1.18. Booting Linux

1.18.1. Introduction

The lowlevel boot command in barebox is bootm - boot an application image. This command can be used directly, but there is also a boot - boot from script, device, … command which offers additional features like a boot sequence which tries to boot different entries until one succeeds.

1.18.2. The bootm command

The bootm - boot an application image command is the lowlevel boot command. Depending on the architecture the bootm command handles different image types. On ARM the following images are supported:

  • ARM Linux zImage
  • U-Boot uImage
  • barebox images

The images can either be passed directly to the bootm command as argument or in the global.bootm.image variable:

bootm /path/to/zImage

# same as:

global.bootm.image=/path/to/zImage
bootm

When barebox has an internal devicetree it is passed to the kernel. You can specify an alternative devicetree with the -o DTS option or the global.bootm.oftree variable:

bootm -o /path/to/dtb /path/to/zImage

# same as:

global.bootm.oftree=/path/to/dtb
global.bootm.image=/path/to/zImage
bootm

NOTE: it may happen that barebox is probed from the devicetree, but you have want to start a Kernel without passing a devicetree. In this case set the global.bootm.boot_atag variable to true.

1.18.2.1. Passing Kernel Arguments

The simple method to pass bootargs to the kernel is with CONFIG_FLEXIBLE_BOOTARGS disabled: in this case the bootm command takes the bootargs from the bootargs environment variable.

With CONFIG_FLEXIBLE_BOOTARGS enabled, the bootargs are composed from different global device variables. All variables beginning with global.linux.bootargs. will be concatenated to the bootargs:

global linux.bootargs.base="console=ttyO0,115200"
global linux.bootargs.debug="earlyprintk ignore_loglevel"

bootm zImage

...

Kernel command line: console=ttymxc0,115200n8 earlyprintk ignore_loglevel

Additionally all variables starting with global.linux.mtdparts. are concatenated to a mtdparts= parameter to the kernel. This makes it possible to consistently partition devices with the addpart - add a partition description to a device command and pass the same string as used with addpart to the Kernel:

norparts="512k(bootloader),512k(env),4M(kernel),-(root)"
nandparts="1M(bootloader),1M(env),4M(kernel),-(root)"

global linux.mtdparts.nor0="physmap-flash.0:$norparts"
global linux.mtdparts.nand0="mxc_nand:$nandparts"

addpart /dev/nor0 $norparts
addpart /dev/nand0 $nandparts

...

bootm zImage

...

Kernel command line: mtdparts=physmap-flash.0:512k(bootloader),512k(env),4M(kernel),-(root);
                      mxc_nand:1M(bootloader),1M(env),4M(kernel),-(root)

1.18.2.2. Creating root= options for the Kernel

It’s a common case that the Linux Kernel is loaded from a filesystem that later becomes the root filesystem for the Kernel. For several filesystems barebox can automatically append a suitable root= option to the Kernel command line. This is done when global.bootm.appendroot is true. How the root= option is appended depends on the device type and filesystem the kernel is booted from. For disk like devices (SD/MMC, ATA) the partition UUID will be used, the root= option will be something like root=PARTUUID=deadbeef-1. For UBIFS fileystems it will be root=ubi0:volname ubi.mtd=mtdpartname rootfstype=ubifs. NFS filesystems will result in root=/dev/nfs nfsroot=ip:/path/to/nfsroot,v3,tcp. The v3,tcp part is configurable in global.linux.rootnfsopts.

1.18.3. The boot command

The boot - boot from script, device, … command offers additional convenience for the bootm - boot an application image command. It works with Boot entries and Bootloader Spec entries. Boot entries are located under /env/boot/ and are scripts which setup the bootm variables so that the boot command can run bootm without further arguments.

1.18.3.1. Boot entries

A simple boot entry in /env/boot/mmc could look like this:

#!/bin/sh

global.bootm.image=/mnt/mmc1/zImage
global.bootm.oftree=/env/oftree

global linux.bootargs.dyn.root="root=PARTUUID=deadbeef:01"

This takes the kernel from /mnt/mmc1/zImage (which could be an Automount path registered earlier). The devicetree will be used from /env/oftree. The Kernel gets the command line root=PARTUUID=deadbeef:01. Note the .dyn in the bootargs variable name. boot entries should always add Kernel command line parameters to variables with .dyn in it. These will be cleared before booting different boot entries. This is done so that following boot entries do not leak command line parameters from the previous boot entries.

This entry can be booted with boot mmc. It can also be made the default by setting the global.boot.default variable to mmc and then calling boot without arguments.

1.18.3.2. Bootloader Spec

barebox supports booting according to the bootloader spec:

http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/BootLoaderSpec/

It follows another philosophy than the Boot entries. With Boot Entries booting is completely configured in the bootloader. Bootloader Spec Entries on the other hand the boot entries are on a boot medium. This gives a boot medium the possibility to describe where a Kernel is and what parameters it needs.

All Bootloader Spec Entries are in a partition on the boot medium under /loader/entries/*.conf. In the Bootloader Spec a boot medium has a dedicated partition to use for boot entries. barebox is less strict, it accepts Bootloader Spec Entries on every partition barebox can read.

A Bootloader Spec Entry consists of key value pairs:

/loader/entries/6a9857a393724b7a981ebb5b8495b9ea-3.8.0-2.fc19.x86_64.conf:

title      Fedora 19 (Rawhide)
version    3.8.0-2.fc19.x86_64
machine-id 6a9857a393724b7a981ebb5b8495b9ea
options    root=UUID=6d3376e4-fc93-4509-95ec-a21d68011da2
linux      /6a9857a393724b7a981ebb5b8495b9ea/3.8.0-2.fc19.x86_64/linux
initrd     /6a9857a393724b7a981ebb5b8495b9ea/3.8.0-2.fc19.x86_64/initrd

All paths are absolute paths in the partition. Bootloader Spec Entries can be created manually, but there also is the scripts/kernel-install tool to create/list/modify entries directly on a MMC/SD card or other media. To use it create a SD card / USB memory stick with a /boot partition with type 0xea. The partition can be formatted with FAT or EXT4 filesystem. If you wish to write to it from barebox later you must use FAT. The following creates a Bootloader Spec Entry on a SD card:

scripts/kernel-install --device=/dev/mmcblk0 -a \
              --machine-id=11ab7c89d02c4f66a4e2474ea25b2b84 --kernel-version="3.15" \
              --kernel=/home/sha/linux/arch/arm/boot/zImage --add-root-option \
              --root=/dev/mmcblk0p1 -o "console=ttymxc0,115200"

The entry can be listed with the -l option:

scripts/kernel-install --device=/dev/mmcblk0 -l

Entry 0:
      title:      Linux-3.15
      version:    3.15
      machine_id: 11ab7c89d02c4f66a4e2474ea25b2b84
      options:    console=ttymxc0,115200 root=PARTUUID=0007CB20-01
      linux:      11ab7c89d02c4f66a4e2474ea25b2b84.15/linux

When on barebox the SD card shows up as mmc1 then this entry can be booted with boot mmc1 or with setting global.boot.default to mmc1.

machine-id is an optional key. If global.boot.machine_id variable is set to non-empty value, then barebox accepts only Bootloader Spec entries with machine-id key. In case if value of global variable and Bootloader Spec key match each other, barebox will choose the boot entry for booting. All other Bootloader Spec entries will be ignored.

A bootloader spec entry can also reside on an NFS server in which case a RFC2224 compatible NFS URI string must be passed to the boot command:

boot nfs://nfshost[:port]//path/

Additionally to the options defined in the original spec barebox understands the linux-appendroot option. This is a boolean value and if set to true barebox will automatically append a root= string to the Linux commandline based on the device where the entry is found on. This makes it possible to use the same rootfs image on different devices without having to specify a different root= option each time.

1.18.4. Network boot

With the following steps, barebox can start the kernel and root filesystem over the network, a standard development case.

See Networking for informations how to configure your network interfaces.

Note that barebox will pass the same IP settings to the kernel, i.e. it passes ip=$ipaddr:$serverip:$gateway:$netmask::<linuxdevname>: for a static IP setup and ip=dhcp for a dynamic DHCP setup. <linuxdevname> is a configurable value. set nv.dev.<ethdev>.linuxdevname to the name the device has in Linux.

By default, barebox uses the variables global.user and global.hostname to retrieve its kernel image over TFTP, which makes it possible to use multiple boards for multiple users with one single server. You can adjust those variables using nvvars with these commands:

nv user=sha
nv hostname=efikasb

Copy the kernel (and devicetree if needed) to the root directory of your TFTP server, and name them accordingly; for example:

cp zImage /tftpboot/sha-linux-efikasb
cp myboard.dtb /tftpboot/sha-oftree-efikasb

(In this example, the directory /tftpboot represents the root directory of the TFTP server. That directory depends on the configuration of your TFTP server, some servers may also use /srv/tftp instead.)

barebox will pass nfsroot=/home/${global.user}/nfsroot/${global.hostname} to the kernel. This causes the kernel to mount its root filesystem from a NFS server, which is detected through the DHCP reply. To choose a different server, simply prepend its IP address to the mount path, e.g. nfsroot=192.168.23.5:/home/.... In any case, make sure that the specified mountpoint is exported by your NFS server.

For more information about booting with nfsroot, see Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsroot.txt in the Linux kernel documentation.

If the preconfigured paths or names are not suitable, they can be adjusted in /env/boot/net:

#!/bin/sh

path="/mnt/tftp"

global.bootm.image="${path}/${global.user}-linux-${global.hostname}"

oftree="${path}/${global.user}-oftree-${global.hostname}"
if [ -f "${oftree}" ]; then
       global.bootm.oftree="$oftree"
fi

nfsroot="/home/${global.user}/nfsroot/${global.hostname}"
ip_route_get -b ${global.net.server} global.linux.bootargs.dyn.ip

global.linux.bootargs.dyn.root="root=/dev/nfs nfsroot=$nfsroot,v3,tcp"

boot net will then retrieve the kernel (and also the device tree and initramfs, if used) over TFTP and boot it.