123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227 |
- Booting U-boot on a MX28 processor
- ==================================
- This document describes the MX28 U-Boot port. This document mostly
- covers topics related to making the module/board bootable.
- Terminology
- -----------
- The dollar symbol ($) introduces a snipped of shell code. This shall be typed
- into the unix command prompt in U-Boot source code root directory.
- The (=>) introduces a snipped of code that should by typed into U-Boot command
- prompt
- Contents
- --------
- 1) Prerequisites
- 2) Compiling U-Boot for a MX28 based board
- 3) Installation of U-Boot for a MX28 based board to SD card
- 4) Installation of U-Boot into NAND flash
- 1) Prerequisites
- ----------------
- To make a MX28 based board bootable, some tools are necessary. The first one
- is the "elftosb" tool distributed by Freescale Semiconductor. The other one
- is the "mxsboot" tool found in U-Boot source tree.
- Firstly, obtain the elftosb archive from the following location:
- ftp://ftp.denx.de/pub/tools/elftosb-10.12.01.tar.gz
- We use a $VER variable here to denote the current version. At the time of
- writing of this document, that is "10.12.01". To obtain the file from command
- line, use:
- $ VER="10.12.01"
- $ wget ftp://ftp.denx.de/pub/tools/elftosb-${VER}.tar.gz
- Extract the file:
- $ tar xzf elftosb-${VER}.tar.gz
- Compile the file. We need to manually tell the linker to use also libm:
- $ cd elftosb-${VER}/
- $ make LIBS="-lstdc++ -lm" elftosb
- Optionally, remove debugging symbols from elftosb:
- $ strip bld/linux/elftosb
- Finally, install the "elftosb" binary. The "install" target is missing, so just
- copy the binary by hand:
- $ sudo cp bld/linux/elftosb /usr/local/bin/
- Make sure the "elftosb" binary can be found in your $PATH, in this case this
- means "/usr/local/bin/" has to be in your $PATH.
- 2) Compiling U-Boot for a MX28 based board
- -------------------------------------------
- Compiling the U-Boot for a MX28 board is straightforward and done as compiling U-Boot
- for any other ARM device. For cross-compiler setup, please refer to ELDK5.0
- documentation. First, clean up the source code:
- $ make mrproper
- Next, configure U-Boot for a MX28 based board
- $ make <mx28_based_board_name>_config
- Examples:
- 1. For building U-boot for Denx M28EVK board:
- $ make m28evk_config
- 2. For building U-boot for Freescale MX28EVK board:
- $ make mx28evk_config
- Lastly, compile U-Boot and prepare a "BootStream". The "BootStream" is a special
- type of file, which the i.MX28 CPU can boot. This is handled by the following
- command:
- $ make u-boot.sb
- HINT: To speed-up the build process, you can add -j<N>, where N is number of
- compiler instances that'll run in parallel.
- The code produces "u-boot.sb" file. This file needs to be augmented with a
- proper header to allow successful boot from SD or NAND. Adding the header is
- discussed in the following chapters.
- 3) Installation of U-Boot for a MX28 based board to SD card
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- To boot a MX28 based board from SD, set the boot mode DIP switches according
- to i.MX28 manual chapter 12.2.1 (Table 12-2), PORT=SSP0, SD/MMC master on
- SSP0, 3.3V.
- An SD card the i.MX28 CPU can use to boot U-Boot must contain a DOS partition
- table, which in turn carries a partition of special type and which contains a
- special header. The rest of partitions in the DOS partition table can be used
- by the user.
- To prepare such partition, use your favourite partitioning tool. The partition
- must have the following parameters:
- * Start sector .......... sector 2048
- * Partition size ........ at least 1024 kb
- * Partition type ........ 0x53 (sometimes "OnTrack DM6 Aux3")
- For example in Linux fdisk, the sequence for a clear card follows. Be sure to
- run fdisk with the option "-u=sectors" to set units to sectors:
- * o ..................... create a clear partition table
- * n ..................... create new partition
- * p ............. primary partition
- * 1 ............. first partition
- * 2048 .......... first sector is 2048
- * +1M ........... make the partition 1Mb big
- * t 1 ................... change first partition ID
- * 53 ............ change the ID to 0x53 (OnTrack DM6 Aux3)
- * <create other partitions>
- * w ..................... write partition table to disk
- The partition layout is ready, next the special partition must be filled with
- proper contents. The contents is generated by running the following command
- (see chapter 2)):
- $ ./tools/mxsboot sd u-boot.sb u-boot.sd
- The resulting file, "u-boot.sd", shall then be written to the partition. In this
- case, we assume the first partition of the SD card is /dev/mmcblk0p1:
- $ dd if=u-boot.sd of=/dev/mmcblk0p1
- Last step is to insert the card into MX28 based board and boot.
- NOTE: If the user needs to adjust the start sector, the "mxsboot" tool contains
- a "-p" switch for that purpose. The "-p" switch takes the sector number as
- an argument.
- 4) Installation of U-Boot into NAND flash
- -----------------------------------------
- To boot a MX28 based board from NAND, set the boot mode DIP switches according to i.MX28
- manual chapter 12.2.1 (Table 12-2), PORT=GPMI, NAND 1.8 V.
- There are two possibilities when preparing an image writable to NAND flash.
- I) The NAND wasn't written at all yet or the BCB is broken
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- In this case, both BCB (FCB and DBBT) and firmware needs to be
- written to NAND. To generate NAND image containing all these,
- there is a tool called "mxsboot" in the "tools/" directory. The tool
- is invoked on "u-boot.sb" file from chapter 2):
- $ ./tools/mxsboot nand u-boot.sb u-boot.nand
- NOTE: The above invokation works for NAND flash with geometry of
- 2048b per page, 64b OOB data, 128kb erase size. If your chip
- has a different geometry, please use:
- -w <size> change page size (default 2048 b)
- -o <size> change oob size (default 64 b)
- -e <size> change erase size (default 131072 b)
- The geometry information can be obtained from running U-Boot
- on the MX28 board by issuing the "nand info" command.
- The resulting file, "u-boot.nand" can be written directly to NAND
- from the U-Boot prompt. To simplify the process, the U-Boot default
- environment contains script "update_nand_full" to update the system.
- This script expects a working TFTP server containing the file
- "u-boot.nand" in it's root directory. This can be changed by
- adjusting the "update_nand_full_filename" varible.
- To update the system, run the following in U-Boot prompt:
- => run update_nand_full
- In case you would only need to update the bootloader in future,
- see II) below.
- II) The NAND was already written with a good BCB
- ------------------------------------------------
- This part applies after the part I) above was done at least once.
- If part I) above was done correctly already, there is no need to
- write the FCB and DBBT parts of NAND again. It's possible to upgrade
- only the bootloader image.
- To simplify the process of firmware update, the U-Boot default
- environment contains script "update_nand_firmware" to update only
- the firmware, without rewriting FCB and DBBT.
- This script expects a working TFTP server containing the file
- "u-boot.sb" in it's root directory. This can be changed by
- adjusting the "update_nand_firmware_filename" varible.
- To update the system, run the following in U-Boot prompt:
- => run update_nand_firmware
- III) Special settings for the update scripts
- --------------------------------------------
- There is a slight possibility of the user wanting to adjust the
- STRIDE and COUNT options of the NAND boot. For description of these,
- see i.MX28 manual section 12.12.1.2 and 12.12.1.3.
- The update scripts take this possibility into account. In case the
- user changes STRIDE by blowing fuses, the user also has to change
- "update_nand_stride" variable. In case the user changes COUNT by
- blowing fuses, the user also has to change "update_nand_count"
- variable for the update scripts to work correctly.
- In case the user needs to boot a firmware image bigger than 1Mb, the
- user has to adjust the "update_nand_firmware_maxsz" variable for the
- update scripts to work properly.
|