UDP port. This has the effect of 2006 "punching through" the (Windows XP) firewall, allowing 2007 the remainder of the TFTP transfer to proceed normally. 2008 A better solution is to properly configure the firewall, 2009 but sometimes that is not allowed. 2010 2011 CONFIG_STANDALONE_LOAD_ADDR 2012 2013 This option defines a board specific value for the 2014 address where standalone program gets loaded, thus 2015 overwriting the architecture dependent default 2016 settings. 2017 2018- Frame Buffer Address: 2019 CONFIG_FB_ADDR 2020 2021 Define CONFIG_FB_ADDR if you want to use specific 2022 address for frame buffer. This is typically the case 2023 when using a graphics controller has separate video 2024 memory. U-Boot will then place the frame buffer at 2025 the given address instead of dynamically reserving it 2026 in system RAM by calling lcd_setmem(), which grabs 2027 the memory for the frame buffer depending on the 2028 configured panel size. 2029 2030 Please see board_init_f function. 2031 2032- Automatic software updates via TFTP server 2033 CONFIG_UPDATE_TFTP 2034 CONFIG_UPDATE_TFTP_CNT_MAX 2035 CONFIG_UPDATE_TFTP_MSEC_MAX 2036 2037 These options enable and control the auto-update feature; 2038 for a more detailed description refer to doc/README.update. 2039 2040- MTD Support (mtdparts command, UBI support) 2041 CONFIG_MTD_UBI_WL_THRESHOLD 2042 This parameter defines the maximum difference between the highest 2043 erase counter value and the lowest erase counter value of eraseblocks 2044 of UBI devices. When this threshold is exceeded, UBI starts performing 2045 wear leveling by means of moving data from eraseblock with low erase 2046 counter to eraseblocks with high erase counter. 2047 2048 The default value should be OK for SLC NAND flashes, NOR flashes and 2049 other flashes which have eraseblock life-cycle 100000 or more. 2050 However, in case of MLC NAND flashes which typically have eraseblock 2051 life-cycle less than 10000, the threshold should be lessened (e.g., 2052 to 128 or 256, although it does not have to be power of 2). 2053 2054 default: 4096 2055 2056 CONFIG_MTD_UBI_BEB_LIMIT 2057 This option specifies the maximum bad physical eraseblocks UBI 2058 expects on the MTD device (per 1024 eraseblocks). If the 2059 underlying flash does not admit of bad eraseblocks (e.g. NOR 2060 flash), this value is ignored. 2061 2062 NAND datasheets often specify the minimum and maximum NVM 2063 (Number of Valid Blocks) for the flashes' endurance lifetime. 2064 The maximum expected bad eraseblocks per 1024 eraseblocks 2065 then can be calculated as "1024 * (1 - MinNVB / MaxNVB)", 2066 which gives 20 for most NANDs (MaxNVB is basically the total 2067 count of eraseblocks on the chip). 2068 2069 To put it differently, if this value is 20, UBI will try to 2070 reserve about 1.9% of physical eraseblocks for bad blocks 2071 handling. And that will be 1.9% of eraseblocks on the entire 2072 NAND chip, not just the MTD partition UBI attaches. This means 2073 that if you have, say, a NAND flash chip admits maximum 40 bad 2074 eraseblocks, and it is split on two MTD partitions of the same 2075 size, UBI will reserve 40 eraseblocks when attaching a 2076 partition. 2077 2078 default: 20 2079 2080 CONFIG_MTD_UBI_FASTMAP 2081 Fastmap is a mechanism which allows attaching an UBI device 2082 in nearly constant time. Instead of scanning the whole MTD device it 2083 only has to locate a checkpoint (called fastmap) on the device. 2084 The on-flash fastmap contains all information needed to attach 2085 the device. Using fastmap makes only sense on large devices where 2086 attaching by scanning takes long. UBI will not automatically install 2087 a fastmap on old images, but you can set the UBI parameter 2088 CONFIG_MTD_UBI_FASTMAP_AUTOCONVERT to 1 if you want so. Please note 2089 that fastmap-enabled images are still usable with UBI implementations 2090 without fastmap support. On typical flash devices the whole fastmap 2091 fits into one PEB. UBI will reserve PEBs to hold two fastmaps. 2092 2093 CONFIG_MTD_UBI_FASTMAP_AUTOCONVERT 2094 Set this parameter to enable fastmap automatically on images 2095 without a fastmap. 2096 default: 0 2097 2098 CONFIG_MTD_UBI_FM_DEBUG 2099 Enable UBI fastmap debug 2100 default: 0 2101 2102- SPL framework 2103 CONFIG_SPL 2104 Enable building of SPL globally. 2105 2106 CONFIG_SPL_LDSCRIPT 2107 LDSCRIPT for linking the SPL binary. 2108 2109 CONFIG_SPL_MAX_FOOTPRINT 2110 Maximum size in memory allocated to the SPL, BSS included. 2111 When defined, the linker checks that the actual memory 2112 used by SPL from _start to __bss_end does not exceed it. 2113 CONFIG_SPL_MAX_FOOTPRINT and CONFIG_SPL_BSS_MAX_SIZE 2114 must not be both defined at the same time. 2115 2116 CONFIG_SPL_MAX_SIZE 2117 Maximum size of the SPL image (text, data, rodata, and 2118 linker lists sections), BSS excluded. 2119 When defined, the linker checks that the actual size does 2120 not exceed it. 2121 2122 CONFIG_SPL_RELOC_TEXT_BASE 2123 Address to relocate to. If unspecified, this is equal to 2124 CONFIG_SPL_TEXT_BASE (i.e. no relocation is done). 2125 2126 CONFIG_SPL_BSS_START_ADDR 2127 Link address for the BSS within the SPL binary. 2128 2129 CONFIG_SPL_BSS_MAX_SIZE 2130 Maximum size in memory allocated to the SPL BSS. 2131 When defined, the linker checks that the actual memory used 2132 by SPL from __bss_start to __bss_end does not exceed it. 2133 CONFIG_SPL_MAX_FOOTPRINT and CONFIG_SPL_BSS_MAX_SIZE 2134 must not be both defined at the same time. 2135 2136 CONFIG_SPL_STACK 2137 Adress of the start of the stack SPL will use 2138 2139 CONFIG_SPL_PANIC_ON_RAW_IMAGE 2140 When defined, SPL will panic() if the image it has 2141 loaded does not have a signature. 2142 Defining this is useful when code which loads images 2143 in SPL cannot guarantee that absolutely all read errors 2144 will be caught. 2145 An example is the LPC32XX MLC NAND driver, which will 2146 consider that a completely unreadable NAND block is bad, 2147 and thus should be skipped silently. 2148 2149 CONFIG_SPL_RELOC_STACK 2150 Adress of the start of the stack SPL will use after 2151 relocation. If unspecified, this is equal to 2152 CONFIG_SPL_STACK. 2153 2154 CONFIG_SYS_SPL_MALLOC_START 2155 Starting address of the malloc pool used in SPL. 2156 When this option is set the full malloc is used in SPL and 2157 it is set up by spl_init() and before that, the simple malloc() 2158 can be used if CONFIG_SYS_MALLOC_F is defined. 2159 2160 CONFIG_SYS_SPL_MALLOC_SIZE 2161 The size of the malloc pool used in SPL. 2162 2163 CONFIG_SPL_OS_BOOT 2164 Enable booting directly to an OS from SPL. 2165 See also: doc/README.falcon 2166 2167 CONFIG_SPL_DISPLAY_PRINT 2168 For ARM, enable an optional function to print more information 2169 about the running system. 2170 2171 CONFIG_SPL_INIT_MINIMAL 2172 Arch init code should be built for a very small image 2173 2174 CONFIG_SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_PARTITION 2175 Partition on the MMC to load U-Boot from when the MMC is being 2176 used in raw mode 2177 2178 CONFIG_SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_KERNEL_SECTOR 2179 Sector to load kernel uImage from when MMC is being 2180 used in raw mode (for Falcon mode) 2181 2182 CONFIG_SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_ARGS_SECTOR, 2183 CONFIG_SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_ARGS_SECTORS 2184 Sector and number of sectors to load kernel argument 2185 parameters from when MMC is being used in raw mode 2186 (for falcon mode) 2187 2188 CONFIG_SPL_FS_LOAD_PAYLOAD_NAME 2189 Filename to read to load U-Boot when reading from filesystem 2190 2191 CONFIG_SPL_FS_LOAD_KERNEL_NAME 2192 Filename to read to load kernel uImage when reading 2193 from filesystem (for Falcon mode) 2194 2195 CONFIG_SPL_FS_LOAD_ARGS_NAME 2196 Filename to read to load kernel argument parameters 2197 when reading from filesystem (for Falcon mode) 2198 2199 CONFIG_SPL_MPC83XX_WAIT_FOR_NAND 2200 Set this for NAND SPL on PPC mpc83xx targets, so that 2201 start.S waits for the rest of the SPL to load before 2202 continuing (the hardware starts execution after just 2203 loading the first page rather than the full 4K). 2204 2205 CONFIG_SPL_SKIP_RELOCATE 2206 Avoid SPL relocation 2207 2208 CONFIG_SPL_NAND_IDENT 2209 SPL uses the chip ID list to identify the NAND flash. 2210 Requires CONFIG_SPL_NAND_BASE. 2211 2212 CONFIG_SPL_UBI 2213 Support for a lightweight UBI (fastmap) scanner and 2214 loader 2215 2216 CONFIG_SPL_NAND_RAW_ONLY 2217 Support to boot only raw u-boot.bin images. Use this only 2218 if you need to save space. 2219 2220 CONFIG_SPL_COMMON_INIT_DDR 2221 Set for common ddr init with serial presence detect in 2222 SPL binary. 2223 2224 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_5_ADDR_CYCLE, CONFIG_SYS_NAND_PAGE_COUNT, 2225 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_PAGE_SIZE, CONFIG_SYS_NAND_OOBSIZE, 2226 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_BLOCK_SIZE, CONFIG_SYS_NAND_BAD_BLOCK_POS, 2227 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_ECCPOS, CONFIG_SYS_NAND_ECCSIZE, 2228 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_ECCBYTES 2229 Defines the size and behavior of the NAND that SPL uses 2230 to read U-Boot 2231 2232 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_OFFS 2233 Location in NAND to read U-Boot from 2234 2235 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_DST 2236 Location in memory to load U-Boot to 2237 2238 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_SIZE 2239 Size of image to load 2240 2241 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_U_BOOT_START 2242 Entry point in loaded image to jump to 2243 2244 CONFIG_SYS_NAND_HW_ECC_OOBFIRST 2245 Define this if you need to first read the OOB and then the 2246 data. This is used, for example, on davinci platforms. 2247 2248 CONFIG_SPL_RAM_DEVICE 2249 Support for running image already present in ram, in SPL binary 2250 2251 CONFIG_SPL_PAD_TO 2252 Image offset to which the SPL should be padded before appending 2253 the SPL payload. By default, this is defined as 2254 CONFIG_SPL_MAX_SIZE, or 0 if CONFIG_SPL_MAX_SIZE is undefined. 2255 CONFIG_SPL_PAD_TO must be either 0, meaning to append the SPL 2256 payload without any padding, or >= CONFIG_SPL_MAX_SIZE. 2257 2258 CONFIG_SPL_TARGET 2259 Final target image containing SPL and payload. Some SPLs 2260 use an arch-specific makefile fragment instead, for 2261 example if more than one image needs to be produced. 2262 2263 CONFIG_SPL_FIT_PRINT 2264 Printing information about a FIT image adds quite a bit of 2265 code to SPL. So this is normally disabled in SPL. Use this 2266 option to re-enable it. This will affect the output of the 2267 bootm command when booting a FIT image. 2268 2269- TPL framework 2270 CONFIG_TPL 2271 Enable building of TPL globally. 2272 2273 CONFIG_TPL_PAD_TO 2274 Image offset to which the TPL should be padded before appending 2275 the TPL payload. By default, this is defined as 2276 CONFIG_SPL_MAX_SIZE, or 0 if CONFIG_SPL_MAX_SIZE is undefined. 2277 CONFIG_SPL_PAD_TO must be either 0, meaning to append the SPL 2278 payload without any padding, or >= CONFIG_SPL_MAX_SIZE. 2279 2280- Interrupt support (PPC): 2281 2282 There are common interrupt_init() and timer_interrupt() 2283 for all PPC archs. interrupt_init() calls interrupt_init_cpu() 2284 for CPU specific initialization. interrupt_init_cpu() 2285 should set decrementer_count to appropriate value. If 2286 CPU resets decrementer automatically after interrupt 2287 (ppc4xx) it should set decrementer_count to zero. 2288 timer_interrupt() calls timer_interrupt_cpu() for CPU 2289 specific handling. If board has watchdog / status_led 2290 / other_activity_monitor it works automatically from 2291 general timer_interrupt(). 2292 2293 2294Board initialization settings: 2295------------------------------ 2296 2297During Initialization u-boot calls a number of board specific functions 2298to allow the preparation of board specific prerequisites, e.g. pin setup 2299before drivers are initialized. To enable these callbacks the 2300following configuration macros have to be defined. Currently this is 2301architecture specific, so please check arch/your_architecture/lib/board.c 2302typically in board_init_f() and board_init_r(). 2303 2304- CONFIG_BOARD_EARLY_INIT_F: Call board_early_init_f() 2305- CONFIG_BOARD_EARLY_INIT_R: Call board_early_init_r() 2306- CONFIG_BOARD_LATE_INIT: Call board_late_init() 2307- CONFIG_BOARD_POSTCLK_INIT: Call board_postclk_init() 2308 2309Configuration Settings: 2310----------------------- 2311 2312- MEM_SUPPORT_64BIT_DATA: Defined automatically if compiled as 64-bit. 2313 Optionally it can be defined to support 64-bit memory commands. 2314 2315- CONFIG_SYS_LONGHELP: Defined when you want long help messages included; 2316 undefine this when you're short of memory. 2317 2318- CONFIG_SYS_HELP_CMD_WIDTH: Defined when you want to override the default 2319 width of the commands listed in the 'help' command output. 2320 2321- CONFIG_SYS_PROMPT: This is what U-Boot prints on the console to 2322 prompt for user input. 2323 2324- CONFIG_SYS_CBSIZE: Buffer size for input from the Console 2325 2326- CONFIG_SYS_PBSIZE: Buffer size for Console output 2327 2328- CONFIG_SYS_MAXARGS: max. Number of arguments accepted for monitor commands 2329 2330- CONFIG_SYS_BARGSIZE: Buffer size for Boot Arguments which are passed to 2331 the application (usually a Linux kernel) when it is 2332 booted 2333 2334- CONFIG_SYS_BAUDRATE_TABLE: 2335 List of legal baudrate settings for this board. 2336 2337- CONFIG_SYS_MEM_RESERVE_SECURE 2338 Only implemented for ARMv8 for now. 2339 If defined, the size of CONFIG_SYS_MEM_RESERVE_SECURE memory 2340 is substracted from total RAM and won't be reported to OS. 2341 This memory can be used as secure memory. A variable 2342 gd->arch.secure_ram is used to track the location. In systems 2343 the RAM base is not zero, or RAM is divided into banks, 2344 this variable needs to be recalcuated to get the address. 2345 2346- CONFIG_SYS_MEM_TOP_HIDE: 2347 If CONFIG_SYS_MEM_TOP_HIDE is defined in the board config header, 2348 this specified memory area will get subtracted from the top 2349 (end) of RAM and won't get "touched" at all by U-Boot. By 2350 fixing up gd->ram_size the Linux kernel should gets passed 2351 the now "corrected" memory size and won't touch it either. 2352 This should work for arch/ppc and arch/powerpc. Only Linux 2353 board ports in arch/powerpc with bootwrapper support that 2354 recalculate the memory size from the SDRAM controller setup 2355 will have to get fixed in Linux additionally. 2356 2357 This option can be used as a workaround for the 440EPx/GRx 2358 CHIP 11 errata where the last 256 bytes in SDRAM shouldn't 2359 be touched. 2360 2361 WARNING: Please make sure that this value is a multiple of 2362 the Linux page size (normally 4k). If this is not the case, 2363 then the end address of the Linux memory will be located at a 2364 non page size aligned address and this could cause major 2365 problems. 2366 2367- CONFIG_SYS_LOADS_BAUD_CHANGE: 2368 Enable temporary baudrate change while serial download 2369 2370- CONFIG_SYS_SDRAM_BASE: 2371 Physical start address of SDRAM. _Must_ be 0 here. 2372 2373- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_BASE: 2374 Physical start address of Flash memory. 2375 2376- CONFIG_SYS_MONITOR_BASE: 2377 Physical start address of boot monitor code (set by 2378 make config files to be same as the text base address 2379 (CONFIG_SYS_TEXT_BASE) used when linking) - same as 2380 CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_BASE when booting from flash. 2381 2382- CONFIG_SYS_MONITOR_LEN: 2383 Size of memory reserved for monitor code, used to 2384 determine _at_compile_time_ (!) if the environment is 2385 embedded within the U-Boot image, or in a separate 2386 flash sector. 2387 2388- CONFIG_SYS_MALLOC_LEN: 2389 Size of DRAM reserved for malloc() use. 2390 2391- CONFIG_SYS_MALLOC_F_LEN 2392 Size of the malloc() pool for use before relocation. If 2393 this is defined, then a very simple malloc() implementation 2394 will become available before relocation. The address is just 2395 below the global data, and the stack is moved down to make 2396 space. 2397 2398 This feature allocates regions with increasing addresses 2399 within the region. calloc() is supported, but realloc() 2400 is not available. free() is supported but does nothing. 2401 The memory will be freed (or in fact just forgotten) when 2402 U-Boot relocates itself. 2403 2404- CONFIG_SYS_MALLOC_SIMPLE 2405 Provides a simple and small malloc() and calloc() for those 2406 boards which do not use the full malloc in SPL (which is 2407 enabled with CONFIG_SYS_SPL_MALLOC_START). 2408 2409- CONFIG_SYS_NONCACHED_MEMORY: 2410 Size of non-cached memory area. This area of memory will be 2411 typically located right below the malloc() area and mapped 2412 uncached in the MMU. This is useful for drivers that would 2413 otherwise require a lot of explicit cache maintenance. For 2414 some drivers it's also impossible to properly maintain the 2415 cache. For example if the regions that need to be flushed 2416 are not a multiple of the cache-line size, *and* padding 2417 cannot be allocated between the regions to align them (i.e. 2418 if the HW requires a contiguous array of regions, and the 2419 size of each region is not cache-aligned), then a flush of 2420 one region may result in overwriting data that hardware has 2421 written to another region in the same cache-line. This can 2422 happen for example in network drivers where descriptors for 2423 buffers are typically smaller than the CPU cache-line (e.g. 2424 16 bytes vs. 32 or 64 bytes). 2425 2426 Non-cached memory is only supported on 32-bit ARM at present. 2427 2428- CONFIG_SYS_BOOTM_LEN: 2429 Normally compressed uImages are limited to an 2430 uncompressed size of 8 MBytes. If this is not enough, 2431 you can define CONFIG_SYS_BOOTM_LEN in your board config file 2432 to adjust this setting to your needs. 2433 2434- CONFIG_SYS_BOOTMAPSZ: 2435 Maximum size of memory mapped by the startup code of 2436 the Linux kernel; all data that must be processed by 2437 the Linux kernel (bd_info, boot arguments, FDT blob if 2438 used) must be put below this limit, unless "bootm_low" 2439 environment variable is defined and non-zero. In such case 2440 all data for the Linux kernel must be between "bootm_low" 2441 and "bootm_low" + CONFIG_SYS_BOOTMAPSZ. The environment 2442 variable "bootm_mapsize" will override the value of 2443 CONFIG_SYS_BOOTMAPSZ. If CONFIG_SYS_BOOTMAPSZ is undefined, 2444 then the value in "bootm_size" will be used instead. 2445 2446- CONFIG_SYS_BOOT_RAMDISK_HIGH: 2447 Enable initrd_high functionality. If defined then the 2448 initrd_high feature is enabled and the bootm ramdisk subcommand 2449 is enabled. 2450 2451- CONFIG_SYS_BOOT_GET_CMDLINE: 2452 Enables allocating and saving kernel cmdline in space between 2453 "bootm_low" and "bootm_low" + BOOTMAPSZ. 2454 2455- CONFIG_SYS_BOOT_GET_KBD: 2456 Enables allocating and saving a kernel copy of the bd_info in 2457 space between "bootm_low" and "bootm_low" + BOOTMAPSZ. 2458 2459- CONFIG_SYS_MAX_FLASH_BANKS: 2460 Max number of Flash memory banks 2461 2462- CONFIG_SYS_MAX_FLASH_SECT: 2463 Max number of sectors on a Flash chip 2464 2465- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_ERASE_TOUT: 2466 Timeout for Flash erase operations (in ms) 2467 2468- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_WRITE_TOUT: 2469 Timeout for Flash write operations (in ms) 2470 2471- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_LOCK_TOUT 2472 Timeout for Flash set sector lock bit operation (in ms) 2473 2474- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_UNLOCK_TOUT 2475 Timeout for Flash clear lock bits operation (in ms) 2476 2477- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_PROTECTION 2478 If defined, hardware flash sectors protection is used 2479 instead of U-Boot software protection. 2480 2481- CONFIG_SYS_DIRECT_FLASH_TFTP: 2482 2483 Enable TFTP transfers directly to flash memory; 2484 without this option such a download has to be 2485 performed in two steps: (1) download to RAM, and (2) 2486 copy from RAM to flash. 2487 2488 The two-step approach is usually more reliable, since 2489 you can check if the download worked before you erase 2490 the flash, but in some situations (when system RAM is 2491 too limited to allow for a temporary copy of the 2492 downloaded image) this option may be very useful. 2493 2494- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_CFI: 2495 Define if the flash driver uses extra elements in the 2496 common flash structure for storing flash geometry. 2497 2498- CONFIG_FLASH_CFI_DRIVER 2499 This option also enables the building of the cfi_flash driver 2500 in the drivers directory 2501 2502- CONFIG_FLASH_CFI_MTD 2503 This option enables the building of the cfi_mtd driver 2504 in the drivers directory. The driver exports CFI flash 2505 to the MTD layer. 2506 2507- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_USE_BUFFER_WRITE 2508 Use buffered writes to flash. 2509 2510- CONFIG_FLASH_SPANSION_S29WS_N 2511 s29ws-n MirrorBit flash has non-standard addresses for buffered 2512 write commands. 2513 2514- CONFIG_SYS_FLASH_QUIET_TEST 2515 If this option is defined, the common CFI flash doesn't 2516 print it's warning upon not recognized FLASH banks. This 2517 is useful, if some of the configured banks are only 2518 optionally available. 2519 2520- CONFIG_FLASH_SHOW_PROGRESS 2521 If defined (must be an integer), print out countdown 2522 digits and dots. Recommended value: 45 (9..1) for 80 2523 column displays, 15 (3..1) for 40 column displays. 2524 2525- CONFIG_FLASH_VERIFY 2526 If defined, the content of the flash (destination) is compared 2527 against the source after the write operation. An error message 2528 will be printed when the contents are not identical. 2529 Please note that this option is useless in nearly all cases, 2530 since such flash programming errors usually are detected earlier 2531 while unprotecting/erasing/programming. Please only enable 2532 this option if you really know what you are doing. 2533 2534- CONFIG_SYS_RX_ETH_BUFFER: 2535 Defines the number of Ethernet receive buffers. On some 2536 Ethernet controllers it is recommended to set this value 2537 to 8 or even higher (EEPRO100 or 405 EMAC), since all 2538 buffers can be full shortly after enabling the interface 2539 on high Ethernet traffic. 2540 Defaults to 4 if not defined. 2541 2542- CONFIG_ENV_MAX_ENTRIES 2543 2544 Maximum number of entries in the hash table that is used 2545 internally to store the environment settings. The default 2546 setting is supposed to be generous and should work in most 2547 cases. This setting can be used to tune behaviour; see 2548 lib/hashtable.c for details. 2549 2550- CONFIG_ENV_FLAGS_LIST_DEFAULT 2551- CONFIG_ENV_FLAGS_LIST_STATIC 2552 Enable validation of the values given to environment variables when 2553 calling env set. Variables can be restricted to only decimal, 2554 hexadecimal, or boolean. If CONFIG_CMD_NET is also defined, 2555 the variables can also be restricted to IP address or MAC address. 2556 2557 The format of the list is: 2558 type_attribute = [s|d|x|b|i|m] 2559 access_attribute = [a|r|o|c] 2560 attributes = type_attribute[access_attribute] 2561 entry = variable_name[:attributes] 2562 list = entry[,list] 2563 2564 The type attributes are: 2565 s - String (default) 2566 d - Decimal 2567 x - Hexadecimal 2568 b - Boolean ([1yYtT|0nNfF]) 2569 i - IP address 2570 m - MAC address 2571 2572 The access attributes are: 2573 a - Any (default) 2574 r - Read-only 2575 o - Write-once 2576 c - Change-default 2577 2578 - CONFIG_ENV_FLAGS_LIST_DEFAULT 2579 Define this to a list (string) to define the ".flags" 2580 environment variable in the default or embedded environment. 2581 2582 - CONFIG_ENV_FLAGS_LIST_STATIC 2583 Define this to a list (string) to define validation that 2584 should be done if an entry is not found in the ".flags" 2585 environment variable. To override a setting in the static 2586 list, simply add an entry for the same variable name to the 2587 ".flags" variable. 2588 2589 If CONFIG_REGEX is defined, the variable_name above is evaluated as a 2590 regular expression. This allows multiple variables to define the same 2591 flags without explicitly listing them for each variable. 2592 2593The following definitions that deal with the placement and management 2594of environment data (variable area); in general, we support the 2595following configurations: 2596 2597- CONFIG_BUILD_ENVCRC: 2598 2599 Builds up envcrc with the target environment so that external utils 2600 may easily extract it and embed it in final U-Boot images. 2601 2602BE CAREFUL! The first access to the environment happens quite early 2603in U-Boot initialization (when we try to get the setting of for the 2604console baudrate). You *MUST* have mapped your NVRAM area then, or 2605U-Boot will hang. 2606 2607Please note that even with NVRAM we still use a copy of the 2608environment in RAM: we could work on NVRAM directly, but we want to 2609keep settings there always unmodified except somebody uses "saveenv" 2610to save the current settings. 2611 2612BE CAREFUL! For some special cases, the local device can not use 2613"saveenv" command. For example, the local device will get the 2614environment stored in a remote NOR flash by SRIO or PCIE link, 2615but it can not erase, write this NOR flash by SRIO or PCIE interface. 2616 2617- CONFIG_NAND_ENV_DST 2618 2619 Defines address in RAM to which the nand_spl code should copy the 2620 environment. If redundant environment is used, it will be copied to 2621 CONFIG_NAND_ENV_DST + CONFIG_ENV_SIZE. 2622 2623Please note that the environment is read-only until the monitor 2624has been relocated to RAM and a RAM copy of the environment has been 2625created; also, when using EEPROM you will have to use env_get_f() 2626until then to read environment variables. 2627 2628The environment is protected by a CRC32 checksum. Before the monitor 2629is relocated into RAM, as a result of a bad CRC you will be working 2630with the compiled-in default environment - *silently*!!! [This is 2631necessary, because the first environment variable we need is the 2632"baudrate" setting for the console - if we have a bad CRC, we don't 2633have any device yet where we could complain.] 2634 2635Note: once the monitor has been relocated, then it will complain if 2636the default environment is used; a new CRC is computed as soon as you 2637use the "saveenv" command to store a valid environment. 2638 2639- CONFIG_SYS_FAULT_ECHO_LINK_DOWN: 2640 Echo the inverted Ethernet link state to the fault LED. 2641 2642 Note: If this option is active, then CONFIG_SYS_FAULT_MII_ADDR 2643 also needs to be defined. 2644 2645- CONFIG_SYS_FAULT_MII_ADDR: 2646 MII address of the PHY to check for the Ethernet link state. 2647 2648- CONFIG_NS16550_MIN_FUNCTIONS: 2649 Define this if you desire to only have use of the NS16550_init 2650 and NS16550_putc functions for the serial driver located at 2651 drivers/serial/ns16550.c. This option is useful for saving 2652 space for already greatly restricted images, including but not 2653 limited to NAND_SPL configurations. 2654 2655- CONFIG_DISPLAY_BOARDINFO 2656 Display information about the board that U-Boot is running on 2657 when U-Boot starts up. The board function checkboard() is called 2658 to do this. 2659 2660- CONFIG_DISPLAY_BOARDINFO_LATE 2661 Similar to the previous option, but display this information 2662 later, once stdio is running and output goes to the LCD, if 2663 present. 2664 2665- CONFIG_BOARD_SIZE_LIMIT: 2666 Maximum size of the U-Boot image. When defined, the 2667 build system checks that the actual size does not 2668 exceed it. 2669 2670Low Level (hardware related) configuration options: 2671--------------------------------------------------- 2672 2673- CONFIG_SYS_CACHELINE_SIZE: 2674 Cache Line Size of the CPU. 2675 2676- CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_DEFAULT: 2677 Default (power-on reset) physical address of CCSR on Freescale 2678 PowerPC SOCs. 2679 2680- CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR: 2681 Virtual address of CCSR. On a 32-bit build, this is typically 2682 the same value as CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_DEFAULT. 2683 2684- CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS: 2685 Physical address of CCSR. CCSR can be relocated to a new 2686 physical address, if desired. In this case, this macro should 2687 be set to that address. Otherwise, it should be set to the 2688 same value as CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_DEFAULT. For example, CCSR 2689 is typically relocated on 36-bit builds. It is recommended 2690 that this macro be defined via the _HIGH and _LOW macros: 2691 2692 #define CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS ((CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS_HIGH 2693 * 1ull) << 32 | CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS_LOW) 2694 2695- CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS_HIGH: 2696 Bits 33-36 of CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS. This value is typically 2697 either 0 (32-bit build) or 0xF (36-bit build). This macro is 2698 used in assembly code, so it must not contain typecasts or 2699 integer size suffixes (e.g. "ULL"). 2700 2701- CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS_LOW: 2702 Lower 32-bits of CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS. This macro is 2703 used in assembly code, so it must not contain typecasts or 2704 integer size suffixes (e.g. "ULL"). 2705 2706- CONFIG_SYS_CCSR_DO_NOT_RELOCATE: 2707 If this macro is defined, then CONFIG_SYS_CCSRBAR_PHYS will be 2708 forced to a value that ensures that CCSR is not relocated. 2709 2710- CONFIG_IDE_AHB: 2711 Most IDE controllers were designed to be connected with PCI 2712 interface. Only few of them were designed for AHB interface. 2713 When software is doing ATA command and data transfer to 2714 IDE devices through IDE-AHB controller, some additional 2715 registers accessing to these kind of IDE-AHB controller 2716 is required. 2717 2718- CONFIG_SYS_IMMR: Physical address of the Internal Memory. 2719 DO NOT CHANGE unless you know exactly what you're 2720 doing! (11-4) [MPC8xx systems only] 2721 2722- CONFIG_SYS_INIT_RAM_ADDR: 2723 2724 Start address of memory area that can be used for 2725 initial data and stack; please note that this must be 2726 writable memory that is working WITHOUT special 2727 initialization, i. e. you CANNOT use normal RAM which 2728 will become available only after programming the 2729 memory controller and running certain initialization 2730 sequences. 2731 2732 U-Boot uses the following memory types: 2733 - MPC8xx: IMMR (internal memory of the CPU) 2734 2735- CONFIG_SYS_GBL_DATA_OFFSET: 2736 2737 Offset of the initial data structure in the memory 2738 area defined by CONFIG_SYS_INIT_RAM_ADDR. Usually 2739 CONFIG_SYS_GBL_DATA_OFFSET is chosen such that the initial 2740 data is located at the end of the available space 2741 (sometimes written as (CONFIG_SYS_INIT_RAM_SIZE - 2742 GENERATED_GBL_DATA_SIZE), and the initial stack is just 2743 below that area (growing from (CONFIG_SYS_INIT_RAM_ADDR + 2744 CONFIG_SYS_GBL_DATA_OFFSET) downward. 2745 2746 Note: 2747 On the MPC824X (or other systems that use the data 2748 cache for initial memory) the address chosen for 2749 CONFIG_SYS_INIT_RAM_ADDR is basically arbitrary - it must 2750 point to an otherwise UNUSED address space between 2751 the top of RAM and the start of the PCI space. 2752 2753- CONFIG_SYS_SCCR: System Clock and reset Control Register (15-27) 2754 2755- CONFIG_SYS_OR_TIMING_SDRAM: 2756 SDRAM timing 2757 2758- CONFIG_SYS_MAMR_PTA: 2759 periodic timer for refresh 2760 2761- FLASH_BASE0_PRELIM, FLASH_BASE1_PRELIM, CONFIG_SYS_REMAP_OR_AM, 2762 CONFIG_SYS_PRELIM_OR_AM, CONFIG_SYS_OR_TIMING_FLASH, CONFIG_SYS_OR0_REMAP, 2763 CONFIG_SYS_OR0_PRELIM, CONFIG_SYS_BR0_PRELIM, CONFIG_SYS_OR1_REMAP, CONFIG_SYS_OR1_PRELIM, 2764 CONFIG_SYS_BR1_PRELIM: 2765 Memory Controller Definitions: BR0/1 and OR0/1 (FLASH) 2766 2767- SDRAM_BASE2_PRELIM, SDRAM_BASE3_PRELIM, SDRAM_MAX_SIZE, 2768 CONFIG_SYS_OR_TIMING_SDRAM, CONFIG_SYS_OR2_PRELIM, CONFIG_SYS_BR2_PRELIM, 2769 CONFIG_SYS_OR3_PRELIM, CONFIG_SYS_BR3_PRELIM: 2770 Memory Controller Definitions: BR2/3 and OR2/3 (SDRAM) 2771 2772- CONFIG_PCI_INDIRECT_BRIDGE: 2773 Enable support for indirect PCI bridges. 2774 2775- CONFIG_SYS_SRIO: 2776 Chip has SRIO or not 2777 2778- CONFIG_SRIO1: 2779 Board has SRIO 1 port available 2780 2781- CONFIG_SRIO2: 2782 Board has SRIO 2 port available 2783 2784- CONFIG_SRIO_PCIE_BOOT_MASTER 2785 Board can support master function for Boot from SRIO and PCIE 2786 2787- CONFIG_SYS_SRIOn_MEM_VIRT: 2788 Virtual Address of SRIO port 'n' memory region 2789 2790- CONFIG_SYS_SRIOn_MEM_PHYxS: 2791 Physical Address of SRIO port 'n' memory region 2792 2793- CONFIG_SYS_SRIOn_MEM_SIZE: 2794 Size of SRIO port 'n' memory region 2795 2796- CONFIG_SYS_NAND_BUSWIDTH_16BIT 2797 Defined to tell the NAND controller that the NAND chip is using 2798 a 16 bit bus. 2799 Not all NAND drivers use this symbol. 2800 Example of drivers that use it: 2801 - drivers/mtd/nand/raw/ndfc.c 2802 - drivers/mtd/nand/raw/mxc_nand.c 2803 2804- CONFIG_SYS_NDFC_EBC0_CFG 2805 Sets the EBC0_CFG register for the NDFC. If not defined 2806 a default value will be used. 2807 2808- CONFIG_SPD_EEPROM 2809 Get DDR timing information from an I2C EEPROM. Common 2810 with pluggable memory modules such as SODIMMs 2811 2812 SPD_EEPROM_ADDRESS 2813 I2C address of the SPD EEPROM 2814 2815- CONFIG_SYS_SPD_BUS_NUM 2816 If SPD EEPROM is on an I2C bus other than the first 2817 one, specify here. Note that the value must resolve 2818 to something your driver can deal with. 2819 2820- CONFIG_SYS_DDR_RAW_TIMING 2821 Get DDR timing information from other than SPD. Common with 2822 soldered DDR chips onboard without SPD. DDR raw timing 2823 parameters are extracted from datasheet and hard-coded into 2824 header files or board specific files. 2825 2826- CONFIG_FSL_DDR_INTERACTIVE 2827 Enable interactive DDR debugging. See doc/README.fsl-ddr. 2828 2829- CONFIG_FSL_DDR_SYNC_REFRESH 2830 Enable sync of refresh for multiple controllers. 2831 2832- CONFIG_FSL_DDR_BIST 2833 Enable built-in memory test for Freescale DDR controllers. 2834 2835- CONFIG_SYS_83XX_DDR_USES_CS0 2836 Only for 83xx systems. If specified, then DDR should 2837 be configured using CS0 and CS1 instead of CS2 and CS3. 2838 2839- CONFIG_RMII 2840 Enable RMII mode for all FECs. 2841 Note that this is a global option, we can't 2842 have one FEC in standard MII mode and another in RMII mode. 2843 2844- CONFIG_CRC32_VERIFY 2845 Add a verify option to the crc32 command. 2846 The syntax is: 2847 2848 => crc32 -v <address> <count> <crc32> 2849 2850 Where address/count indicate a memory area 2851 and crc32 is the correct crc32 which the 2852 area should have. 2853 2854- CONFIG_LOOPW 2855 Add the "loopw" memory command. This only takes effect if 2856 the memory commands are activated globally (CONFIG_CMD_MEMORY). 2857 2858- CONFIG_CMD_MX_CYCLIC 2859 Add the "mdc" and "mwc" memory commands. These are cyclic 2860 "md/mw" commands. 2861 Examples: 2862 2863 => mdc.b 10 4 500 2864 This command will print 4 bytes (10,11,12,13) each 500 ms. 2865 2866 => mwc.l 100 12345678 10 2867 This command will write 12345678 to address 100 all 10 ms. 2868 2869 This only takes effect if the memory commands are activated 2870 globally (CONFIG_CMD_MEMORY). 2871 2872- CONFIG_SKIP_LOWLEVEL_INIT 2873 [ARM, NDS32, MIPS, RISC-V only] If this variable is defined, then certain 2874 low level initializations (like setting up the memory 2875 controller) are omitted and/or U-Boot does not 2876 relocate itself into RAM. 2877 2878 Normally this variable MUST NOT be defined. The only 2879 exception is when U-Boot is loaded (to RAM) by some 2880 other boot loader or by a debugger which performs 2881 these initializations itself. 2882 2883- CONFIG_SKIP_LOWLEVEL_INIT_ONLY 2884 [ARM926EJ-S only] This allows just the call to lowlevel_init() 2885 to be skipped. The normal CP15 init (such as enabling the 2886 instruction cache) is still performed. 2887 2888- CONFIG_SPL_BUILD 2889 Set when the currently-running compilation is for an artifact 2890 that will end up in the SPL (as opposed to the TPL or U-Boot 2891 proper). Code that needs stage-specific behavior should check 2892 this. 2893 2894- CONFIG_TPL_BUILD 2895 Set when the currently-running compilation is for an artifact 2896 that will end up in the TPL (as opposed to the SPL or U-Boot 2897 proper). Code that needs stage-specific behavior should check 2898 this. 2899 2900- CONFIG_SYS_MPC85XX_NO_RESETVEC 2901 Only for 85xx systems. If this variable is specified, the section 2902 .resetvec is not kept and the section .bootpg is placed in the 2903 previous 4k of the .text section. 2904 2905- CONFIG_ARCH_MAP_SYSMEM 2906 Generally U-Boot (and in particular the md command) uses 2907 effective address. It is therefore not necessary to regard 2908 U-Boot address as virtual addresses that need to be translated 2909 to physical addresses. However, sandbox requires this, since 2910 it maintains its own little RAM buffer which contains all 2911 addressable memory. This option causes some memory accesses 2912 to be mapped through map_sysmem() / unmap_sysmem(). 2913 2914- CONFIG_X86_RESET_VECTOR 2915 If defined, the x86 reset vector code is included. This is not 2916 needed when U-Boot is running from Coreboot. 2917 2918- CONFIG_SYS_NAND_NO_SUBPAGE_WRITE 2919 Option to disable subpage write in NAND driver 2920 driver that uses this: 2921 drivers/mtd/nand/raw/davinci_nand.c 2922 2923Freescale QE/FMAN Firmware Support: 2924----------------------------------- 2925 2926The Freescale QUICCEngine (QE) and Frame Manager (FMAN) both support the 2927loading of "firmware", which is encoded in the QE firmware binary format. 2928This firmware often needs to be loaded during U-Boot booting, so macros 2929are used to identify the storage device (NOR flash, SPI, etc) and the address 2930within that device. 2931 2932- CONFIG_SYS_FMAN_FW_ADDR 2933 The address in the storage device where the FMAN microcode is located. The 2934 meaning of this address depends on which CONFIG_SYS_QE_FMAN_FW_IN_xxx macro 2935 is also specified. 2936 2937- CONFIG_SYS_QE_FW_ADDR 2938 The address in the storage device where the QE microcode is located. The 2939 meaning of this address depends on which CONFIG_SYS_QE_FMAN_FW_IN_xxx macro 2940 is also specified. 2941 2942- CONFIG_SYS_QE_FMAN_FW_LENGTH 2943 The maximum possible size of the firmware. The firmware binary format 2944 has a field that specifies the actual size of the firmware, but it 2945 might not be possible to read any part of the firmware unless some 2946 local storage is allocated to hold the entire firmware first. 2947 2948- CONFIG_SYS_QE_FMAN_FW_IN_NOR 2949 Specifies that QE/FMAN firmware is located in NOR flash, mapped as 2950 normal addressable memory via the LBC. CONFIG_SYS_FMAN_FW_ADDR is the 2951 virtual address in NOR flash. 2952 2953- CONFIG_SYS_QE_FMAN_FW_IN_NAND 2954 Specifies that QE/FMAN firmware is located in NAND flash. 2955 CONFIG_SYS_FMAN_FW_ADDR is the offset within NAND flash. 2956 2957- CONFIG_SYS_QE_FMAN_FW_IN_MMC 2958 Specifies that QE/FMAN firmware is located on the primary SD/MMC 2959 device. CONFIG_SYS_FMAN_FW_ADDR is the byte offset on that device. 2960 2961- CONFIG_SYS_QE_FMAN_FW_IN_REMOTE 2962 Specifies that QE/FMAN firmware is located in the remote (master) 2963 memory space. CONFIG_SYS_FMAN_FW_ADDR is a virtual address which 2964 can be mapped from slave TLB->slave LAW->slave SRIO or PCIE outbound 2965 window->master inbound window->master LAW->the ucode address in 2966 master's memory space. 2967 2968Freescale Layerscape Management Complex Firmware Support: 2969--------------------------------------------------------- 2970The Freescale Layerscape Management Complex (MC) supports the loading of 2971"firmware". 2972This firmware often needs to be loaded during U-Boot booting, so macros 2973are used to identify the storage device (NOR flash, SPI, etc) and the address 2974within that device. 2975 2976- CONFIG_FSL_MC_ENET 2977 Enable the MC driver for Layerscape SoCs. 2978 2979Freescale Layerscape Debug Server Support: 2980------------------------------------------- 2981The Freescale Layerscape Debug Server Support supports the loading of 2982"Debug Server firmware" and triggering SP boot-rom. 2983This firmware often needs to be loaded during U-Boot booting. 2984 2985- CONFIG_SYS_MC_RSV_MEM_ALIGN 2986 Define alignment of reserved memory MC requires 2987 2988Reproducible builds 2989------------------- 2990 2991In order to achieve reproducible builds, timestamps used in the U-Boot build 2992process have to be set to a fixed value. 2993 2994This is done using the SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH environment variable. 2995SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH is to be set on the build host's shell, not as a configuration 2996option for U-Boot or an environment variable in U-Boot. 2997 2998SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH should be set to a number of seconds since the epoch, in UTC. 2999 3000Building the Software: 3001====================== 3002 3003Building U-Boot has been tested in several native build environments 3004and in many different cross environments. Of course we cannot support 3005all possibly existing versions of cross development tools in all 3006(potentially obsolete) versions. In case of tool chain problems we 3007recommend to use the ELDK (see https://www.denx.de/wiki/DULG/ELDK) 3008which is extensively used to build and test U-Boot. 3009 3010If you are not using a native environment, it is assumed that you 3011have GNU cross compiling tools available in your path. In this case, 3012you must set the environment variable CROSS_COMPILE in your shell. 3013Note that no changes to the Makefile or any other source files are 3014necessary. For example using the ELDK on a 4xx CPU, please enter: 3015 3016 $ CROSS_COMPILE=ppc_4xx- 3017 $ export CROSS_COMPILE 3018 3019U-Boot is intended to be simple to build. After installing the 3020sources you must configure U-Boot for one specific board type. This 3021is done by typing: 3022 3023 make NAME_defconfig 3024 3025where "NAME_defconfig" is the name of one of the existing configu- 3026rations; see configs/*_defconfig for supported names. 3027 3028Note: for some boards special configuration names may exist; check if 3029 additional information is available from the board vendor; for 3030 instance, the TQM823L systems are available without (standard) 3031 or with LCD support. You can select such additional "features" 3032 when choosing the configuration, i. e. 3033 3034 make TQM823L_defconfig 3035 - will configure for a plain TQM823L, i. e. no LCD support 3036 3037 make TQM823L_LCD_defconfig 3038 - will configure for a TQM823L with U-Boot console on LCD 3039 3040 etc. 3041 3042 3043Finally, type "make all", and you should get some working U-Boot 3044images ready for download to / installation on your system: 3045 3046- "u-boot.bin" is a raw binary image 3047- "u-boot" is an image in ELF binary format 3048- "u-boot.srec" is in Motorola S-Record format 3049 3050By default the build is performed locally and the objects are saved 3051in the source directory. One of the two methods can be used to change 3052this behavior and build U-Boot to some external directory: 3053 30541. Add O= to the make command line invocations: 3055 3056 make O=/tmp/build distclean 3057 make O=/tmp/build NAME_defconfig 3058 make O=/tmp/build all 3059 30602. Set environment variable KBUILD_OUTPUT to point to the desired location: 3061 3062 export KBUILD_OUTPUT=/tmp/build 3063 make distclean 3064 make NAME_defconfig 3065 make all 3066 3067Note that the command line "O=" setting overrides the KBUILD_OUTPUT environment 3068variable. 3069 3070User specific CPPFLAGS, AFLAGS and CFLAGS can be passed to the compiler by 3071setting the according environment variables KCPPFLAGS, KAFLAGS and KCFLAGS. 3072For example to treat all compiler warnings as errors: 3073 3074 make KCFLAGS=-Werror 3075 3076Please be aware that the Makefiles assume you are using GNU make, so 3077for instance on NetBSD you might need to use "gmake" instead of 3078native "make". 3079 3080 3081If the system board that you have is not listed, then you will need 3082to port U-Boot to your hardware platform. To do this, follow these 3083steps: 3084 30851. Create a new directory to hold your board specific code. Add any 3086 files you need. In your board directory, you will need at least 3087 the "Makefile" and a "<board>.c". 30882. Create a new configuration file "include/configs/<board>.h" for 3089 your board. 30903. If you're porting U-Boot to a new CPU, then also create a new 3091 directory to hold your CPU specific code. Add any files you need. 30924. Run "make <board>_defconfig" with your new name. 30935. Type "make", and you should get a working "u-boot.srec" file 3094 to be installed on your target system. 30956. Debug and solve any problems that might arise. 3096 [Of course, this last step is much harder than it sounds.] 3097 3098 3099Testing of U-Boot Modifications, Ports to New Hardware, etc.: 3100============================================================== 3101 3102If you have modified U-Boot sources (for instance added a new board 3103or support for new devices, a new CPU, etc.) you are expected to 3104provide feedback to the other developers. The feedback normally takes 3105the form of a "patch", i.e. a context diff against a certain (latest 3106official or latest in the git repository) version of U-Boot sources. 3107 3108But before you submit such a patch, please verify that your modifi- 3109cation did not break existing code. At least make sure that *ALL* of 3110the supported boards compile WITHOUT ANY compiler warnings. To do so, 3111just run the buildman script (tools/buildman/buildman), which will 3112configure and build U-Boot for ALL supported system. Be warned, this 3113will take a while. Please see the buildman README, or run 'buildman -H' 3114for documentation. 3115 3116 3117See also "U-Boot Porting Guide" below. 3118 3119 3120Monitor Commands - Overview: 3121============================ 3122 3123go - start application at address 'addr' 3124run - run commands in an environment variable 3125bootm - boot application image from memory 3126bootp - boot image via network using BootP/TFTP protocol 3127bootz - boot zImage from memory 3128tftpboot- boot image via network using TFTP protocol 3129 and env variables "ipaddr" and "serverip" 3130 (and eventually "gatewayip") 3131tftpput - upload a file via network using TFTP protocol 3132rarpboot- boot image via network using RARP/TFTP protocol 3133diskboot- boot from IDE devicebootd - boot default, i.e., run 'bootcmd' 3134loads - load S-Record file over serial line 3135loadb - load binary file over serial line (kermit mode) 3136md - memory display 3137mm - memory modify (auto-incrementing) 3138nm - memory modify (constant address) 3139mw - memory write (fill) 3140ms - memory search 3141cp - memory copy 3142cmp - memory compare 3143crc32 - checksum calculation 3144i2c - I2C sub-system 3145sspi - SPI utility commands 3146base - print or set address offset 3147printenv- print environment variables 3148pwm - control pwm channels 3149setenv - set environment variables 3150saveenv - save environment variables to persistent storage 3151protect - enable or disable FLASH write protection 3152erase - erase FLASH memory 3153flinfo - print FLASH memory information 3154nand - NAND memory operations (see doc/README.nand) 3155bdinfo - print Board Info structure 3156iminfo - print header information for application image 3157coninfo - print console devices and informations 3158ide - IDE sub-system 3159loop - infinite loop on address range 3160loopw - infinite write loop on address range 3161mtest - simple RAM test 3162icache - enable or disable instruction cache 3163dcache - enable or disable data cache 3164reset - Perform RESET of the CPU 3165echo - echo args to console 3166version - print monitor version 3167help - print online help 3168? - alias for 'help' 3169 3170 3171Monitor Commands - Detailed Description: 3172======================================== 3173 3174TODO. 3175 3176For now: just type "help <command>". 3177 3178 3179Environment Variables: 3180====================== 3181 3182U-Boot supports user configuration using Environment Variables which 3183can be made persistent by saving to Flash memory. 3184 3185Environment Variables are set using "setenv", printed using 3186"printenv", and saved to Flash using "saveenv". Using "setenv" 3187without a value can be used to delete a variable from the 3188environment. As long as you don't save the environment you are 3189working with an in-memory copy. In case the Flash area containing the 3190environment is erased by accident, a default environment is provided. 3191 3192Some configuration options can be set using Environment Variables. 3193 3194List of environment variables (most likely not complete): 3195 3196 baudrate - see CONFIG_BAUDRATE 3197 3198 bootdelay - see CONFIG_BOOTDELAY 3199 3200 bootcmd - see CONFIG_BOOTCOMMAND 3201 3202 bootargs - Boot arguments when booting an RTOS image 3203 3204 bootfile - Name of the image to load with TFTP 3205 3206 bootm_low - Memory range available for image processing in the bootm 3207 command can be restricted. This variable is given as 3208 a hexadecimal number and defines lowest address allowed 3209 for use by the bootm command. See also "bootm_size" 3210 environment variable. Address defined by "bootm_low" is 3211 also the base of the initial memory mapping for the Linux 3212 kernel -- see the description of CONFIG_SYS_BOOTMAPSZ and 3213 bootm_mapsize. 3214 3215 bootm_mapsize - Size of the initial memory mapping for the Linux kernel. 3216 This variable is given as a hexadecimal number and it 3217 defines the size of the memory region starting at base 3218 address bootm_low that is accessible by the Linux kernel 3219 during early boot. If unset, CONFIG_SYS_BOOTMAPSZ is used 3220 as the default value if it is defined, and bootm_size is 3221 used otherwise. 3222 3223 bootm_size - Memory range available for image processing in the bootm 3224 command can be restricted. This variable is given as 3225 a hexadecimal number and defines the size of the region 3226 allowed for use by the bootm command. See also "bootm_low" 3227 environment variable. 3228 3229 bootstopkeysha256, bootdelaykey, bootstopkey - See README.autoboot 3230 3231 updatefile - Location of the software update file on a TFTP server, used 3232 by the automatic software update feature. Please refer to 3233 documentation in doc/README.update for more details. 3234 3235 autoload - if set to "no" (any string beginning with 'n'), 3236 "bootp" will just load perform a lookup of the 3237 configuration from the BOOTP server, but not try to 3238 load any image using TFTP 3239 3240 autostart - if set to "yes", an image loaded using the "bootp", 3241 "rarpboot", "tftpboot" or "diskboot" commands will 3242 be automatically started (by internally calling 3243 "bootm") 3244 3245 If set to "no", a standalone image passed to the 3246 "bootm" command will be copied to the load address 3247 (and eventually uncompressed), but NOT be started. 3248 This can be used to load and uncompress arbitrary 3249 data. 3250 3251 fdt_high - if set this restricts the maximum address that the 3252 flattened device tree will be copied into upon boot. 3253 For example, if you have a system with 1 GB memory 3254 at physical address 0x10000000, while Linux kernel 3255 only recognizes the first 704 MB as low memory, you 3256 may need to set fdt_high as 0x3C000000 to have the 3257 device tree blob be copied to the maximum address 3258 of the 704 MB low memory, so that Linux kernel can 3259 access it during the boot procedure. 3260 3261 If this is set to the special value 0xFFFFFFFF then 3262 the fdt will not be copied at all on boot. For this 3263 to work it must reside in writable memory, have 3264 sufficient padding on the end of it for u-boot to 3265 add the information it needs into it, and the memory 3266 must be accessible by the kernel. 3267 3268 fdtcontroladdr- if set this is the address of the control flattened 3269 device tree used by U-Boot when CONFIG_OF_CONTROL is 3270 defined. 3271 3272 i2cfast - (PPC405GP|PPC405EP only) 3273 if set to 'y' configures Linux I2C driver for fast 3274 mode (400kHZ). This environment variable is used in 3275 initialization code. So, for changes to be effective 3276 it must be saved and board must be reset. 3277 3278 initrd_high - restrict positioning of initrd images: 3279 If this variable is not set, initrd images will be 3280 copied to the highest possible address in RAM; this 3281 is usually what you want since it allows for 3282 maximum initrd size. If for some reason you want to 3283 make sure that the initrd image is loaded below the 3284 CONFIG_SYS_BOOTMAPSZ limit, you can set this environment 3285 variable to a value of "no" or "off" or "0". 3286 Alternatively, you can set it to a maximum upper 3287 address to use (U-Boot will still check that it 3288 does not overwrite the U-Boot stack and data). 3289 3290 For instance, when you have a system with 16 MB 3291 RAM, and want to reserve 4 MB from use by Linux, 3292 you can do this by adding "mem=12M" to the value of 3293 the "bootargs" variable. However, now you must make 3294 sure that the initrd image is placed in the first 3295 12 MB as well - this can be done with 3296 3297 setenv initrd_high 00c00000 3298 3299 If you set initrd_high to 0xFFFFFFFF, this is an 3300 indication to U-Boot that all addresses are legal 3301 for the Linux kernel, including addresses in flash 3302 memory. In this case U-Boot will NOT COPY the 3303 ramdisk at all. This may be useful to reduce the 3304 boot time on your system, but requires that this 3305 feature is supported by your Linux kernel. 3306 3307 ipaddr - IP address; needed for tftpboot command 3308 3309 loadaddr - Default load address for commands like "bootp", 3310 "rarpboot", "tftpboot", "loadb" or "diskboot" 3311 3312 loads_echo - see CONFIG_LOADS_ECHO 3313 3314 serverip - TFTP server IP address; needed for tftpboot command 3315 3316 bootretry - see CONFIG_BOOT_RETRY_TIME 3317 3318 bootdelaykey - see CONFIG_AUTOBOOT_DELAY_STR 3319 3320 bootstopkey - see CONFIG_AUTOBOOT_STOP_STR 3321 3322 ethprime - controls which interface is used first. 3323 3324 ethact - controls which interface is currently active. 3325 For example you can do the following 3326 3327 => setenv ethact FEC 3328 => ping 192.168.0.1 # traffic sent on FEC 3329 => setenv ethact SCC 3330 => ping 10.0.0.1 # traffic sent on SCC 3331 3332 ethrotate - When set to "no" U-Boot does not go through all 3333 available network interfaces. 3334 It just stays at the currently selected interface. 3335 3336 netretry - When set to "no" each network operation will 3337 either succeed or fail without retrying. 3338 When set to "once" the network operation will 3339 fail when all the available network interfaces 3340 are tried once without success. 3341 Useful on scripts which control the retry operation 3342 themselves. 3343 3344 npe_ucode - set load address for the NPE microcode 3345 3346 silent_linux - If set then Linux will be told to boot silently, by 3347 changing the console to be empty. If "yes" it will be 3348 made silent. If "no" it will not be made silent. If 3349 unset, then it will be made silent if the U-Boot console 3350 is silent. 3351 3352 tftpsrcp - If this is set, the value is used for TFTP's 3353 UDP source port. 3354 3355 tftpdstp - If this is set, the value is used for TFTP's UDP 3356 destination port instead of the Well Know Port 69. 3357 3358 tftpblocksize - Block size to use for TFTP transfers; if not set, 3359 we use the TFTP server's default block size 3360 3361 tftptimeout - Retransmission timeout for TFTP packets (in milli- 3362 seconds, minimum value is 1000 = 1 second). Defines 3363 when a packet is considered to be lost so it has to 3364 be retransmitted. The default is 5000 = 5 seconds. 3365 Lowering this value may make downloads succeed 3366 faster in networks with high packet loss rates or 3367 with unreliable TFTP servers. 3368 3369 tftptimeoutcountmax - maximum count of TFTP timeouts (no 3370 unit, minimum value = 0). Defines how many timeouts 3371 can happen during a single file transfer before that 3372 transfer is aborted. The default is 10, and 0 means 3373 'no timeouts allowed'. Increasing this value may help 3374 downloads succeed with high packet loss rates, or with 3375 unreliable TFTP servers or client hardware. 3376 3377 tftpwindowsize - if this is set, the value is used for TFTP's 3378 window size as described by RFC 7440. 3379 This means the count of blocks we can receive before 3380 sending ack to server. 3381 3382 vlan - When set to a value < 4095 the traffic over 3383 Ethernet is encapsulated/received over 802.1q 3384 VLAN tagged frames. 3385 3386 bootpretryperiod - Period during which BOOTP/DHCP sends retries. 3387 Unsigned value, in milliseconds. If not set, the period will 3388 be either the default (28000), or a value based on 3389 CONFIG_NET_RETRY_COUNT, if defined. This value has 3390 precedence over the valu based on CONFIG_NET_RETRY_COUNT. 3391 3392 memmatches - Number of matches found by the last 'ms' command, in hex 3393 3394 memaddr - Address of the last match found by the 'ms' command, in hex, 3395 or 0 if none 3396 3397 mempos - Index position of the last match found by the 'ms' command, 3398 in units of the size (.b, .w, .l) of the search 3399 3400 zbootbase - (x86 only) Base address of the bzImage 'setup' block 3401 3402 zbootaddr - (x86 only) Address of the loaded bzImage, typically 3403 BZIMAGE_LOAD_ADDR which is 0x100000 3404 3405The following image location variables contain the location of images 3406used in booting. The "Image" column gives the role of the image and is 3407not an environment variable name. The other columns are environment 3408variable names. "File Name" gives the name of the file on a TFTP 3409server, "RAM Address" gives the location in RAM the image will be 3410loaded to, and "Flash Location" gives the image's address in NOR 3411flash or offset in NAND flash. 3412 3413*Note* - these variables don't have to be defined for all boards, some 3414boards currently use other variables for these purposes, and some 3415boards use these variables for other purposes. 3416 3417Image File Name RAM Address Flash Location 3418----- --------- ----------- -------------- 3419u-boot u-boot u-boot_addr_r u-boot_addr 3420Linux kernel bootfile kernel_addr_r kernel_addr 3421device tree blob fdtfile fdt_addr_r fdt_addr 3422ramdisk ramdiskfile ramdisk_addr_r ramdisk_addr 3423 3424The following environment variables may be used and automatically 3425updated by the network boot commands ("bootp" and "rarpboot"), 3426depending the information provided by your boot server: 3427 3428 bootfile - see above 3429 dnsip - IP address of your Domain Name Server 3430 dnsip2 - IP address of your secondary Domain Name Server 3431 gatewayip - IP address of the Gateway (Router) to use 3432 hostname - Target hostname 3433 ipaddr - see above 3434 netmask - Subnet Mask 3435 rootpath - Pathname of the root filesystem on the NFS server 3436 serverip - see above 3437 3438 3439There are two special Environment Variables: 3440 3441 serial# - contains hardware identification information such 3442 as type string and/or serial number 3443 ethaddr - Ethernet address 3444 3445These variables can be set only once (usually during manufacturing of 3446the board). U-Boot refuses to delete or overwrite these variables 3447once they have been set once. 3448 3449 3450Further special Environment Variables: 3451 3452 ver - Contains the U-Boot version string as printed 3453 with the "version" command. This variable is 3454 readonly (see CONFIG_VERSION_VARIABLE). 3455 3456 3457Please note that changes to some configuration parameters may take 3458only effect after the next boot (yes, that's just like Windoze :-). 3459 3460 3461Callback functions for environment variables: 3462--------------------------------------------- 3463 3464For some environment variables, the behavior of u-boot needs to change 3465when their values are changed. This functionality allows functions to 3466be associated with arbitrary variables. On creation, overwrite, or 3467deletion, the callback will provide the opportunity for some side 3468effect to happen or for the change to be rejected. 3469 3470The callbacks are named and associated with a function using the 3471U_BOOT_ENV_CALLBACK macro in your board or driver code. 3472 3473These callbacks are associated with variables in one of two ways. The 3474static list can be added to by defining CONFIG_ENV_CALLBACK_LIST_STATIC 3475in the board configuration to a string that defines a list of 3476associations. The list must be in the following format: 3477 3478 entry = variable_name[:callback_name] 3479 list = entry[,list] 3480 3481If the callback name is not specified, then the callback is deleted. 3482Spaces are also allowed anywhere in the list. 3483 3484Callbacks can also be associated by defining the ".callbacks" variable 3485with the same list format above. Any association in ".callbacks" will 3486override any association in the static list. You can define 3487CONFIG_ENV_CALLBACK_LIST_DEFAULT to a list (string) to define the 3488".callbacks" environment variable in the default or embedded environment. 3489 3490If CONFIG_REGEX is defined, the variable_name above is evaluated as a 3491regular expression. This allows multiple variables to be connected to 3492the same callback without explicitly listing them all out. 3493 3494The signature of the callback functions is: 3495 3496 int callback(const char *name, const char *value, enum env_op op, int flags) 3497 3498* name - changed environment variable 3499* value - new value of the environment variable 3500* op - operation (create, overwrite, or delete) 3501* flags - attributes of the environment variable change, see flags H_* in 3502 include/search.h 3503 3504The return value is 0 if the variable change is accepted and 1 otherwise. 3505 3506Command Line Parsing: 3507===================== 3508 3509There are two different command line parsers available with U-Boot: 3510the old "simple" one, and the much more powerful "hush" shell: 3511 3512Old, simple command line parser: 3513-------------------------------- 3514 3515- supports environment variables (through setenv / saveenv commands) 3516- several commands on one line, separated by ';' 3517- variable substitution using "... ${name} ..." syntax 3518- special characters ('$', ';') can be escaped by prefixing with '\', 3519 for example: 3520 setenv bootcmd bootm \${address} 3521- You can also escape text by enclosing in single apostrophes, for example: 3522 setenv addip 'setenv bootargs $bootargs ip=$ipaddr:$serverip:$gatewayip:$netmask:$hostname::off' 3523 3524Hush shell: 3525----------- 3526 3527- similar to Bourne shell, with control structures like 3528 if...then...else...fi, for...do...done; while...do...done, 3529 until...do...done, ... 3530- supports environment ("global") variables (through setenv / saveenv 3531 commands) and local shell variables (through standard shell syntax 3532 "name=value"); only environment variables can be used with "run" 3533 command 3534 3535General rules: 3536-------------- 3537 3538(1) If a command line (or an environment variable executed by a "run" 3539 command) contains several commands separated by semicolon, and 3540 one of these commands fails, then the remaining commands will be 3541 executed anyway. 3542 3543(2) If you execute several variables with one call to run (i. e. 3544 calling run with a list of variables as arguments), any failing 3545 command will cause "run" to terminate, i. e. the remaining 3546 variables are not executed. 3547 3548Note for Redundant Ethernet Interfaces: 3549======================================= 3550 3551Some boards come with redundant Ethernet interfaces; U-Boot supports 3552such configurations and is capable of automatic selection of a 3553"working" interface when needed. MAC assignment works as follows: 3554 3555Network interfaces are numbered eth0, eth1, eth2, ... Corresponding 3556MAC addresses can be stored in the environment as "ethaddr" (=>eth0), 3557"eth1addr" (=>eth1), "eth2addr", ... 3558 3559If the network interface stores some valid MAC address (for instance 3560in SROM), this is used as default address if there is NO correspon- 3561ding setting in the environment; if the corresponding environment 3562variable is set, this overrides the settings in the card; that means: 3563 3564o If the SROM has a valid MAC address, and there is no address in the 3565 environment, the SROM's address is used. 3566 3567o If there is no valid address in the SROM, and a definition in the 3568 environment exists, then the value from the environment variable is 3569 used. 3570 3571o If both the SROM and the environment contain a MAC address, and 3572 both addresses are the same, this MAC address is used. 3573 3574o If both the SROM and the environment contain a MAC address, and the 3575 addresses differ, the value from the environment is used and a 3576 warning is printed. 3577 3578o If neither SROM nor the environment contain a MAC address, an error 3579 is raised. If CONFIG_NET_RANDOM_ETHADDR is defined, then in this case 3580 a random, locally-assigned MAC is used. 3581 3582If Ethernet drivers implement the 'write_hwaddr' function, valid MAC addresses 3583will be programmed into hardware as part of the initialization process. This 3584may be skipped by setting the appropriate 'ethmacskip' environment variable. 3585The naming convention is as follows: 3586"ethmacskip" (=>eth0), "eth1macskip" (=>eth1) etc. 3587 3588Image Formats: 3589============== 3590 3591U-Boot is capable of booting (and performing other auxiliary operations on) 3592images in two formats: 3593 3594New uImage format (FIT) 3595----------------------- 3596 3597Flexible and powerful format based on Flattened Image Tree -- FIT (similar 3598to Flattened Device Tree). It allows the use of images with multiple 3599components (several kernels, ramdisks, etc.), with contents protected by 3600SHA1, MD5 or CRC32. More details are found in the doc/uImage.FIT directory. 3601 3602 3603Old uImage format 3604----------------- 3605 3606Old image format is based on binary files which can be basically anything, 3607preceded by a special header; see the definitions in include/image.h for 3608details; basically, the header defines the following image properties: 3609 3610* Target Operating System (Provisions for OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD, 3611 4.4BSD, Linux, SVR4, Esix, Solaris, Irix, SCO, Dell, NCR, VxWorks, 3612 LynxOS, pSOS, QNX, RTEMS, INTEGRITY; 3613 Currently supported: Linux, NetBSD, VxWorks, QNX, RTEMS, LynxOS, 3614 INTEGRITY). 3615* Target CPU Architecture (Provisions for Alpha, ARM, Intel x86, 3616 IA64, MIPS, NDS32, Nios II, PowerPC, IBM S390, SuperH, Sparc, Sparc 64 Bit; 3617 Currently supported: ARM, Intel x86, MIPS, NDS32, Nios II, PowerPC). 3618* Compression Type (uncompressed, gzip, bzip2) 3619* Load Address 3620* Entry Point 3621* Image Name 3622* Image Timestamp 3623 3624The header is marked by a special Magic Number, and both the header 3625and the data portions of the image are secured against corruption by 3626CRC32 checksums. 3627 3628 3629Linux Support: 3630============== 3631 3632Although U-Boot should support any OS or standalone application 3633easily, the main focus has always been on Linux during the design of 3634U-Boot. 3635 3636U-Boot includes many features that so far have been part of some 3637special "boot loader" code within the Linux kernel. Also, any 3638"initrd" images to be used are no longer part of one big Linux image; 3639instead, kernel and "initrd" are separate images. This implementation 3640serves several purposes: 3641 3642- the same features can be used for other OS or standalone 3643 applications (for instance: using compressed images to reduce the 3644 Flash memory footprint) 3645 3646- it becomes much easier to port new Linux kernel versions because 3647 lots of low-level, hardware dependent stuff are done by U-Boot 3648 3649- the same Linux kernel image can now be used with different "initrd" 3650 images; of course this also means that different kernel images can 3651 be run with the same "initrd". This makes testing easier (you don't 3652 have to build a new "zImage.initrd" Linux image when you just 3653 change a file in your "initrd"). Also, a field-upgrade of the 3654 software is easier now. 3655 3656 3657Linux HOWTO: 3658============ 3659 3660Porting Linux to U-Boot based systems: 3661--------------------------------------- 3662 3663U-Boot cannot save you from doing all the necessary modifications to 3664configure the Linux device drivers for use with your target hardware 3665(no, we don't intend to provide a full virtual machine interface to 3666Linux :-). 3667 3668But now you can ignore ALL boot loader code (in arch/powerpc/mbxboot). 3669 3670Just make sure your machine specific header file (for instance 3671include/asm-ppc/tqm8xx.h) includes the same definition of the Board 3672Information structure as we define in include/asm-<arch>/u-boot.h, 3673and make sure that your definition of IMAP_ADDR uses the same value 3674as your U-Boot configuration in CONFIG_SYS_IMMR. 3675 3676Note that U-Boot now has a driver model, a unified model for drivers. 3677If you are adding a new driver, plumb it into driver model. If there 3678is no uclass available, you are encouraged to create one. See 3679doc/driver-model. 3680 3681 3682Configuring the Linux kernel: 3683----------------------------- 3684 3685No specific requirements for U-Boot. Make sure you have some root 3686device (initial ramdisk, NFS) for your target system. 3687 3688 3689Building a Linux Image: 3690----------------------- 3691 3692With U-Boot, "normal" build targets like "zImage" or "bzImage" are 3693not used. If you use recent kernel source, a new build target 3694"uImage" will exist which automatically builds an image usable by 3695U-Boot. Most older kernels also have support for a "pImage" target, 3696which was introduced for our predecessor project PPCBoot and uses a 3697100% compatible format. 3698 3699Example: 3700 3701 make TQM850L_defconfig 3702 make oldconfig 3703 make dep 3704 make uImage 3705 3706The "uImage" build target uses a special tool (in 'tools/mkimage') to 3707encapsulate a compressed Linux kernel image with header information, 3708CRC32 checksum etc. for use with U-Boot. This is what we are doing: 3709 3710* build a standard "vmlinux" kernel image (in ELF binary format): 3711 3712* convert the kernel into a raw binary image: 3713 3714 ${CROSS_COMPILE}-objcopy -O binary \ 3715 -R .note -R .comment \ 3716 -S vmlinux linux.bin 3717 3718* compress the binary image: 3719 3720 gzip -9 linux.bin 3721 3722* package compressed binary image for U-Boot: 3723 3724 mkimage -A ppc -O linux -T kernel -C gzip \ 3725 -a 0 -e 0 -n "Linux Kernel Image" \ 3726 -d linux.bin.gz uImage 3727 3728 3729The "mkimage" tool can also be used to create ramdisk images for use 3730with U-Boot, either separated from the Linux kernel image, or 3731combined into one file. "mkimage" encapsulates the images with a 64 3732byte header containing information about target architecture, 3733operating system, image type, compression method, entry points, time 3734stamp, CRC32 checksums, etc. 3735 3736"mkimage" can be called in two ways: to verify existing images and 3737print the header information, or to build new images. 3738 3739In the first form (with "-l" option) mkimage lists the information 3740contained in the header of an existing U-Boot image; this includes 3741checksum verification: 3742 3743 tools/mkimage -l image 3744 -l ==> list image header information 3745 3746The second form (with "-d" option) is used to build a U-Boot image 3747from a "data file" which is used as image payload: 3748 3749 tools/mkimage -A arch -O os -T type -C comp -a addr -e ep \ 3750 -n name -d data_file image 3751 -A ==> set architecture to 'arch' 3752 -O ==> set operating system to 'os' 3753 -T ==> set image type to 'type' 3754 -C ==> set compression type 'comp' 3755 -a ==> set load address to 'addr' (hex) 3756 -e ==> set entry point to 'ep' (hex) 3757 -n ==> set image name to 'name' 3758 -d ==> use image data from 'datafile' 3759 3760Right now, all Linux kernels for PowerPC systems use the same load 3761address (0x00000000), but the entry point address depends on the 3762kernel version: 3763 3764- 2.2.x kernels have the entry point at 0x0000000C, 3765- 2.3.x and later kernels have the entry point at 0x00000000. 3766 3767So a typical call to build a U-Boot image would read: 3768 3769 -> tools/mkimage -n '2.4.4 kernel for TQM850L' \ 3770 > -A ppc -O linux -T kernel -C gzip -a 0 -e 0 \ 3771 > -d /opt/elsk/ppc_8xx/usr/src/linux-2.4.4/arch/powerpc/coffboot/vmlinux.gz \ 3772 > examples/uImage.TQM850L 3773 Image Name: 2.4.4 kernel for TQM850L 3774 Created: Wed Jul 19 02:34:59 2000 3775 Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (gzip compressed) 3776 Data Size: 335725 Bytes = 327.86 kB = 0.32 MB 3777 Load Address: 0x00000000 3778 Entry Point: 0x00000000 3779 3780To verify the contents of the image (or check for corruption): 3781 3782 -> tools/mkimage -l examples/uImage.TQM850L 3783 Image Name: 2.4.4 kernel for TQM850L 3784 Created: Wed Jul 19 02:34:59 2000 3785 Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (gzip compressed) 3786 Data Size: 335725 Bytes = 327.86 kB = 0.32 MB 3787 Load Address: 0x00000000 3788 Entry Point: 0x00000000 3789 3790NOTE: for embedded systems where boot time is critical you can trade 3791speed for memory and install an UNCOMPRESSED image instead: this 3792needs more space in Flash, but boots much faster since it does not 3793need to be uncompressed: 3794 3795 -> gunzip /opt/elsk/ppc_8xx/usr/src/linux-2.4.4/arch/powerpc/coffboot/vmlinux.gz 3796 -> tools/mkimage -n '2.4.4 kernel for TQM850L' \ 3797 > -A ppc -O linux -T kernel -C none -a 0 -e 0 \ 3798 > -d /opt/elsk/ppc_8xx/usr/src/linux-2.4.4/arch/powerpc/coffboot/vmlinux \ 3799 > examples/uImage.TQM850L-uncompressed 3800 Image Name: 2.4.4 kernel for TQM850L 3801 Created: Wed Jul 19 02:34:59 2000 3802 Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (uncompressed) 3803 Data Size: 792160 Bytes = 773.59 kB = 0.76 MB 3804 Load Address: 0x00000000 3805 Entry Point: 0x00000000 3806 3807 3808Similar you can build U-Boot images from a 'ramdisk.image.gz' file 3809when your kernel is intended to use an initial ramdisk: 3810 3811 -> tools/mkimage -n 'Simple Ramdisk Image' \ 3812 > -A ppc -O linux -T ramdisk -C gzip \ 3813 > -d /LinuxPPC/images/SIMPLE-ramdisk.image.gz examples/simple-initrd 3814 Image Name: Simple Ramdisk Image 3815 Created: Wed Jan 12 14:01:50 2000 3816 Image Type: PowerPC Linux RAMDisk Image (gzip compressed) 3817 Data Size: 566530 Bytes = 553.25 kB = 0.54 MB 3818 Load Address: 0x00000000 3819 Entry Point: 0x00000000 3820 3821The "dumpimage" tool can be used to disassemble or list the contents of images 3822built by mkimage. See dumpimage's help output (-h) for details. 3823 3824Installing a Linux Image: 3825------------------------- 3826 3827To downloading a U-Boot image over the serial (console) interface, 3828you must convert the image to S-Record format: 3829 3830 objcopy -I binary -O srec examples/image examples/image.srec 3831 3832The 'objcopy' does not understand the information in the U-Boot 3833image header, so the resulting S-Record file will be relative to 3834address 0x00000000. To load it to a given address, you need to 3835specify the target address as 'offset' parameter with the 'loads' 3836command. 3837 3838Example: install the image to address 0x40100000 (which on the 3839TQM8xxL is in the first Flash bank): 3840 3841 => erase 40100000 401FFFFF 3842 3843 .......... done 3844 Erased 8 sectors 3845 3846 => loads 40100000 3847 ## Ready for S-Record download ... 3848 ~>examples/image.srec 3849 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 ... 3850 ... 3851 15989 15990 15991 15992 3852 [file transfer complete] 3853 [connected] 3854 ## Start Addr = 0x00000000 3855 3856 3857You can check the success of the download using the 'iminfo' command; 3858this includes a checksum verification so you can be sure no data 3859corruption happened: 3860 3861 => imi 40100000 3862 3863 ## Checking Image at 40100000 ... 3864 Image Name: 2.2.13 for initrd on TQM850L 3865 Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (gzip compressed) 3866 Data Size: 335725 Bytes = 327 kB = 0 MB 3867 Load Address: 00000000 3868 Entry Point: 0000000c 3869 Verifying Checksum ... OK 3870 3871 3872Boot Linux: 3873----------- 3874 3875The "bootm" command is used to boot an application that is stored in 3876memory (RAM or Flash). In case of a Linux kernel image, the contents 3877of the "bootargs" environment variable is passed to the kernel as 3878parameters. You can check and modify this variable using the 3879"printenv" and "setenv" commands: 3880 3881 3882 => printenv bootargs 3883 bootargs=root=/dev/ram 3884 3885 => setenv bootargs root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=10.0.0.2:/LinuxPPC nfsaddrs=10.0.0.99:10.0.0.2 3886 3887 => printenv bootargs 3888 bootargs=root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=10.0.0.2:/LinuxPPC nfsaddrs=10.0.0.99:10.0.0.2 3889 3890 => bootm 40020000 3891 ## Booting Linux kernel at 40020000 ... 3892 Image Name: 2.2.13 for NFS on TQM850L 3893 Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (gzip compressed) 3894 Data Size: 381681 Bytes = 372 kB = 0 MB 3895 Load Address: 00000000 3896 Entry Point: 0000000c 3897 Verifying Checksum ... OK 3898 Uncompressing Kernel Image ... OK 3899 Linux version 2.2.13 (wd@denx.local.net) (gcc version 2.95.2 19991024 (release)) #1 Wed Jul 19 02:35:17 MEST 2000 3900 Boot arguments: root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=10.0.0.2:/LinuxPPC nfsaddrs=10.0.0.99:10.0.0.2 3901 time_init: decrementer frequency = 187500000/60 3902 Calibrating delay loop... 49.77 BogoMIPS 3903 Memory: 15208k available (700k kernel code, 444k data, 32k init) [c0000000,c1000000] 3904 ... 3905 3906If you want to boot a Linux kernel with initial RAM disk, you pass 3907the memory addresses of both the kernel and the initrd image (PPBCOOT 3908format!) to the "bootm" command: 3909 3910 => imi 40100000 40200000 3911 3912 ## Checking Image at 40100000 ... 3913 Image Name: 2.2.13 for initrd on TQM850L 3914 Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (gzip compressed) 3915 Data Size: 335725 Bytes = 327 kB = 0 MB 3916 Load Address: 00000000 3917 Entry Point: 0000000c 3918 Verifying Checksum ... OK 3919 3920 ## Checking Image at 40200000 ... 3921 Image Name: Simple Ramdisk Image 3922 Image Type: PowerPC Linux RAMDisk Image (gzip compressed) 3923 Data Size: 566530 Bytes = 553 kB = 0 MB 3924 Load Address: 00000000 3925 Entry Point: 00000000 3926 Verifying Checksum ... OK 3927 3928 => bootm 40100000 40200000 3929 ## Booting Linux kernel at 40100000 ... 3930 Image Name: 2.2.13 for initrd on TQM850L 3931 Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (gzip compressed) 3932 Data Size: 335725 Bytes = 327 kB = 0 MB 3933 Load Address: 00000000 3934 Entry Point: 0000000c 3935 Verifying Checksum ... OK 3936 Uncompressing Kernel Image ... OK 3937 ## Loading RAMDisk Image at 40200000 ... 3938 Image Name: Simple Ramdisk Image 3939 Image Type: PowerPC Linux RAMDisk Image (gzip compressed) 3940 Data Size: 566530 Bytes = 553 kB = 0 MB 3941 Load Address: 00000000 3942 Entry Point: 00000000 3943 Verifying Checksum ... OK 3944 Loading Ramdisk ... OK 3945 Linux version 2.2.13 (wd@denx.local.net) (gcc version 2.95.2 19991024 (release)) #1 Wed Jul 19 02:32:08 MEST 2000 3946 Boot arguments: root=/dev/ram 3947 time_init: decrementer frequency = 187500000/60 3948 Calibrating delay loop... 49.77 BogoMIPS 3949 ... 3950 RAMDISK: Compressed image found at block 0 3951 VFS: Mounted root (ext2 filesystem). 3952 3953 bash# 3954 3955Boot Linux and pass a flat device tree: 3956----------- 3957 3958First, U-Boot must be compiled with the appropriate defines. See the section 3959titled "Linux Kernel Interface" above for a more in depth explanation. The 3960following is an example of how to start a kernel and pass an updated 3961flat device tree: 3962 3963=> print oftaddr 3964oftaddr=0x300000 3965=> print oft 3966oft=oftrees/mpc8540ads.dtb 3967=> tftp $oftaddr $oft 3968Speed: 1000, full duplex 3969Using TSEC0 device 3970TFTP from server 192.168.1.1; our IP address is 192.168.1.101 3971Filename 'oftrees/mpc8540ads.dtb'. 3972Load address: 0x300000 3973Loading: # 3974done 3975Bytes transferred = 4106 (100a hex) 3976=> tftp $loadaddr $bootfile 3977Speed: 1000, full duplex 3978Using TSEC0 device 3979TFTP from server 192.168.1.1; our IP address is 192.168.1.2 3980Filename 'uImage'. 3981Load address: 0x200000 3982Loading:############ 3983done 3984Bytes transferred = 1029407 (fb51f hex) 3985=> print loadaddr 3986loadaddr=200000 3987=> print oftaddr 3988oftaddr=0x300000 3989=> bootm $loadaddr - $oftaddr 3990## Booting image at 00200000 ... 3991 Image Name: Linux-2.6.17-dirty 3992 Image Type: PowerPC Linux Kernel Image (gzip compressed) 3993 Data Size: 1029343 Bytes = 1005.2 kB 3994 Load Address: 00000000 3995 Entry Point: 00000000 3996 Verifying Checksum ... OK 3997 Uncompressing Kernel Image ... OK 3998Booting using flat device tree at 0x300000 3999Using MPC85xx ADS machine description 4000Memory CAM mapping: CAM0=256Mb, CAM1=256Mb, CAM2=0Mb residual: 0Mb 4001[snip] 4002 4003 4004More About U-Boot Image Types: 4005------------------------------ 4006 4007U-Boot supports the following image types: 4008 4009 "Standalone Programs" are directly runnable in the environment 4010 provided by U-Boot; it is expected that (if they behave 4011 well) you can continue to work in U-Boot after return from 4012 the Standalone Program. 4013 "OS Kernel Images" are usually images of some Embedded OS which 4014 will take over control completely. Usually these programs 4015 will install their own set of exception handlers, device 4016 drivers, set up the MMU, etc. - this means, that you cannot 4017 expect to re-enter U-Boot except by resetting the CPU. 4018 "RAMDisk Images" are more or less just data blocks, and their 4019 parameters (address, size) are passed to an OS kernel that is 4020 being started. 4021 "Multi-File Images" contain several images, typically an OS 4022 (Linux) kernel image and one or more data images like 4023 RAMDisks. This construct is useful for instance when you want 4024 to boot over the network using BOOTP etc., where the boot 4025 server provides just a single image file, but you want to get 4026 for instance an OS kernel and a RAMDisk image. 4027 4028 "Multi-File Images" start with a list of image sizes, each 4029 image size (in bytes) specified by an "uint32_t" in network 4030 byte order. This list is terminated by an "(uint32_t)0". 4031 Immediately after the terminating 0 follow the images, one by 4032 one, all aligned on "uint32_t" boundaries (size rounded up to 4033 a multiple of 4 bytes). 4034 4035 "Firmware Images" are binary images containing firmware (like 4036 U-Boot or FPGA images) which usually will be programmed to 4037 flash memory. 4038 4039 "Script files" are command sequences that will be executed by 4040 U-Boot's command interpreter; this feature is especially 4041 useful when you configure U-Boot to use a real shell (hush) 4042 as command interpreter. 4043 4044Booting the Linux zImage: 4045------------------------- 4046 4047On some platforms, it's possible to boot Linux zImage. This is done 4048using the "bootz" command. The syntax of "bootz" command is the same 4049as the syntax of "bootm" command. 4050 4051Note, defining the CONFIG_SUPPORT_RAW_INITRD allows user to supply 4052kernel with raw initrd images. The syntax is slightly different, the 4053address of the initrd must be augmented by it's size, in the following 4054format: "<initrd addres>:<initrd size>". 4055 4056 4057Standalone HOWTO: 4058================= 4059 4060One of the features of U-Boot is that you can dynamically load and 4061run "standalone" applications, which can use some resources of 4062U-Boot like console I/O functions or interrupt services. 4063 4064Two simple examples are included with the sources: 4065 4066"Hello World" Demo: 4067------------------- 4068 4069'examples/hello_world.c' contains a small "Hello World" Demo 4070application; it is automatically compiled when you build U-Boot. 4071It's configured to run at address 0x00040004, so you can play with it 4072like that: 4073 4074 => loads 4075 ## Ready for S-Record download ... 4076 ~>examples/hello_world.srec 4077 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ... 4078 [file transfer complete] 4079 [connected] 4080 ## Start Addr = 0x00040004 4081 4082 => go 40004 Hello World! This is a test. 4083 ## Starting application at 0x00040004 ... 4084 Hello World 4085 argc = 7 4086 argv[0] = "40004" 4087 argv[1] = "Hello" 4088 argv[2] = "World!" 4089 argv[3] = "This" 4090 argv[4] = "is" 4091 argv[5] = "a" 4092 argv[6] = "test." 4093 argv[7] = "<NULL>" 4094 Hit any key to exit ... 4095 4096 ## Application terminated, rc = 0x0 4097 4098Another example, which demonstrates how to register a CPM interrupt 4099handler with the U-Boot code, can be found in 'examples/timer.c'. 4100Here, a CPM timer is set up to generate an interrupt every second. 4101The interrupt service routine is trivial, just printing a '.' 4102character, but this is just a demo program. The application can be 4103controlled by the following keys: 4104 4105 ? - print current values og the CPM Timer registers 4106 b - enable interrupts and start timer 4107 e - stop timer and disable interrupts 4108 q - quit application 4109 4110 => loads 4111 ## Ready for S-Record download ... 4112 ~>examples/timer.srec 4113 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ... 4114 [file transfer complete] 4115 [connected] 4116 ## Start Addr = 0x00040004 4117 4118 => go 40004 4119 ## Starting application at 0x00040004 ... 4120 TIMERS=0xfff00980 4121 Using timer 1 4122 tgcr @ 0xfff00980, tmr @ 0xfff00990, trr @ 0xfff00994, tcr @ 0xfff00998, tcn @ 0xfff0099c, ter @ 0xfff009b0 4123 4124Hit 'b': 4125 [q, b, e, ?] Set interval 1000000 us 4126 Enabling timer 4127Hit '?': 4128 [q, b, e, ?] ........ 4129 tgcr=0x1, tmr=0xff1c, trr=0x3d09, tcr=0x0, tcn=0xef6, ter=0x0 4130Hit '?': 4131 [q, b, e, ?] . 4132 tgcr=0x1, tmr=0xff1c, trr=0x3d09, tcr=0x0, tcn=0x2ad4, ter=0x0 4133Hit '?': 4134 [q, b, e, ?] . 4135 tgcr=0x1, tmr=0xff1c, trr=0x3d09, tcr=0x0, tcn=0x1efc, ter=0x0 4136Hit '?': 4137 [q, b, e, ?] . 4138 tgcr=0x1, tmr=0xff1c, trr=0x3d09, tcr=0x0, tcn=0x169d, ter=0x0 4139Hit 'e': 4140 [q, b, e, ?] ...Stopping timer 4141Hit 'q': 4142 [q, b, e, ?] ## Application terminated, rc = 0x0 4143 4144 4145Minicom warning: 4146================ 4147 4148Over time, many people have reported problems when trying to use the 4149"minicom" terminal emulation program for serial download. I (wd) 4150consider minicom to be broken, and recommend not to use it. Under 4151Unix, I recommend to use C-Kermit for general purpose use (and 4152especially for kermit binary protocol download ("loadb" command), and 4153use "cu" for S-Record download ("loads" command). See 4154https://www.denx.de/wiki/view/DULG/SystemSetup#Section_4.3. 4155for help with kermit. 4156 4157 4158Nevertheless, if you absolutely want to use it try adding this 4159configuration to your "File transfer protocols" section: 4160 4161 Name Program Name U/D FullScr IO-Red. Multi 4162 X kermit /usr/bin/kermit -i -l %l -s Y U Y N N 4163 Y kermit /usr/bin/kermit -i -l %l -r N D Y N N 4164 4165 4166NetBSD Notes: 4167============= 4168 4169Starting at version 0.9.2, U-Boot supports NetBSD both as host 4170(build U-Boot) and target system (boots NetBSD/mpc8xx). 4171 4172Building requires a cross environment; it is known to work on 4173NetBSD/i386 with the cross-powerpc-netbsd-1.3 package (you will also 4174need gmake since the Makefiles are not compatible with BSD make). 4175Note that the cross-powerpc package does not install include files; 4176attempting to build U-Boot will fail because <machine/ansi.h> is 4177missing. This file has to be installed and patched manually: 4178 4179 # cd /usr/pkg/cross/powerpc-netbsd/include 4180 # mkdir powerpc 4181 # ln -s powerpc machine 4182 # cp /usr/src/sys/arch/powerpc/include/ansi.h powerpc/ansi.h 4183 # ${EDIT} powerpc/ansi.h ## must remove __va_list, _BSD_VA_LIST 4184 4185Native builds *don't* work due to incompatibilities between native 4186and U-Boot include files. 4187 4188Booting assumes that (the first part of) the image booted is a 4189stage-2 loader which in turn loads and then invokes the kernel 4190proper. Loader sources will eventually appear in the NetBSD source 4191tree (probably in sys/arc/mpc8xx/stand/u-boot_stage2/); in the 4192meantime, see ftp://ftp.denx.de/pub/u-boot/ppcboot_stage2.tar.gz 4193 4194 4195Implementation Internals: 4196========================= 4197 4198The following is not intended to be a complete description of every 4199implementation detail. However, it should help to understand the 4200inner workings of U-Boot and make it easier to port it to custom 4201hardware. 4202 4203 4204Initial Stack, Global Data: 4205--------------------------- 4206 4207The implementation of U-Boot is complicated by the fact that U-Boot 4208starts running out of ROM (flash memory), usually without access to 4209system RAM (because the memory controller is not initialized yet). 4210This means that we don't have writable Data or BSS segments, and BSS 4211is not initialized as zero. To be able to get a C environment working 4212at all, we have to allocate at least a minimal stack. Implementation 4213options for this are defined and restricted by the CPU used: Some CPU 4214models provide on-chip memory (like the IMMR area on MPC8xx and 4215MPC826x processors), on others (parts of) the data cache can be 4216locked as (mis-) used as memory, etc. 4217 4218 Chris Hallinan posted a good summary of these issues to the 4219 U-Boot mailing list: 4220 4221 Subject: RE: [U-Boot-Users] RE: More On Memory Bank x (nothingness)? 4222 From: "Chris Hallinan" <clh@net1plus.com> 4223 Date: Mon, 10 Feb 2003 16:43:46 -0500 (22:43 MET) 4224 ... 4225 4226 Correct me if I'm wrong, folks, but the way I understand it 4227 is this: Using DCACHE as initial RAM for Stack, etc, does not 4228 require any physical RAM backing up the cache. The cleverness 4229 is that the cache is being used as a temporary supply of 4230 necessary storage before the SDRAM controller is setup. It's 4231 beyond the scope of this list to explain the details, but you 4232 can see how this works by studying the cache architecture and 4233 operation in the architecture and processor-specific manuals. 4234 4235 OCM is On Chip Memory, which I believe the 405GP has 4K. It 4236 is another option for the system designer to use as an 4237 initial stack/RAM area prior to SDRAM being available. Either 4238 option should work for you. Using CS 4 should be fine if your 4239 board designers haven't used it for something that would 4240 cause you grief during the initial boot! It is frequently not 4241 used. 4242 4243 CONFIG_SYS_INIT_RAM_ADDR should be somewhere that won't interfere 4244 with your processor/board/system design. The default value 4245 you will find in any recent u-boot distribution in 4246 walnut.h should work for you. I'd set it to a value larger 4247 than your SDRAM module. If you have a 64MB SDRAM module, set 4248 it above 400_0000. Just make sure your board has no resources 4249 that are supposed to respond to that address! That code in 4250 start.S has been around a while and should work as is when 4251 you get the config right. 4252 4253 -Chris Hallinan 4254 DS4.COM, Inc. 4255 4256It is essential to remember this, since it has some impact on the C 4257code for the initialization procedures: 4258 4259* Initialized global data (data segment) is read-only. Do not attempt 4260 to write it. 4261 4262* Do not use any uninitialized global data (or implicitly initialized 4263 as zero data - BSS segment) at all - this is undefined, initiali- 4264 zation is performed later (when relocating to RAM). 4265 4266* Stack space is very limited. Avoid big data buffers or things like 4267 that. 4268 4269Having only the stack as writable memory limits means we cannot use 4270normal global data to share information between the code. But it 4271turned out that the implementation of U-Boot can be greatly 4272simplified by making a global data structure (gd_t) available to all 4273functions. We could pass a pointer to this data as argument to _all_ 4274functions, but this would bloat the code. Instead we use a feature of 4275the GCC compiler (Global Register Variables) to share the data: we 4276place a pointer (gd) to the global data into a register which we 4277reserve for this purpose. 4278 4279When choosing a register for such a purpose we are restricted by the 4280relevant (E)ABI specifications for the current architecture, and by 4281GCC's implementation. 4282 4283For PowerPC, the following registers have specific use: 4284 R1: stack pointer 4285 R2: reserved for system use 4286 R3-R4: parameter passing and return values 4287 R5-R10: parameter passing 4288 R13: small data area pointer 4289 R30: GOT pointer 4290 R31: frame pointer 4291 4292 (U-Boot also uses R12 as internal GOT pointer. r12 4293 is a volatile register so r12 needs to be reset when 4294 going back and forth between asm and C) 4295 4296 ==> U-Boot will use R2 to hold a pointer to the global data 4297 4298 Note: on PPC, we could use a static initializer (since the 4299 address of the global data structure is known at compile time), 4300 but it turned out that reserving a register results in somewhat 4301 smaller code - although the code savings are not that big (on 4302 average for all boards 752 bytes for the whole U-Boot image, 4303 624 text + 127 data). 4304 4305On ARM, the following registers are used: 4306 4307 R0: function argument word/integer result 4308 R1-R3: function argument word 4309 R9: platform specific 4310 R10: stack limit (used only if stack checking is enabled) 4311 R11: argument (frame) pointer 4312 R12: temporary workspace 4313 R13: stack pointer 4314 R14: link register 4315 R15: program counter 4316 4317 ==> U-Boot will use R9 to hold a pointer to the global data 4318 4319 Note: on ARM, only R_ARM_RELATIVE relocations are supported. 4320 4321On Nios II, the ABI is documented here: 4322 https://www.altera.com/literature/hb/nios2/n2cpu_nii51016.pdf 4323 4324 ==> U-Boot will use gp to hold a pointer to the global data 4325 4326 Note: on Nios II, we give "-G0" option to gcc and don't use gp 4327 to access small data sections, so gp is free. 4328 4329On NDS32, the following registers are used: 4330 4331 R0-R1: argument/return 4332 R2-R5: argument 4333 R15: temporary register for assembler 4334 R16: trampoline register 4335 R28: frame pointer (FP) 4336 R29: global pointer (GP) 4337 R30: link register (LP) 4338 R31: stack pointer (SP) 4339 PC: program counter (PC) 4340 4341 ==> U-Boot will use R10 to hold a pointer to the global data 4342 4343NOTE: DECLARE_GLOBAL_DATA_PTR must be used with file-global scope, 4344or current versions of GCC may "optimize" the code too much. 4345 4346On RISC-V, the following registers are used: 4347 4348 x0: hard-wired zero (zero) 4349 x1: return address (ra) 4350 x2: stack pointer (sp) 4351 x3: global pointer (gp) 4352 x4: thread pointer (tp) 4353 x5: link register (t0) 4354 x8: frame pointer (fp) 4355 x10-x11: arguments/return values (a0-1) 4356 x12-x17: arguments (a2-7) 4357 x28-31: temporaries (t3-6) 4358 pc: program counter (pc) 4359 4360 ==> U-Boot will use gp to hold a pointer to the global data 4361 4362Memory Management: 4363------------------ 4364 4365U-Boot runs in system state and uses physical addresses, i.e. the 4366MMU is not used either for address mapping nor for memory protection. 4367 4368The available memory is mapped to fixed addresses using the memory 4369controller. In this process, a contiguous block is formed for each 4370memory type (Flash, SDRAM, SRAM), even when it consists of several 4371physical memory banks. 4372 4373U-Boot is installed in the first 128 kB of the first Flash bank (on 4374TQM8xxL modules this is the range 0x40000000 ... 0x4001FFFF). After 4375booting and sizing and initializing DRAM, the code relocates itself 4376to the upper end of DRAM. Immediately below the U-Boot code some 4377memory is reserved for use by malloc() [see CONFIG_SYS_MALLOC_LEN 4378configuration setting]. Below that, a structure with global Board 4379Info data is placed, followed by the stack (growing downward). 4380 4381Additionally, some exception handler code is copied to the low 8 kB 4382of DRAM (0x00000000 ... 0x00001FFF). 4383 4384So a typical memory configuration with 16 MB of DRAM could look like 4385this: 4386 4387 0x0000 0000 Exception Vector code 4388 : 4389 0x0000 1FFF 4390 0x0000 2000 Free for Application Use 4391 : 4392 : 4393 4394 : 4395 : 4396 0x00FB FF20 Monitor Stack (Growing downward) 4397 0x00FB FFAC Board Info Data and permanent copy of global data 4398 0x00FC 0000 Malloc Arena 4399 : 4400 0x00FD FFFF 4401 0x00FE 0000 RAM Copy of Monitor Code 4402 ... eventually: LCD or video framebuffer 4403 ... eventually: pRAM (Protected RAM - unchanged by reset) 4404 0x00FF FFFF [End of RAM] 4405 4406 4407System Initialization: 4408---------------------- 4409 4410In the reset configuration, U-Boot starts at the reset entry point 4411(on most PowerPC systems at address 0x00000100). Because of the reset 4412configuration for CS0# this is a mirror of the on board Flash memory. 4413To be able to re-map memory U-Boot then jumps to its link address. 4414To be able to implement the initialization code in C, a (small!) 4415initial stack is set up in the internal Dual Ported RAM (in case CPUs 4416which provide such a feature like), or in a locked part of the data 4417cache. After that, U-Boot initializes the CPU core, the caches and 4418the SIU. 4419 4420Next, all (potentially) available memory banks are mapped using a 4421preliminary mapping. For example, we put them on 512 MB boundaries 4422(multiples of 0x20000000: SDRAM on 0x00000000 and 0x20000000, Flash 4423on 0x40000000 and 0x60000000, SRAM on 0x80000000). Then UPM A is 4424programmed for SDRAM access. Using the temporary configuration, a 4425simple memory test is run that determines the size of the SDRAM 4426banks. 4427 4428When there is more than one SDRAM bank, and the banks are of 4429different size, the largest is mapped first. For equal size, the first 4430bank (CS2#) is mapped first. The first mapping is always for address 44310x00000000, with any additional banks following immediately to create 4432contiguous memory starting from 0. 4433 4434Then, the monitor installs itself at the upper end of the SDRAM area 4435and allocates memory for use by malloc() and for the global Board 4436Info data; also, the exception vector code is copied to the low RAM 4437pages, and the final stack is set up. 4438 4439Only after this relocation will you have a "normal" C environment; 4440until that you are restricted in several ways, mostly because you are 4441running from ROM, and because the code will have to be relocated to a 4442new address in RAM. 4443 4444 4445U-Boot Porting Guide: 4446---------------------- 4447 4448[Based on messages by Jerry Van Baren in the U-Boot-Users mailing 4449list, October 2002] 4450 4451 4452int main(int argc, char *argv[]) 4453{ 4454 sighandler_t no_more_time; 4455 4456 signal(SIGALRM, no_more_time); 4457 alarm(PROJECT_DEADLINE - toSec (3 * WEEK)); 4458 4459 if (available_money > available_manpower) { 4460 Pay consultant to port U-Boot; 4461 return 0; 4462 } 4463 4464 Download latest U-Boot source; 4465 4466 Subscribe to u-boot mailing list; 4467 4468 if (clueless) 4469 email("Hi, I am new to U-Boot, how do I get started?"); 4470 4471 while (learning) { 4472 Read the README file in the top level directory; 4473 Read https://www.denx.de/wiki/bin/view/DULG/Manual; 4474 Read applicable doc/README.*; 4475 Read the source, Luke; 4476 /* find . -name "*.[chS]" | xargs grep -i <keyword> */ 4477 } 4478 4479 if (available_money > toLocalCurrency ($2500)) 4480 Buy a BDI3000; 4481 else 4482 Add a lot of aggravation and time; 4483 4484 if (a similar board exists) { /* hopefully... */ 4485 cp -a board/<similar> board/<myboard> 4486 cp include/configs/<similar>.h include/configs/<myboard>.h 4487 } else { 4488 Create your own board support subdirectory; 4489 Create your own board include/configs/<myboard>.h file; 4490 } 4491 Edit new board/<myboard> files 4492 Edit new include/configs/<myboard>.h 4493 4494 while (!accepted) { 4495 while (!running) { 4496 do { 4497 Add / modify source code; 4498 } until (compiles); 4499 Debug; 4500 if (clueless) 4501 email("Hi, I am having problems..."); 4502 } 4503 Send patch file to the U-Boot email list; 4504 if (reasonable critiques) 4505 Incorporate improvements from email list code review; 4506 else 4507 Defend code as written; 4508 } 4509 4510 return 0; 4511} 4512 4513void no_more_time (int sig) 4514{ 4515 hire_a_guru(); 4516} 4517 4518 4519Coding Standards: 4520----------------- 4521 4522All contributions to U-Boot should conform to the Linux kernel 4523coding style; see the kernel coding style guide at 4524https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html, and the 4525script "scripts/Lindent" in your Linux kernel source directory. 4526 4527Source files originating from a different project (for example the 4528MTD subsystem) are generally exempt from these guidelines and are not 4529reformatted to ease subsequent migration to newer versions of those 4530sources. 4531 4532Please note that U-Boot is implemented in C (and to some small parts in 4533Assembler); no C++ is used, so please do not use C++ style comments (//) 4534in your code. 4535 4536Please also stick to the following formatting rules: 4537- remove any trailing white space 4538- use TAB characters for indentation and vertical alignment, not spaces 4539- make sure NOT to use DOS '\r\n' line feeds 4540- do not add more than 2 consecutive empty lines to source files 4541- do not add trailing empty lines to source files 4542 4543Submissions which do not conform to the standards may be returned 4544with a request to reformat the changes. 4545 4546 4547Submitting Patches: 4548------------------- 4549 4550Since the number of patches for U-Boot is growing, we need to 4551establish some rules. Submissions which do not conform to these rules 4552may be rejected, even when they contain important and valuable stuff. 4553 4554Please see https://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot/Patches for details. 4555 4556Patches shall be sent to the u-boot mailing list <u-boot@lists.denx.de>; 4557see https://lists.denx.de/listinfo/u-boot 4558 4559When you send a patch, please include the following information with 4560it: 4561 4562* For bug fixes: a description of the bug and how your patch fixes 4563 this bug. Please try to include a way of demonstrating that the 4564 patch actually fixes something. 4565 4566* For new features: a description of the feature and your 4567 implementation. 4568 4569* For major contributions, add a MAINTAINERS file with your 4570 information and associated file and directory references. 4571 4572* When you add support for a new board, don't forget to add a 4573 maintainer e-mail address to the boards.cfg file, too. 4574 4575* If your patch adds new configuration options, don't forget to 4576 document these in the README file. 4577 4578* The patch itself. If you are using git (which is *strongly* 4579 recommended) you can easily generate the patch using the 4580 "git format-patch". If you then use "git send-email" to send it to 4581 the U-Boot mailing list, you will avoid most of the common problems 4582 with some other mail clients. 4583 4584 If you cannot use git, use "diff -purN OLD NEW". If your version of 4585 diff does not support these options, then get the latest version of 4586 GNU diff. 4587 4588 The current directory when running this command shall be the parent 4589 directory of the U-Boot source tree (i. e. please make sure that 4590 your patch includes sufficient directory information for the 4591 affected files). 4592 4593 We prefer patches as plain text. MIME attachments are discouraged, 4594 and compressed attachments must not be used. 4595 4596* If one logical set of modifications affects or creates several 4597 files, all these changes shall be submitted in a SINGLE patch file. 4598 4599* Changesets that contain different, unrelated modifications shall be 4600 submitted as SEPARATE patches, one patch per changeset. 4601 4602 4603Notes: 4604 4605* Before sending the patch, run the buildman script on your patched 4606 source tree and make sure that no errors or warnings are reported 4607 for any of the boards. 4608 4609* Keep your modifications to the necessary minimum: A patch 4610 containing several unrelated changes or arbitrary reformats will be 4611 returned with a request to re-formatting / split it. 4612 4613* If you modify existing code, make sure that your new code does not 4614 add to the memory footprint of the code ;-) Small is beautiful! 4615 When adding new features, these should compile conditionally only 4616 (using #ifdef), and the resulting code with the new feature 4617 disabled must not need more memory than the old code without your 4618 modification. 4619 4620* Remember that there is a size limit of 100 kB per message on the 4621 u-boot mailing list. Bigger patches will be moderated. If they are 4622 reasonable and not too big, they will be acknowledged. But patches 4623 bigger than the size limit should be avoided. 4624