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Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001Binman Entry Documentation
Heinrich Schuchardtb72160b2023-10-28 11:59:32 +02002==========================
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06003
4This file describes the entry types supported by binman. These entry types can
5be placed in an image one by one to build up a final firmware image. It is
6fairly easy to create new entry types. Just add a new file to the 'etype'
7directory. You can use the existing entries as examples.
8
9Note that some entries are subclasses of others, using and extending their
10features to produce new behaviours.
11
12
13
Simon Glassf3598922024-07-20 11:49:45 +010014.. _etype_alternates_fdt:
15
16Entry: alternates-fdt: Entry that generates alternative sections for each devicetree provided
17---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
18
19When creating an image designed to boot on multiple models, each model
20requires its own devicetree. This entry deals with selecting the correct
21devicetree from a directory containing them. Each one is read in turn, then
22used to produce section contents which are written to a file. This results
23in a number of images, one for each model.
24
25For example this produces images for each .dtb file in the 'dtb' directory::
26
27 alternates-fdt {
28 fdt-list-dir = "dtb";
29 filename-pattern = "NAME.bin";
30 fdt-phase = "tpl";
31
32 section {
33 u-boot-tpl {
34 };
35 };
36 };
37
38Each output file is named based on its input file, so an input file of
39`model1.dtb` results in an output file of `model1.bin` (i.e. the `NAME` in
40the `filename-pattern` property is replaced with the .dtb basename).
41
42Note that this entry type still produces contents for the 'main' image, in
43that case using the normal dtb provided to Binman, e.g. `u-boot-tpl.dtb`.
44But that image is unlikely to be useful, since it relates to whatever dtb
45happened to be the default when U-Boot builds
46(i.e. `CONFIG_DEFAULT_DEVICE_TREE`). However, Binman ensures that the size
47of each of the alternates is the same as the 'default' one, so they can in
48principle be 'slotted in' to the appropriate place in the main image.
49
50The optional `fdt-phase` property indicates the phase to build. In this
51case, it etype runs fdtgrep to obtain the devicetree subset for that phase,
52respecting the `bootph-xxx` tags in the devicetree.
53
54
55
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -060056.. _etype_atf_bl31:
57
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +130058Entry: atf-bl31: ARM Trusted Firmware (ATF) BL31 blob
59-----------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass559c4de2020-09-01 05:13:58 -060060
61Properties / Entry arguments:
62 - atf-bl31-path: Filename of file to read into entry. This is typically
63 called bl31.bin or bl31.elf
64
65This entry holds the run-time firmware, typically started by U-Boot SPL.
66See the U-Boot README for your architecture or board for how to use it. See
Peter Robinson32d26c72024-10-02 19:08:49 +010067https://github.com/TrustedFirmware-A/trusted-firmware-a for more information
Simon Glass559c4de2020-09-01 05:13:58 -060068about ATF.
69
70
71
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -060072.. _etype_atf_fip:
73
Simon Glass3efb2972021-11-23 21:08:59 -070074Entry: atf-fip: ARM Trusted Firmware's Firmware Image Package (FIP)
75-------------------------------------------------------------------
76
77A FIP_ provides a way to group binaries in a firmware image, used by ARM's
78Trusted Firmware A (TF-A) code. It is a simple format consisting of a
79table of contents with information about the type, offset and size of the
80binaries in the FIP. It is quite similar to FMAP, with the major difference
81that it uses UUIDs to indicate the type of each entry.
82
83Note: It is recommended to always add an fdtmap to every image, as well as
84any FIPs so that binman and other tools can access the entire image
85correctly.
86
87The UUIDs correspond to useful names in `fiptool`, provided by ATF to
88operate on FIPs. Binman uses these names to make it easier to understand
89what is going on, although it is possible to provide a UUID if needed.
90
91The contents of the FIP are defined by subnodes of the atf-fip entry, e.g.::
92
93 atf-fip {
94 soc-fw {
95 filename = "bl31.bin";
96 };
97
98 scp-fwu-cfg {
99 filename = "bl2u.bin";
100 };
101
102 u-boot {
103 fip-type = "nt-fw";
104 };
105 };
106
107This describes a FIP with three entries: soc-fw, scp-fwu-cfg and nt-fw.
108You can use normal (non-external) binaries like U-Boot simply by adding a
109FIP type, with the `fip-type` property, as above.
110
111Since FIP exists to bring blobs together, Binman assumes that all FIP
112entries are external binaries. If a binary may not exist, you can use the
113`--allow-missing` flag to Binman, in which case the image is still created,
114even though it will not actually work.
115
116The size of the FIP depends on the size of the binaries. There is currently
117no way to specify a fixed size. If the `atf-fip` node has a `size` entry,
118this affects the space taken up by the `atf-fip` entry, but the FIP itself
119does not expand to use that space.
120
121Some other FIP features are available with Binman. The header and the
122entries have 64-bit flag works. The flag flags do not seem to be defined
123anywhere, but you can use `fip-hdr-flags` and fip-flags` to set the values
124of the header and entries respectively.
125
126FIP entries can be aligned to a particular power-of-two boundary. Use
127fip-align for this.
128
129Binman only understands the entry types that are included in its
130implementation. It is possible to specify a 16-byte UUID instead, using the
131fip-uuid property. In this case Binman doesn't know what its type is, so
132just uses the UUID. See the `u-boot` node in this example::
133
134 binman {
135 atf-fip {
136 fip-hdr-flags = /bits/ 64 <0x123>;
137 fip-align = <16>;
138 soc-fw {
139 fip-flags = /bits/ 64 <0x456>;
140 filename = "bl31.bin";
141 };
142
143 scp-fwu-cfg {
144 filename = "bl2u.bin";
145 };
146
147 u-boot {
148 fip-uuid = [fc 65 13 92 4a 5b 11 ec
149 94 35 ff 2d 1c fc 79 9c];
150 };
151 };
152 fdtmap {
153 };
154 };
155
156Binman allows reading and updating FIP entries after the image is created,
157provided that an FDPMAP is present too. Updates which change the size of a
158FIP entry will cause it to be expanded or contracted as needed.
159
160Properties for top-level atf-fip node
161~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
162
163fip-hdr-flags (64 bits)
164 Sets the flags for the FIP header.
165
166Properties for subnodes
167~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
168
169fip-type (str)
170 FIP type to use for this entry. This is needed if the entry
171 name is not a valid type. Value types are defined in `fip_util.py`.
172 The FIP type defines the UUID that is used (they map 1:1).
173
174fip-uuid (16 bytes)
175 If there is no FIP-type name defined, or it is not supported by Binman,
176 this property sets the UUID. It should be a 16-byte value, following the
177 hex digits of the UUID.
178
179fip-flags (64 bits)
180 Set the flags for a FIP entry. Use in one of the subnodes of the
181 7atf-fip entry.
182
183fip-align
184 Set the alignment for a FIP entry, FIP entries can be aligned to a
185 particular power-of-two boundary. The default is 1.
186
187Adding new FIP-entry types
188~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
189
190When new FIP entries are defined by TF-A they appear in the
191`TF-A source tree`_. You can use `fip_util.py` to update Binman to support
192new types, then `send a patch`_ to the U-Boot mailing list. There are two
193source files that the tool examples:
194
195- `include/tools_share/firmware_image_package.h` has the UUIDs
196- `tools/fiptool/tbbr_config.c` has the name and descripion for each UUID
197
198To run the tool::
199
Peter Robinsonb52fd3b2024-10-04 11:40:44 +0100200 $ tools/binman/fip_util.py -s /path/to/trusted-firmware-a
Simon Glass3efb2972021-11-23 21:08:59 -0700201 Warning: UUID 'UUID_NON_TRUSTED_WORLD_KEY_CERT' is not mentioned in tbbr_config.c file
202 Existing code in 'tools/binman/fip_util.py' is up-to-date
203
204If it shows there is an update, it writes a new version of `fip_util.py`
205to `fip_util.py.out`. You can change the output file using the `-i` flag.
206If you have a problem, use `-D` to enable traceback debugging.
207
208FIP commentary
209~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
210
211As a side effect of use of UUIDs, FIP does not support multiple
212entries of the same type, such as might be used to store fonts or graphics
213icons, for example. For verified boot it could be used for each part of the
214image (e.g. separate FIPs for A and B) but cannot describe the whole
215firmware image. As with FMAP there is no hierarchy defined, although FMAP
216works around this by having 'section' areas which encompass others. A
217similar workaround would be possible with FIP but is not currently defined.
218
219It is recommended to always add an fdtmap to every image, as well as any
220FIPs so that binman and other tools can access the entire image correctly.
221
222.. _FIP: https://trustedfirmware-a.readthedocs.io/en/latest/design/firmware-design.html#firmware-image-package-fip
223.. _`TF-A source tree`: https://git.trustedfirmware.org/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a.git
Tom Rinibc31e3a2024-08-26 10:49:57 -0600224.. _`send a patch`: https://docs.u-boot.org/en/latest/develop/sending_patches.html
Simon Glass3efb2972021-11-23 21:08:59 -0700225
226
227
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600228.. _etype_blob:
229
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +1300230Entry: blob: Arbitrary binary blob
231----------------------------------
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -0600232
233Note: This should not be used by itself. It is normally used as a parent
234class by other entry types.
235
236Properties / Entry arguments:
237 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
Simon Glass7ba33592018-09-14 04:57:26 -0600238 - compress: Compression algorithm to use:
239 none: No compression
240 lz4: Use lz4 compression (via 'lz4' command-line utility)
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -0600241
242This entry reads data from a file and places it in the entry. The
243default filename is often specified specified by the subclass. See for
Simon Glass537e0062021-03-18 20:24:54 +1300244example the 'u-boot' entry which provides the filename 'u-boot.bin'.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -0600245
Simon Glass7ba33592018-09-14 04:57:26 -0600246If compression is enabled, an extra 'uncomp-size' property is written to
247the node (if enabled with -u) which provides the uncompressed size of the
248data.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -0600249
250
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -0600251
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600252.. _etype_blob_dtb:
253
Simon Glasse219aa42018-09-14 04:57:24 -0600254Entry: blob-dtb: A blob that holds a device tree
255------------------------------------------------
256
257This is a blob containing a device tree. The contents of the blob are
258obtained from the list of available device-tree files, managed by the
259'state' module.
260
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -0700261Additional attributes:
262 prepend: Header used (e.g. 'length')
Simon Glasse219aa42018-09-14 04:57:24 -0600263
264
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -0700265
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600266.. _etype_blob_ext:
267
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +1300268Entry: blob-ext: Externally built binary blob
269---------------------------------------------
Simon Glass5e560182020-07-09 18:39:36 -0600270
271Note: This should not be used by itself. It is normally used as a parent
272class by other entry types.
273
Simon Glass5d94cc62020-07-09 18:39:38 -0600274If the file providing this blob is missing, binman can optionally ignore it
275and produce a broken image with a warning.
276
Simon Glass5e560182020-07-09 18:39:36 -0600277See 'blob' for Properties / Entry arguments.
278
279
280
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600281.. _etype_blob_ext_list:
282
Simon Glass0b00ae62021-11-23 21:09:52 -0700283Entry: blob-ext-list: List of externally built binary blobs
284-----------------------------------------------------------
285
286This is like blob-ext except that a number of blobs can be provided,
287typically with some sort of relationship, e.g. all are DDC parameters.
288
289If any of the external files needed by this llist is missing, binman can
290optionally ignore it and produce a broken image with a warning.
291
292Args:
293 filenames: List of filenames to read and include
294
295
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600296
297.. _etype_blob_named_by_arg:
Simon Glass0b00ae62021-11-23 21:09:52 -0700298
Simon Glassdb168d42018-07-17 13:25:39 -0600299Entry: blob-named-by-arg: A blob entry which gets its filename property from its subclass
300-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
301
302Properties / Entry arguments:
303 - <xxx>-path: Filename containing the contents of this entry (optional,
Simon Glass21db0ff2020-09-01 05:13:54 -0600304 defaults to None)
Simon Glassdb168d42018-07-17 13:25:39 -0600305
306where <xxx> is the blob_fname argument to the constructor.
307
308This entry cannot be used directly. Instead, it is used as a parent class
309for another entry, which defined blob_fname. This parameter is used to
310set the entry-arg or property containing the filename. The entry-arg or
311property is in turn used to set the actual filename.
312
313See cros_ec_rw for an example of this.
314
315
316
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600317.. _etype_blob_phase:
318
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +1300319Entry: blob-phase: Section that holds a phase binary
320----------------------------------------------------
321
322This is a base class that should not normally be used directly. It is used
323when converting a 'u-boot' entry automatically into a 'u-boot-expanded'
324entry; similarly for SPL.
325
326
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600327
328.. _etype_cbfs:
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +1300329
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +1300330Entry: cbfs: Coreboot Filesystem (CBFS)
331---------------------------------------
Simon Glass1de34482019-07-08 13:18:53 -0600332
333A CBFS provides a way to group files into a group. It has a simple directory
334structure and allows the position of individual files to be set, since it is
335designed to support execute-in-place in an x86 SPI-flash device. Where XIP
336is not used, it supports compression and storing ELF files.
337
338CBFS is used by coreboot as its way of orgnanising SPI-flash contents.
339
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300340The contents of the CBFS are defined by subnodes of the cbfs entry, e.g.::
Simon Glass1de34482019-07-08 13:18:53 -0600341
342 cbfs {
343 size = <0x100000>;
344 u-boot {
345 cbfs-type = "raw";
346 };
347 u-boot-dtb {
348 cbfs-type = "raw";
349 };
350 };
351
352This creates a CBFS 1MB in size two files in it: u-boot.bin and u-boot.dtb.
353Note that the size is required since binman does not support calculating it.
354The contents of each entry is just what binman would normally provide if it
355were not a CBFS node. A blob type can be used to import arbitrary files as
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300356with the second subnode below::
Simon Glass1de34482019-07-08 13:18:53 -0600357
358 cbfs {
359 size = <0x100000>;
360 u-boot {
361 cbfs-name = "BOOT";
362 cbfs-type = "raw";
363 };
364
365 dtb {
366 type = "blob";
367 filename = "u-boot.dtb";
368 cbfs-type = "raw";
369 cbfs-compress = "lz4";
Simon Glassc2f1aed2019-07-08 13:18:56 -0600370 cbfs-offset = <0x100000>;
Simon Glass1de34482019-07-08 13:18:53 -0600371 };
372 };
373
374This creates a CBFS 1MB in size with u-boot.bin (named "BOOT") and
375u-boot.dtb (named "dtb") and compressed with the lz4 algorithm.
376
377
378Properties supported in the top-level CBFS node:
379
380cbfs-arch:
381 Defaults to "x86", but you can specify the architecture if needed.
382
383
384Properties supported in the CBFS entry subnodes:
385
386cbfs-name:
387 This is the name of the file created in CBFS. It defaults to the entry
388 name (which is the node name), but you can override it with this
389 property.
390
391cbfs-type:
392 This is the CBFS file type. The following are supported:
393
394 raw:
395 This is a 'raw' file, although compression is supported. It can be
396 used to store any file in CBFS.
397
398 stage:
399 This is an ELF file that has been loaded (i.e. mapped to memory), so
400 appears in the CBFS as a flat binary. The input file must be an ELF
401 image, for example this puts "u-boot" (the ELF image) into a 'stage'
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300402 entry::
Simon Glass1de34482019-07-08 13:18:53 -0600403
404 cbfs {
405 size = <0x100000>;
406 u-boot-elf {
407 cbfs-name = "BOOT";
408 cbfs-type = "stage";
409 };
410 };
411
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300412 You can use your own ELF file with something like::
Simon Glass1de34482019-07-08 13:18:53 -0600413
414 cbfs {
415 size = <0x100000>;
416 something {
417 type = "blob";
418 filename = "cbfs-stage.elf";
419 cbfs-type = "stage";
420 };
421 };
422
423 As mentioned, the file is converted to a flat binary, so it is
424 equivalent to adding "u-boot.bin", for example, but with the load and
425 start addresses specified by the ELF. At present there is no option
426 to add a flat binary with a load/start address, similar to the
427 'add-flat-binary' option in cbfstool.
428
Simon Glassc2f1aed2019-07-08 13:18:56 -0600429cbfs-offset:
430 This is the offset of the file's data within the CBFS. It is used to
431 specify where the file should be placed in cases where a fixed position
432 is needed. Typical uses are for code which is not relocatable and must
433 execute in-place from a particular address. This works because SPI flash
434 is generally mapped into memory on x86 devices. The file header is
435 placed before this offset so that the data start lines up exactly with
436 the chosen offset. If this property is not provided, then the file is
437 placed in the next available spot.
Simon Glass1de34482019-07-08 13:18:53 -0600438
439The current implementation supports only a subset of CBFS features. It does
440not support other file types (e.g. payload), adding multiple files (like the
441'files' entry with a pattern supported by binman), putting files at a
442particular offset in the CBFS and a few other things.
443
444Of course binman can create images containing multiple CBFSs, simply by
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300445defining these in the binman config::
Simon Glass1de34482019-07-08 13:18:53 -0600446
447
448 binman {
449 size = <0x800000>;
450 cbfs {
451 offset = <0x100000>;
452 size = <0x100000>;
453 u-boot {
454 cbfs-type = "raw";
455 };
456 u-boot-dtb {
457 cbfs-type = "raw";
458 };
459 };
460
461 cbfs2 {
462 offset = <0x700000>;
463 size = <0x100000>;
464 u-boot {
465 cbfs-type = "raw";
466 };
467 u-boot-dtb {
468 cbfs-type = "raw";
469 };
470 image {
471 type = "blob";
472 filename = "image.jpg";
473 };
474 };
475 };
476
477This creates an 8MB image with two CBFSs, one at offset 1MB, one at 7MB,
478both of size 1MB.
479
480
481
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600482.. _etype_collection:
483
Simon Glasse1915782021-03-21 18:24:31 +1300484Entry: collection: An entry which contains a collection of other entries
485------------------------------------------------------------------------
486
487Properties / Entry arguments:
488 - content: List of phandles to entries to include
489
490This allows reusing the contents of other entries. The contents of the
491listed entries are combined to form this entry. This serves as a useful
492base class for entry types which need to process data from elsewhere in
493the image, not necessarily child entries.
494
Simon Glassbd5cd882022-08-13 11:40:50 -0600495The entries can generally be anywhere in the same image, even if they are in
496a different section from this entry.
497
Simon Glasse1915782021-03-21 18:24:31 +1300498
499
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600500.. _etype_cros_ec_rw:
501
Simon Glassdb168d42018-07-17 13:25:39 -0600502Entry: cros-ec-rw: A blob entry which contains a Chromium OS read-write EC image
503--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
504
505Properties / Entry arguments:
506 - cros-ec-rw-path: Filename containing the EC image
507
508This entry holds a Chromium OS EC (embedded controller) image, for use in
509updating the EC on startup via software sync.
510
511
512
Sughosh Ganu269ee6d2023-08-22 23:09:59 +0530513.. _etype_efi_capsule:
514
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600515Entry: efi-capsule: Generate EFI capsules
516-----------------------------------------
Sughosh Ganu269ee6d2023-08-22 23:09:59 +0530517
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600518The parameters needed for generation of the capsules can
519be provided as properties in the entry.
Sughosh Ganu269ee6d2023-08-22 23:09:59 +0530520
521Properties / Entry arguments:
522 - image-index: Unique number for identifying corresponding
523 payload image. Number between 1 and descriptor count, i.e.
524 the total number of firmware images that can be updated. Mandatory
525 property.
526 - image-guid: Image GUID which will be used for identifying the
527 updatable image on the board. Mandatory property.
528 - hardware-instance: Optional number for identifying unique
529 hardware instance of a device in the system. Default value of 0
530 for images where value is not to be used.
531 - fw-version: Value of image version that can be put on the capsule
532 through the Firmware Management Protocol(FMP) header.
533 - monotonic-count: Count used when signing an image.
534 - private-key: Path to PEM formatted .key private key file. Mandatory
535 property for generating signed capsules.
536 - public-key-cert: Path to PEM formatted .crt public key certificate
537 file. Mandatory property for generating signed capsules.
538 - oem-flags - OEM flags to be passed through capsule header.
539
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600540Since this is a subclass of Entry_section, all properties of the parent
541class also apply here. Except for the properties stated as mandatory, the
542rest of the properties are optional.
Sughosh Ganu269ee6d2023-08-22 23:09:59 +0530543
544For more details on the description of the capsule format, and the capsule
545update functionality, refer Section 8.5 and Chapter 23 in the `UEFI
546specification`_.
547
548The capsule parameters like image index and image GUID are passed as
549properties in the entry. The payload to be used in the capsule is to be
550provided as a subnode of the capsule entry.
551
552A typical capsule entry node would then look something like this::
553
554 capsule {
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600555 type = "efi-capsule";
556 image-index = <0x1>;
557 /* Image GUID for testing capsule update */
558 image-guid = SANDBOX_UBOOT_IMAGE_GUID;
559 hardware-instance = <0x0>;
560 private-key = "path/to/the/private/key";
561 public-key-cert = "path/to/the/public-key-cert";
562 oem-flags = <0x8000>;
Sughosh Ganu269ee6d2023-08-22 23:09:59 +0530563
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600564 u-boot {
565 };
Sughosh Ganu269ee6d2023-08-22 23:09:59 +0530566 };
567
568In the above example, the capsule payload is the U-Boot image. The
569capsule entry would read the contents of the payload and put them
570into the capsule. Any external file can also be specified as the
571payload using the blob-ext subnode.
572
573.. _`UEFI specification`: https://uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/UEFI_Spec_2_10_Aug29.pdf
574
575
576
Sughosh Ganu6b2d18a2023-10-10 14:40:59 +0530577.. _etype_efi_empty_capsule:
578
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600579Entry: efi-empty-capsule: Generate EFI empty capsules
580-----------------------------------------------------
Sughosh Ganu6b2d18a2023-10-10 14:40:59 +0530581
582The parameters needed for generation of the empty capsules can
583be provided as properties in the entry.
584
585Properties / Entry arguments:
586 - image-guid: Image GUID which will be used for identifying the
587 updatable image on the board. Mandatory for accept capsule.
588 - capsule-type - String to indicate type of capsule to generate. Valid
589 values are 'accept' and 'revert'.
590
591For more details on the description of the capsule format, and the capsule
592update functionality, refer Section 8.5 and Chapter 23 in the `UEFI
593specification`_. For more information on the empty capsule, refer the
594sections 2.3.2 and 2.3.3 in the `Dependable Boot specification`_.
595
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600596A typical accept empty capsule entry node would then look something like
597this::
Sughosh Ganu6b2d18a2023-10-10 14:40:59 +0530598
599 empty-capsule {
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600600 type = "efi-empty-capsule";
601 /* GUID of image being accepted */
602 image-type-id = SANDBOX_UBOOT_IMAGE_GUID;
603 capsule-type = "accept";
Sughosh Ganu6b2d18a2023-10-10 14:40:59 +0530604 };
605
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600606A typical revert empty capsule entry node would then look something like
607this::
Sughosh Ganu6b2d18a2023-10-10 14:40:59 +0530608
609 empty-capsule {
Simon Glass86e1b822024-06-23 11:55:02 -0600610 type = "efi-empty-capsule";
611 capsule-type = "revert";
Sughosh Ganu6b2d18a2023-10-10 14:40:59 +0530612 };
613
614The empty capsules do not have any input payload image.
615
616.. _`UEFI specification`: https://uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/UEFI_Spec_2_10_Aug29.pdf
617.. _`Dependable Boot specification`: https://git.codelinaro.org/linaro/dependable-boot/mbfw/uploads/6f7ddfe3be24e18d4319e108a758d02e/mbfw.pdf
618
619
620
Christian Taedckebc454362023-07-17 09:05:52 +0200621.. _etype_encrypted:
622
623Entry: encrypted: Externally built encrypted binary blob
624--------------------------------------------------------
625
626This entry provides the functionality to include information about how to
627decrypt an encrypted binary. This information is added to the
628resulting device tree by adding a new cipher node in the entry's parent
629node (i.e. the binary).
630
631The key that must be used to decrypt the binary is either directly embedded
632in the device tree or indirectly by specifying a key source. The key source
633can be used as an id of a key that is stored in an external device.
634
635Using an embedded key
636~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
637
638This is an example using an embedded key::
639
640 blob-ext {
641 filename = "encrypted-blob.bin";
642 };
643
644 encrypted {
645 algo = "aes256-gcm";
646 iv-filename = "encrypted-blob.bin.iv";
647 key-filename = "encrypted-blob.bin.key";
648 };
649
650This entry generates the following device tree structure form the example
651above::
652
653 data = [...]
654 cipher {
655 algo = "aes256-gcm";
656 key = <0x...>;
657 iv = <0x...>;
658 };
659
660The data property is generated by the blob-ext etype, the cipher node and
661its content is generated by this etype.
662
663Using an external key
664~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
665
666Instead of embedding the key itself into the device tree, it is also
667possible to address an externally stored key by specifying a 'key-source'
668instead of the 'key'::
669
670 blob-ext {
671 filename = "encrypted-blob.bin";
672 };
673
674 encrypted {
675 algo = "aes256-gcm";
676 iv-filename = "encrypted-blob.bin.iv";
677 key-source = "external-key-id";
678 };
679
680This entry generates the following device tree structure form the example
681above::
682
683 data = [...]
684 cipher {
685 algo = "aes256-gcm";
686 key-source = "external-key-id";
687 iv = <0x...>;
688 };
689
690Properties
691~~~~~~~~~~
692
693Properties / Entry arguments:
694 - algo: The encryption algorithm. Currently no algorithm is supported
695 out-of-the-box. Certain algorithms will be added in future
696 patches.
697 - iv-filename: The name of the file containing the initialization
698 vector (in short iv). See
699 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Initialization_vector
700 - key-filename: The name of the file containing the key. Either
701 key-filename or key-source must be provided.
702 - key-source: The key that should be used. Either key-filename or
703 key-source must be provided.
704
705
706
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600707.. _etype_fdtmap:
708
Simon Glass0f621332019-07-08 14:25:27 -0600709Entry: fdtmap: An entry which contains an FDT map
710-------------------------------------------------
711
712Properties / Entry arguments:
713 None
714
715An FDT map is just a header followed by an FDT containing a list of all the
Simon Glassfb30e292019-07-20 12:23:51 -0600716entries in the image. The root node corresponds to the image node in the
717original FDT, and an image-name property indicates the image name in that
718original tree.
Simon Glass0f621332019-07-08 14:25:27 -0600719
720The header is the string _FDTMAP_ followed by 8 unused bytes.
721
722When used, this entry will be populated with an FDT map which reflects the
723entries in the current image. Hierarchy is preserved, and all offsets and
724sizes are included.
725
726Note that the -u option must be provided to ensure that binman updates the
727FDT with the position of each entry.
728
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300729Example output for a simple image with U-Boot and an FDT map::
Simon Glass0f621332019-07-08 14:25:27 -0600730
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300731 / {
732 image-name = "binman";
733 size = <0x00000112>;
Simon Glass0f621332019-07-08 14:25:27 -0600734 image-pos = <0x00000000>;
735 offset = <0x00000000>;
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300736 u-boot {
737 size = <0x00000004>;
738 image-pos = <0x00000000>;
739 offset = <0x00000000>;
740 };
741 fdtmap {
742 size = <0x0000010e>;
743 image-pos = <0x00000004>;
744 offset = <0x00000004>;
745 };
Simon Glass0f621332019-07-08 14:25:27 -0600746 };
Simon Glass0f621332019-07-08 14:25:27 -0600747
Simon Glassfb30e292019-07-20 12:23:51 -0600748If allow-repack is used then 'orig-offset' and 'orig-size' properties are
749added as necessary. See the binman README.
750
Simon Glass637958f2021-11-23 21:09:50 -0700751When extracting files, an alternative 'fdt' format is available for fdtmaps.
752Use `binman extract -F fdt ...` to use this. It will export a devicetree,
753without the fdtmap header, so it can be viewed with `fdtdump`.
Simon Glass0f621332019-07-08 14:25:27 -0600754
755
Simon Glass637958f2021-11-23 21:09:50 -0700756
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600757.. _etype_files:
758
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +1300759Entry: files: A set of files arranged in a section
760--------------------------------------------------
Simon Glassac6328c2018-09-14 04:57:28 -0600761
762Properties / Entry arguments:
763 - pattern: Filename pattern to match the files to include
Simon Glass51d02ad2020-10-26 17:40:07 -0600764 - files-compress: Compression algorithm to use:
Simon Glassac6328c2018-09-14 04:57:28 -0600765 none: No compression
766 lz4: Use lz4 compression (via 'lz4' command-line utility)
Simon Glass3f093a32021-03-18 20:24:53 +1300767 - files-align: Align each file to the given alignment
Simon Glassac6328c2018-09-14 04:57:28 -0600768
769This entry reads a number of files and places each in a separate sub-entry
770within this entry. To access these you need to enable device-tree updates
771at run-time so you can obtain the file positions.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -0600772
773
Simon Glassac6328c2018-09-14 04:57:28 -0600774
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600775.. _etype_fill:
776
Simon Glass53f53992018-07-17 13:25:40 -0600777Entry: fill: An entry which is filled to a particular byte value
778----------------------------------------------------------------
779
780Properties / Entry arguments:
781 - fill-byte: Byte to use to fill the entry
782
783Note that the size property must be set since otherwise this entry does not
784know how large it should be.
785
786You can often achieve the same effect using the pad-byte property of the
787overall image, in that the space between entries will then be padded with
788that byte. But this entry is sometimes useful for explicitly setting the
789byte value of a region.
790
791
Simon Glassc7b010d2020-07-09 18:39:45 -0600792
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -0600793.. _etype_fit:
794
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +1300795Entry: fit: Flat Image Tree (FIT)
796---------------------------------
Simon Glass45d556d2020-07-09 18:39:45 -0600797
798This calls mkimage to create a FIT (U-Boot Flat Image Tree) based on the
799input provided.
800
801Nodes for the FIT should be written out in the binman configuration just as
802they would be in a file passed to mkimage.
803
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300804For example, this creates an image containing a FIT with U-Boot SPL::
Simon Glass45d556d2020-07-09 18:39:45 -0600805
806 binman {
807 fit {
808 description = "Test FIT";
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600809 fit,fdt-list = "of-list";
Simon Glass45d556d2020-07-09 18:39:45 -0600810
811 images {
812 kernel@1 {
813 description = "SPL";
814 os = "u-boot";
815 type = "rkspi";
816 arch = "arm";
817 compression = "none";
818 load = <0>;
819 entry = <0>;
820
821 u-boot-spl {
822 };
823 };
824 };
825 };
826 };
827
Simon Glass912339f2022-02-08 11:50:03 -0700828More complex setups can be created, with generated nodes, as described
829below.
830
831Properties (in the 'fit' node itself)
832~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
833
834Special properties have a `fit,` prefix, indicating that they should be
835processed but not included in the final FIT.
836
837The top-level 'fit' node supports the following special properties:
838
839 fit,external-offset
840 Indicates that the contents of the FIT are external and provides the
841 external offset. This is passed to mkimage via the -E and -p flags.
842
Jonas Karlmanc59ea892023-01-21 19:01:39 +0000843 fit,align
844 Indicates what alignment to use for the FIT and its external data,
845 and provides the alignment to use. This is passed to mkimage via
846 the -B flag.
847
Simon Glass912339f2022-02-08 11:50:03 -0700848 fit,fdt-list
849 Indicates the entry argument which provides the list of device tree
850 files for the gen-fdt-nodes operation (as below). This is often
851 `of-list` meaning that `-a of-list="dtb1 dtb2..."` should be passed
852 to binman.
853
Simon Glass2d94c422023-07-18 07:23:59 -0600854 fit,fdt-list-val
855 As an alternative to fit,fdt-list the list of device tree files
856 can be provided in this property as a string list, e.g.::
857
858 fit,fdt-list-val = "dtb1", "dtb2";
859
Simon Glasscd2783e2024-07-20 11:49:46 +0100860 fit,fdt-list-dir
861 As an alternative to fit,fdt-list the list of device tree files
862 can be provided as a directory. Each .dtb file in the directory is
863 processed, , e.g.::
864
865 fit,fdt-list-dir = "arch/arm/dts
866
Alexander Kochetkova730a282024-09-16 11:24:46 +0300867 fit,sign
868 Enable signing FIT images via mkimage as described in
869 verified-boot.rst. If the property is found, the private keys path is
870 detected among binman include directories and passed to mkimage via
871 -k flag. All the keys required for signing FIT must be available at
872 time of signing and must be located in single include directory.
873
Paul HENRYS65cea562024-11-25 18:47:16 +0100874 fit,encrypt
875 Enable data encryption in FIT images via mkimage. If the property
876 is found, the keys path is detected among binman include
877 directories and passed to mkimage via -k flag. All the keys
878 required for encrypting the FIT must be available at the time of
879 encrypting and must be located in a single include directory.
880
Simon Glass912339f2022-02-08 11:50:03 -0700881Substitutions
882~~~~~~~~~~~~~
883
884Node names and property values support a basic string-substitution feature.
885Available substitutions for '@' nodes (and property values) are:
886
887SEQ:
888 Sequence number of the generated fdt (1, 2, ...)
889NAME
890 Name of the dtb as provided (i.e. without adding '.dtb')
891
892The `default` property, if present, will be automatically set to the name
893if of configuration whose devicetree matches the `default-dt` entry
894argument, e.g. with `-a default-dt=sun50i-a64-pine64-lts`.
895
896Available substitutions for property values in these nodes are:
897
898DEFAULT-SEQ:
899 Sequence number of the default fdt, as provided by the 'default-dt'
900 entry argument
901
902Available operations
903~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
904
905You can add an operation to an '@' node to indicate which operation is
906required::
907
908 @fdt-SEQ {
909 fit,operation = "gen-fdt-nodes";
910 ...
911 };
912
913Available operations are:
914
915gen-fdt-nodes
916 Generate FDT nodes as above. This is the default if there is no
917 `fit,operation` property.
918
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -0700919split-elf
920 Split an ELF file into a separate node for each segment.
921
Simon Glass912339f2022-02-08 11:50:03 -0700922Generating nodes from an FDT list (gen-fdt-nodes)
923~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
924
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600925U-Boot supports creating fdt and config nodes automatically. To do this,
Simon Glass9f1c6b92022-02-08 11:50:02 -0700926pass an `of-list` property (e.g. `-a of-list=file1 file2`). This tells
927binman that you want to generates nodes for two files: `file1.dtb` and
928`file2.dtb`. The `fit,fdt-list` property (see above) indicates that
929`of-list` should be used. If the property is missing you will get an error.
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600930
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300931Then add a 'generator node', a node with a name starting with '@'::
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600932
933 images {
934 @fdt-SEQ {
935 description = "fdt-NAME";
936 type = "flat_dt";
937 compression = "none";
938 };
939 };
940
Simon Glass9f1c6b92022-02-08 11:50:02 -0700941This tells binman to create nodes `fdt-1` and `fdt-2` for each of your two
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600942files. All the properties you specify will be included in the node. This
943node acts like a template to generate the nodes. The generator node itself
944does not appear in the output - it is replaced with what binman generates.
Simon Glass9f1c6b92022-02-08 11:50:02 -0700945A 'data' property is created with the contents of the FDT file.
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600946
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +1300947You can create config nodes in a similar way::
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600948
949 configurations {
950 default = "@config-DEFAULT-SEQ";
951 @config-SEQ {
952 description = "NAME";
Samuel Holland91079ac2020-10-21 21:12:14 -0500953 firmware = "atf";
954 loadables = "uboot";
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600955 fdt = "fdt-SEQ";
Simon Glass5f7aadf2024-07-20 11:49:47 +0100956 fit,compatible; // optional
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600957 };
958 };
959
Simon Glass9f1c6b92022-02-08 11:50:02 -0700960This tells binman to create nodes `config-1` and `config-2`, i.e. a config
961for each of your two files.
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600962
Simon Glassa435cd12020-09-01 05:13:59 -0600963Note that if no devicetree files are provided (with '-a of-list' as above)
964then no nodes will be generated.
965
Simon Glass5f7aadf2024-07-20 11:49:47 +0100966The 'fit,compatible' property (if present) is replaced with the compatible
967string from the root node of the devicetree, so that things work correctly
968with FIT's configuration-matching algortihm.
969
Simon Glassa04b9942024-07-20 11:49:48 +0100970Dealing with phases
971~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
972
973FIT can be used to load firmware. In this case it may be necessary to run
974the devicetree for each model through fdtgrep to remove unwanted properties.
975The 'fit,fdt-phase' property can be provided to indicate the phase for which
976the devicetree is intended.
977
978For example this indicates that the FDT should be processed for VPL::
979
980 images {
981 @fdt-SEQ {
982 description = "fdt-NAME";
983 type = "flat_dt";
984 compression = "none";
985 fit,fdt-phase = "vpl";
986 };
987 };
988
989Using this mechanism, it is possible to generate a FIT which can provide VPL
990images for multiple models, with TPL selecting the correct model to use. The
991same approach can of course be used for SPL images.
992
993Note that the `of-spl-remove-props` entryarg can be used to indicate
994additional properties to remove. It is often used to remove properties like
995`clock-names` and `pinctrl-names` which are not needed in SPL builds.
996
997See :ref:`fdtgrep_filter` for more information.
998
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -0700999Generating nodes from an ELF file (split-elf)
1000~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1001
1002This uses the node as a template to generate multiple nodes. The following
1003special properties are available:
1004
1005split-elf
1006 Split an ELF file into a separate node for each segment. This uses the
1007 node as a template to generate multiple nodes. The following special
1008 properties are available:
1009
1010 fit,load
1011 Generates a `load = <...>` property with the load address of the
1012 segment
1013
1014 fit,entry
1015 Generates a `entry = <...>` property with the entry address of the
1016 ELF. This is only produced for the first entry
1017
1018 fit,data
1019 Generates a `data = <...>` property with the contents of the segment
1020
Jonas Karlman490f73c2023-01-21 19:02:12 +00001021 fit,firmware
1022 Generates a `firmware = <...>` property. Provides a list of possible
1023 nodes to be used as the `firmware` property value. The first valid
1024 node is picked as the firmware. Any remaining valid nodes is
1025 prepended to the `loadable` property generated by `fit,loadables`
1026
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001027 fit,loadables
1028 Generates a `loadable = <...>` property with a list of the generated
1029 nodes (including all nodes if this operation is used multiple times)
1030
1031
1032Here is an example showing ATF, TEE and a device tree all combined::
1033
1034 fit {
1035 description = "test-desc";
1036 #address-cells = <1>;
1037 fit,fdt-list = "of-list";
1038
1039 images {
1040 u-boot {
1041 description = "U-Boot (64-bit)";
1042 type = "standalone";
1043 os = "U-Boot";
1044 arch = "arm64";
1045 compression = "none";
Simon Glass72cc5382022-10-20 18:22:39 -06001046 load = <CONFIG_TEXT_BASE>;
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001047 u-boot-nodtb {
1048 };
1049 };
1050 @fdt-SEQ {
1051 description = "fdt-NAME.dtb";
1052 type = "flat_dt";
1053 compression = "none";
1054 };
1055 @atf-SEQ {
1056 fit,operation = "split-elf";
1057 description = "ARM Trusted Firmware";
1058 type = "firmware";
1059 arch = "arm64";
1060 os = "arm-trusted-firmware";
1061 compression = "none";
1062 fit,load;
1063 fit,entry;
1064 fit,data;
1065
1066 atf-bl31 {
1067 };
Jonas Karlmand2c7d902023-01-21 19:01:48 +00001068 hash {
1069 algo = "sha256";
1070 };
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001071 };
1072
1073 @tee-SEQ {
1074 fit,operation = "split-elf";
1075 description = "TEE";
1076 type = "tee";
1077 arch = "arm64";
1078 os = "tee";
1079 compression = "none";
1080 fit,load;
1081 fit,entry;
1082 fit,data;
1083
1084 tee-os {
1085 };
Jonas Karlmand2c7d902023-01-21 19:01:48 +00001086 hash {
1087 algo = "sha256";
1088 };
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001089 };
1090 };
1091
1092 configurations {
1093 default = "@config-DEFAULT-SEQ";
1094 @config-SEQ {
1095 description = "conf-NAME.dtb";
1096 fdt = "fdt-SEQ";
Jonas Karlman490f73c2023-01-21 19:02:12 +00001097 fit,firmware = "atf-1", "u-boot";
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001098 fit,loadables;
1099 };
1100 };
1101 };
1102
1103If ATF-BL31 is available, this generates a node for each segment in the
1104ELF file, for example::
1105
1106 images {
1107 atf-1 {
1108 data = <...contents of first segment...>;
1109 data-offset = <0x00000000>;
1110 entry = <0x00040000>;
1111 load = <0x00040000>;
1112 compression = "none";
1113 os = "arm-trusted-firmware";
1114 arch = "arm64";
1115 type = "firmware";
1116 description = "ARM Trusted Firmware";
Jonas Karlmand2c7d902023-01-21 19:01:48 +00001117 hash {
1118 algo = "sha256";
1119 value = <...hash of first segment...>;
1120 };
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001121 };
1122 atf-2 {
1123 data = <...contents of second segment...>;
1124 load = <0xff3b0000>;
1125 compression = "none";
1126 os = "arm-trusted-firmware";
1127 arch = "arm64";
1128 type = "firmware";
1129 description = "ARM Trusted Firmware";
Jonas Karlmand2c7d902023-01-21 19:01:48 +00001130 hash {
1131 algo = "sha256";
1132 value = <...hash of second segment...>;
1133 };
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001134 };
1135 };
1136
1137The same applies for OP-TEE if that is available.
1138
1139If each binary is not available, the relevant template node (@atf-SEQ or
1140@tee-SEQ) is removed from the output.
1141
1142This also generates a `config-xxx` node for each device tree in `of-list`.
1143Note that the U-Boot build system uses `-a of-list=$(CONFIG_OF_LIST)`
1144so you can use `CONFIG_OF_LIST` to define that list. In this example it is
1145set up for `firefly-rk3399` with a single device tree and the default set
1146with `-a default-dt=$(CONFIG_DEFAULT_DEVICE_TREE)`, so the resulting output
1147is::
1148
1149 configurations {
1150 default = "config-1";
1151 config-1 {
Jonas Karlman490f73c2023-01-21 19:02:12 +00001152 loadables = "u-boot", "atf-2", "atf-3", "tee-1", "tee-2";
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001153 description = "rk3399-firefly.dtb";
1154 fdt = "fdt-1";
Jonas Karlman490f73c2023-01-21 19:02:12 +00001155 firmware = "atf-1";
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001156 };
1157 };
1158
Jonas Karlman490f73c2023-01-21 19:02:12 +00001159U-Boot SPL can then load the firmware (ATF) and all the loadables (U-Boot
1160proper, ATF and TEE), then proceed with the boot.
Simon Glass5f423422022-03-05 20:19:12 -07001161
Simon Glass45d556d2020-07-09 18:39:45 -06001162
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001163
1164.. _etype_fmap:
Simon Glass45d556d2020-07-09 18:39:45 -06001165
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001166Entry: fmap: An entry which contains an Fmap section
1167----------------------------------------------------
1168
1169Properties / Entry arguments:
1170 None
1171
1172FMAP is a simple format used by flashrom, an open-source utility for
1173reading and writing the SPI flash, typically on x86 CPUs. The format
1174provides flashrom with a list of areas, so it knows what it in the flash.
1175It can then read or write just a single area, instead of the whole flash.
1176
1177The format is defined by the flashrom project, in the file lib/fmap.h -
1178see www.flashrom.org/Flashrom for more information.
1179
1180When used, this entry will be populated with an FMAP which reflects the
1181entries in the current image. Note that any hierarchy is squashed, since
Simon Glassb1d414c2021-04-03 11:05:10 +13001182FMAP does not support this. Sections are represented as an area appearing
1183before its contents, so that it is possible to reconstruct the hierarchy
1184from the FMAP by using the offset information. This convention does not
1185seem to be documented, but is used in Chromium OS.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001186
Simon Glasscda991e2023-02-12 17:11:15 -07001187To mark an area as preserved, use the normal 'preserved' flag in the entry.
1188This will result in the corresponding FMAP area having the
1189FMAP_AREA_PRESERVE flag. This flag does not automatically propagate down to
1190child entries.
1191
Simon Glassb1d414c2021-04-03 11:05:10 +13001192CBFS entries appear as a single entry, i.e. the sub-entries are ignored.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001193
1194
Simon Glassb1d414c2021-04-03 11:05:10 +13001195
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001196.. _etype_gbb:
1197
Simon Glassc1ae83c2018-07-17 13:25:44 -06001198Entry: gbb: An entry which contains a Chromium OS Google Binary Block
1199---------------------------------------------------------------------
1200
1201Properties / Entry arguments:
1202 - hardware-id: Hardware ID to use for this build (a string)
1203 - keydir: Directory containing the public keys to use
1204 - bmpblk: Filename containing images used by recovery
1205
1206Chromium OS uses a GBB to store various pieces of information, in particular
1207the root and recovery keys that are used to verify the boot process. Some
1208more details are here:
1209
1210 https://www.chromium.org/chromium-os/firmware-porting-guide/2-concepts
1211
1212but note that the page dates from 2013 so is quite out of date. See
1213README.chromium for how to obtain the required keys and tools.
1214
1215
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001216
1217.. _etype_image_header:
Simon Glassc1ae83c2018-07-17 13:25:44 -06001218
Simon Glasscec34ba2019-07-08 14:25:28 -06001219Entry: image-header: An entry which contains a pointer to the FDT map
1220---------------------------------------------------------------------
1221
1222Properties / Entry arguments:
1223 location: Location of header ("start" or "end" of image). This is
1224 optional. If omitted then the entry must have an offset property.
1225
1226This adds an 8-byte entry to the start or end of the image, pointing to the
1227location of the FDT map. The format is a magic number followed by an offset
1228from the start or end of the image, in twos-compliment format.
1229
1230This entry must be in the top-level part of the image.
1231
1232NOTE: If the location is at the start/end, you will probably need to specify
1233sort-by-offset for the image, unless you actually put the image header
1234first/last in the entry list.
1235
1236
1237
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001238.. _etype_intel_cmc:
1239
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001240Entry: intel-cmc: Intel Chipset Micro Code (CMC) file
1241-----------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001242
1243Properties / Entry arguments:
1244 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1245
1246This file contains microcode for some devices in a special format. An
1247example filename is 'Microcode/C0_22211.BIN'.
1248
1249See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1250
1251
1252
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001253.. _etype_intel_descriptor:
1254
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001255Entry: intel-descriptor: Intel flash descriptor block (4KB)
1256-----------------------------------------------------------
1257
1258Properties / Entry arguments:
1259 filename: Filename of file containing the descriptor. This is typically
1260 a 4KB binary file, sometimes called 'descriptor.bin'
1261
1262This entry is placed at the start of flash and provides information about
1263the SPI flash regions. In particular it provides the base address and
1264size of the ME (Management Engine) region, allowing us to place the ME
1265binary in the right place.
1266
1267With this entry in your image, the position of the 'intel-me' entry will be
1268fixed in the image, which avoids you needed to specify an offset for that
1269region. This is useful, because it is not possible to change the position
1270of the ME region without updating the descriptor.
1271
1272See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1273
1274
1275
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001276.. _etype_intel_fit:
1277
Simon Glass232f90c2019-08-24 07:22:50 -06001278Entry: intel-fit: Intel Firmware Image Table (FIT)
1279--------------------------------------------------
1280
1281This entry contains a dummy FIT as required by recent Intel CPUs. The FIT
1282contains information about the firmware and microcode available in the
1283image.
1284
1285At present binman only supports a basic FIT with no microcode.
1286
1287
1288
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001289.. _etype_intel_fit_ptr:
1290
Simon Glass232f90c2019-08-24 07:22:50 -06001291Entry: intel-fit-ptr: Intel Firmware Image Table (FIT) pointer
1292--------------------------------------------------------------
1293
1294This entry contains a pointer to the FIT. It is required to be at address
12950xffffffc0 in the image.
1296
1297
1298
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001299.. _etype_intel_fsp:
1300
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001301Entry: intel-fsp: Intel Firmware Support Package (FSP) file
1302-----------------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001303
1304Properties / Entry arguments:
1305 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1306
1307This file contains binary blobs which are used on some devices to make the
1308platform work. U-Boot executes this code since it is not possible to set up
1309the hardware using U-Boot open-source code. Documentation is typically not
1310available in sufficient detail to allow this.
1311
1312An example filename is 'FSP/QUEENSBAY_FSP_GOLD_001_20-DECEMBER-2013.fd'
1313
1314See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1315
1316
1317
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001318.. _etype_intel_fsp_m:
1319
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001320Entry: intel-fsp-m: Intel Firmware Support Package (FSP) memory init
1321--------------------------------------------------------------------
Simon Glassba7985d2019-08-24 07:23:07 -06001322
1323Properties / Entry arguments:
1324 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1325
1326This file contains a binary blob which is used on some devices to set up
1327SDRAM. U-Boot executes this code in SPL so that it can make full use of
1328memory. Documentation is typically not available in sufficient detail to
1329allow U-Boot do this this itself..
1330
1331An example filename is 'fsp_m.bin'
1332
1333See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1334
1335
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001336
1337.. _etype_intel_fsp_s:
Simon Glassba7985d2019-08-24 07:23:07 -06001338
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001339Entry: intel-fsp-s: Intel Firmware Support Package (FSP) silicon init
1340---------------------------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass4d9086d2019-10-20 21:31:35 -06001341
1342Properties / Entry arguments:
1343 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1344
1345This file contains a binary blob which is used on some devices to set up
1346the silicon. U-Boot executes this code in U-Boot proper after SDRAM is
1347running, so that it can make full use of memory. Documentation is typically
1348not available in sufficient detail to allow U-Boot do this this itself.
1349
1350An example filename is 'fsp_s.bin'
1351
1352See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1353
1354
1355
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001356.. _etype_intel_fsp_t:
1357
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001358Entry: intel-fsp-t: Intel Firmware Support Package (FSP) temp ram init
1359----------------------------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass9ea87b22019-10-20 21:31:36 -06001360
1361Properties / Entry arguments:
1362 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1363
1364This file contains a binary blob which is used on some devices to set up
1365temporary memory (Cache-as-RAM or CAR). U-Boot executes this code in TPL so
1366that it has access to memory for its stack and initial storage.
1367
1368An example filename is 'fsp_t.bin'
1369
1370See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1371
1372
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001373
1374.. _etype_intel_ifwi:
Simon Glass9ea87b22019-10-20 21:31:36 -06001375
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001376Entry: intel-ifwi: Intel Integrated Firmware Image (IFWI) file
1377--------------------------------------------------------------
Simon Glassc2f1aed2019-07-08 13:18:56 -06001378
1379Properties / Entry arguments:
1380 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry. This is either the
1381 IFWI file itself, or a file that can be converted into one using a
1382 tool
1383 - convert-fit: If present this indicates that the ifwitool should be
1384 used to convert the provided file into a IFWI.
1385
1386This file contains code and data used by the SoC that is required to make
1387it work. It includes U-Boot TPL, microcode, things related to the CSE
1388(Converged Security Engine, the microcontroller that loads all the firmware)
1389and other items beyond the wit of man.
1390
1391A typical filename is 'ifwi.bin' for an IFWI file, or 'fitimage.bin' for a
1392file that will be converted to an IFWI.
1393
1394The position of this entry is generally set by the intel-descriptor entry.
1395
1396The contents of the IFWI are specified by the subnodes of the IFWI node.
1397Each subnode describes an entry which is placed into the IFWFI with a given
1398sub-partition (and optional entry name).
1399
Simon Glass8a5e2492019-08-24 07:22:47 -06001400Properties for subnodes:
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +13001401 - ifwi-subpart: sub-parition to put this entry into, e.g. "IBBP"
1402 - ifwi-entry: entry name t use, e.g. "IBBL"
1403 - ifwi-replace: if present, indicates that the item should be replaced
1404 in the IFWI. Otherwise it is added.
Simon Glass8a5e2492019-08-24 07:22:47 -06001405
Simon Glassc2f1aed2019-07-08 13:18:56 -06001406See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1407
1408
1409
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001410.. _etype_intel_me:
1411
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001412Entry: intel-me: Intel Management Engine (ME) file
1413--------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001414
1415Properties / Entry arguments:
1416 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1417
1418This file contains code used by the SoC that is required to make it work.
1419The Management Engine is like a background task that runs things that are
Thomas Hebbfd37f242019-11-13 18:18:03 -08001420not clearly documented, but may include keyboard, display and network
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001421access. For platform that use ME it is not possible to disable it. U-Boot
1422does not directly execute code in the ME binary.
1423
1424A typical filename is 'me.bin'.
1425
Simon Glassc4056b82019-07-08 13:18:38 -06001426The position of this entry is generally set by the intel-descriptor entry.
1427
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001428See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1429
1430
1431
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001432.. _etype_intel_mrc:
1433
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001434Entry: intel-mrc: Intel Memory Reference Code (MRC) file
1435--------------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001436
1437Properties / Entry arguments:
1438 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1439
1440This file contains code for setting up the SDRAM on some Intel systems. This
1441is executed by U-Boot when needed early during startup. A typical filename
1442is 'mrc.bin'.
1443
1444See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1445
1446
1447
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001448.. _etype_intel_refcode:
1449
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001450Entry: intel-refcode: Intel Reference Code file
1451-----------------------------------------------
Simon Glass17b84eb2019-05-17 22:00:53 -06001452
1453Properties / Entry arguments:
1454 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1455
1456This file contains code for setting up the platform on some Intel systems.
1457This is executed by U-Boot when needed early during startup. A typical
1458filename is 'refcode.bin'.
1459
1460See README.x86 for information about x86 binary blobs.
1461
1462
1463
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001464.. _etype_intel_vbt:
1465
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001466Entry: intel-vbt: Intel Video BIOS Table (VBT) file
1467---------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001468
1469Properties / Entry arguments:
1470 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1471
1472This file contains code that sets up the integrated graphics subsystem on
1473some Intel SoCs. U-Boot executes this when the display is started up.
1474
1475See README.x86 for information about Intel binary blobs.
1476
1477
1478
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001479.. _etype_intel_vga:
1480
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001481Entry: intel-vga: Intel Video Graphics Adaptor (VGA) file
1482---------------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001483
1484Properties / Entry arguments:
1485 - filename: Filename of file to read into entry
1486
1487This file contains code that sets up the integrated graphics subsystem on
1488some Intel SoCs. U-Boot executes this when the display is started up.
1489
1490This is similar to the VBT file but in a different format.
1491
1492See README.x86 for information about Intel binary blobs.
1493
1494
1495
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001496.. _etype_mkimage:
1497
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001498Entry: mkimage: Binary produced by mkimage
1499------------------------------------------
Simon Glass48f3aad2020-07-09 18:39:31 -06001500
1501Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glass42074dc2022-08-13 11:40:47 -06001502 - args: Arguments to pass
Simon Glass8fbca772022-08-13 11:40:48 -06001503 - data-to-imagename: Indicates that the -d data should be passed in as
1504 the image name also (-n)
Quentin Schulz9b5c6482022-09-02 15:10:48 +02001505 - multiple-data-files: boolean to tell binman to pass all files as
1506 datafiles to mkimage instead of creating a temporary file the result
1507 of datafiles concatenation
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001508 - filename: filename of output binary generated by mkimage
Simon Glass48f3aad2020-07-09 18:39:31 -06001509
Simon Glass42074dc2022-08-13 11:40:47 -06001510The data passed to mkimage via the -d flag is collected from subnodes of the
1511mkimage node, e.g.::
Simon Glass48f3aad2020-07-09 18:39:31 -06001512
1513 mkimage {
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001514 filename = "imximage.bin";
Simon Glass48f3aad2020-07-09 18:39:31 -06001515 args = "-n test -T imximage";
1516
1517 u-boot-spl {
1518 };
1519 };
1520
Simon Glass42074dc2022-08-13 11:40:47 -06001521This calls mkimage to create an imximage with `u-boot-spl.bin` as the data
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001522file, with mkimage being called like this::
Simon Glass42074dc2022-08-13 11:40:47 -06001523
1524 mkimage -d <data_file> -n test -T imximage <output_file>
1525
1526The output from mkimage then becomes part of the image produced by
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001527binman but also is written into `imximage.bin` file. If you need to put
1528multiple things in the data file, you can use a section, or just multiple
1529subnodes like this::
Simon Glass42074dc2022-08-13 11:40:47 -06001530
1531 mkimage {
1532 args = "-n test -T imximage";
1533
1534 u-boot-spl {
1535 };
1536
1537 u-boot-tpl {
1538 };
1539 };
Simon Glass48f3aad2020-07-09 18:39:31 -06001540
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001541Note that binman places the contents (here SPL and TPL) into a single file
1542and passes that to mkimage using the -d option.
1543
Quentin Schulz9b5c6482022-09-02 15:10:48 +02001544To pass all datafiles untouched to mkimage::
1545
1546 mkimage {
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001547 args = "-n rk3399 -T rkspi";
1548 multiple-data-files;
Quentin Schulz9b5c6482022-09-02 15:10:48 +02001549
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001550 u-boot-tpl {
1551 };
Quentin Schulz9b5c6482022-09-02 15:10:48 +02001552
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001553 u-boot-spl {
1554 };
Quentin Schulz9b5c6482022-09-02 15:10:48 +02001555 };
1556
1557This calls mkimage to create a Rockchip RK3399-specific first stage
1558bootloader, made of TPL+SPL. Since this first stage bootloader requires to
1559align the TPL and SPL but also some weird hacks that is handled by mkimage
1560directly, binman is told to not perform the concatenation of datafiles prior
1561to passing the data to mkimage.
1562
Simon Glass948dd3a2022-02-08 11:49:58 -07001563To use CONFIG options in the arguments, use a string list instead, as in
1564this example which also produces four arguments::
1565
1566 mkimage {
1567 args = "-n", CONFIG_SYS_SOC, "-T imximage";
1568
1569 u-boot-spl {
1570 };
1571 };
1572
Simon Glass8fbca772022-08-13 11:40:48 -06001573If you need to pass the input data in with the -n argument as well, then use
1574the 'data-to-imagename' property::
1575
1576 mkimage {
1577 args = "-T imximage";
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001578 data-to-imagename;
Simon Glass8fbca772022-08-13 11:40:48 -06001579
1580 u-boot-spl {
1581 };
1582 };
1583
1584That will pass the data to mkimage both as the data file (with -d) and as
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001585the image name (with -n). In both cases, a filename is passed as the
1586argument, with the actual data being in that file.
Simon Glass948dd3a2022-02-08 11:49:58 -07001587
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001588If need to pass different data in with -n, then use an `imagename` subnode::
Simon Glassb1669752022-08-13 11:40:49 -06001589
1590 mkimage {
1591 args = "-T imximage";
1592
1593 imagename {
1594 blob {
1595 filename = "spl/u-boot-spl.cfgout"
1596 };
1597 };
1598
1599 u-boot-spl {
1600 };
1601 };
1602
1603This will pass in u-boot-spl as the input data and the .cfgout file as the
1604-n data.
1605
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001606
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001607
Simon Glassa4948b22023-01-11 16:10:14 -07001608.. _etype_null:
1609
1610Entry: null: An entry which has no contents of its own
1611------------------------------------------------------
1612
1613Note that the size property must be set since otherwise this entry does not
1614know how large it should be.
1615
1616The contents are set by the containing section, e.g. the section's pad
1617byte.
1618
1619
1620
Simon Glass4d972362024-06-23 11:55:03 -06001621.. _etype_nxp_imx8mcst:
1622
1623Entry: nxp-imx8mcst: NXP i.MX8M CST .cfg file generator and cst invoker
1624-----------------------------------------------------------------------
1625
1626Properties / Entry arguments:
1627 - nxp,loader-address - loader address (SPL text base)
1628
1629
1630
1631.. _etype_nxp_imx8mimage:
1632
1633Entry: nxp-imx8mimage: NXP i.MX8M imx8mimage .cfg file generator and mkimage invoker
1634------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1635
1636Properties / Entry arguments:
1637 - nxp,boot-from - device to boot from (e.g. 'sd')
1638 - nxp,loader-address - loader address (SPL text base)
1639 - nxp,rom-version - BootROM version ('2' for i.MX8M Nano and Plus)
1640
1641
1642
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001643.. _etype_opensbi:
Simon Glass48f3aad2020-07-09 18:39:31 -06001644
Bin Mengc0b15742021-05-10 20:23:33 +08001645Entry: opensbi: RISC-V OpenSBI fw_dynamic blob
1646----------------------------------------------
1647
1648Properties / Entry arguments:
1649 - opensbi-path: Filename of file to read into entry. This is typically
1650 called fw_dynamic.bin
1651
1652This entry holds the run-time firmware, typically started by U-Boot SPL.
1653See the U-Boot README for your architecture or board for how to use it. See
1654https://github.com/riscv/opensbi for more information about OpenSBI.
1655
1656
1657
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001658.. _etype_powerpc_mpc85xx_bootpg_resetvec:
1659
Jagdish Gediya311d4842018-09-03 21:35:08 +05301660Entry: powerpc-mpc85xx-bootpg-resetvec: PowerPC mpc85xx bootpg + resetvec code for U-Boot
1661-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1662
1663Properties / Entry arguments:
1664 - filename: Filename of u-boot-br.bin (default 'u-boot-br.bin')
1665
Thomas Hebbfd37f242019-11-13 18:18:03 -08001666This entry is valid for PowerPC mpc85xx cpus. This entry holds
Jagdish Gediya311d4842018-09-03 21:35:08 +05301667'bootpg + resetvec' code for PowerPC mpc85xx CPUs which needs to be
1668placed at offset 'RESET_VECTOR_ADDRESS - 0xffc'.
1669
Simon Glass136dd352020-10-26 17:39:59 -06001670
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001671
1672.. _etype_pre_load:
Simon Glass136dd352020-10-26 17:39:59 -06001673
Philippe Reynesebe96cb2022-03-28 22:57:04 +02001674Entry: pre-load: Pre load image header
1675--------------------------------------
1676
1677Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glass9f571582022-08-13 11:40:43 -06001678 - pre-load-key-path: Path of the directory that store key (provided by
1679 the environment variable PRE_LOAD_KEY_PATH)
Philippe Reynesebe96cb2022-03-28 22:57:04 +02001680 - content: List of phandles to entries to sign
1681 - algo-name: Hash and signature algo to use for the signature
1682 - padding-name: Name of the padding (pkcs-1.5 or pss)
1683 - key-name: Filename of the private key to sign
1684 - header-size: Total size of the header
1685 - version: Version of the header
1686
1687This entry creates a pre-load header that contains a global
1688image signature.
1689
1690For example, this creates an image with a pre-load header and a binary::
1691
1692 binman {
1693 image2 {
1694 filename = "sandbox.bin";
1695
1696 pre-load {
1697 content = <&image>;
1698 algo-name = "sha256,rsa2048";
1699 padding-name = "pss";
1700 key-name = "private.pem";
1701 header-size = <4096>;
1702 version = <1>;
1703 };
1704
1705 image: blob-ext {
1706 filename = "sandbox.itb";
1707 };
1708 };
1709 };
1710
1711
1712
Jonas Karlman35305492023-02-25 19:01:33 +00001713.. _etype_rockchip_tpl:
1714
1715Entry: rockchip-tpl: Rockchip TPL binary
1716----------------------------------------
1717
1718Properties / Entry arguments:
1719 - rockchip-tpl-path: Filename of file to read into the entry,
1720 typically <soc>_ddr_<version>.bin
1721
1722This entry holds an external TPL binary used by some Rockchip SoCs
1723instead of normal U-Boot TPL, typically to initialize DRAM.
1724
1725
1726
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001727.. _etype_scp:
1728
Simon Glass8911fa12021-03-18 20:25:16 +13001729Entry: scp: System Control Processor (SCP) firmware blob
1730--------------------------------------------------------
Simon Glass136dd352020-10-26 17:39:59 -06001731
1732Properties / Entry arguments:
1733 - scp-path: Filename of file to read into the entry, typically scp.bin
1734
1735This entry holds firmware for an external platform-specific coprocessor.
Jagdish Gediya311d4842018-09-03 21:35:08 +05301736
1737
Simon Glass136dd352020-10-26 17:39:59 -06001738
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001739.. _etype_section:
1740
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001741Entry: section: Entry that contains other entries
1742-------------------------------------------------
1743
Simon Glasscc9a41c2021-11-23 11:03:49 -07001744A section is an entry which can contain other entries, thus allowing
1745hierarchical images to be created. See 'Sections and hierarchical images'
1746in the binman README for more information.
1747
1748The base implementation simply joins the various entries together, using
1749various rules about alignment, etc.
1750
1751Subclassing
1752~~~~~~~~~~~
1753
1754This class can be subclassed to support other file formats which hold
1755multiple entries, such as CBFS. To do this, override the following
1756functions. The documentation here describes what your function should do.
1757For example code, see etypes which subclass `Entry_section`, or `cbfs.py`
1758for a more involved example::
1759
1760 $ grep -l \(Entry_section tools/binman/etype/*.py
1761
1762ReadNode()
1763 Call `super().ReadNode()`, then read any special properties for the
1764 section. Then call `self.ReadEntries()` to read the entries.
1765
1766 Binman calls this at the start when reading the image description.
1767
1768ReadEntries()
1769 Read in the subnodes of the section. This may involve creating entries
1770 of a particular etype automatically, as well as reading any special
1771 properties in the entries. For each entry, entry.ReadNode() should be
1772 called, to read the basic entry properties. The properties should be
1773 added to `self._entries[]`, in the correct order, with a suitable name.
1774
1775 Binman calls this at the start when reading the image description.
1776
1777BuildSectionData(required)
1778 Create the custom file format that you want and return it as bytes.
1779 This likely sets up a file header, then loops through the entries,
1780 adding them to the file. For each entry, call `entry.GetData()` to
1781 obtain the data. If that returns None, and `required` is False, then
1782 this method must give up and return None. But if `required` is True then
1783 it should assume that all data is valid.
1784
1785 Binman calls this when packing the image, to find out the size of
1786 everything. It is called again at the end when building the final image.
1787
1788SetImagePos(image_pos):
1789 Call `super().SetImagePos(image_pos)`, then set the `image_pos` values
1790 for each of the entries. This should use the custom file format to find
1791 the `start offset` (and `image_pos`) of each entry. If the file format
1792 uses compression in such a way that there is no offset available (other
1793 than reading the whole file and decompressing it), then the offsets for
1794 affected entries can remain unset (`None`). The size should also be set
1795 if possible.
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +13001796
Simon Glasscc9a41c2021-11-23 11:03:49 -07001797 Binman calls this after the image has been packed, to update the
1798 location that all the entries ended up at.
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +13001799
Simon Glass637958f2021-11-23 21:09:50 -07001800ReadChildData(child, decomp, alt_format):
Simon Glasscc9a41c2021-11-23 11:03:49 -07001801 The default version of this may be good enough, if you are able to
1802 implement SetImagePos() correctly. But that is a bit of a bypass, so
1803 you can override this method to read from your custom file format. It
1804 should read the entire entry containing the custom file using
1805 `super().ReadData(True)`, then parse the file to get the data for the
1806 given child, then return that data.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001807
Simon Glasscc9a41c2021-11-23 11:03:49 -07001808 If your file format supports compression, the `decomp` argument tells
1809 you whether to return the compressed data (`decomp` is False) or to
1810 uncompress it first, then return the uncompressed data (`decomp` is
1811 True). This is used by the `binman extract -U` option.
Simon Glass21db0ff2020-09-01 05:13:54 -06001812
Simon Glass637958f2021-11-23 21:09:50 -07001813 If your entry supports alternative formats, the alt_format provides the
1814 alternative format that the user has selected. Your function should
1815 return data in that format. This is used by the 'binman extract -l'
1816 option.
1817
Simon Glasscc9a41c2021-11-23 11:03:49 -07001818 Binman calls this when reading in an image, in order to populate all the
1819 entries with the data from that image (`binman ls`).
1820
1821WriteChildData(child):
1822 Binman calls this after `child.data` is updated, to inform the custom
1823 file format about this, in case it needs to do updates.
1824
1825 The default version of this does nothing and probably needs to be
1826 overridden for the 'binman replace' command to work. Your version should
1827 use `child.data` to update the data for that child in the custom file
1828 format.
1829
1830 Binman calls this when updating an image that has been read in and in
1831 particular to update the data for a particular entry (`binman replace`)
1832
1833Properties / Entry arguments
1834~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1835
1836See :ref:`develop/package/binman:Image description format` for more
1837information.
1838
1839align-default
1840 Default alignment for this section, if no alignment is given in the
1841 entry
1842
1843pad-byte
1844 Pad byte to use when padding
1845
1846sort-by-offset
1847 True if entries should be sorted by offset, False if they must be
1848 in-order in the device tree description
1849
1850end-at-4gb
1851 Used to build an x86 ROM which ends at 4GB (2^32)
1852
1853name-prefix
1854 Adds a prefix to the name of every entry in the section when writing out
1855 the map
1856
1857skip-at-start
1858 Number of bytes before the first entry starts. These effectively adjust
1859 the starting offset of entries. For example, if this is 16, then the
1860 first entry would start at 16. An entry with offset = 20 would in fact
1861 be written at offset 4 in the image file, since the first 16 bytes are
1862 skipped when writing.
Simon Glassb1d414c2021-04-03 11:05:10 +13001863
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07001864filename
1865 filename to write the unpadded section contents to within the output
1866 directory (None to skip this).
1867
Simon Glass39dd2152019-07-08 14:25:47 -06001868Since a section is also an entry, it inherits all the properies of entries
1869too.
1870
Simon Glasscc9a41c2021-11-23 11:03:49 -07001871Note that the `allow_missing` member controls whether this section permits
1872external blobs to be missing their contents. The option will produce an
1873image but of course it will not work. It is useful to make sure that
1874Continuous Integration systems can build without the binaries being
1875available. This is set by the `SetAllowMissing()` method, if
1876`--allow-missing` is passed to binman.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001877
1878
1879
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001880.. _etype_tee_os:
1881
Roger Quadros5cdcea02022-02-19 20:50:04 +02001882Entry: tee-os: Entry containing an OP-TEE Trusted OS (TEE) blob
1883---------------------------------------------------------------
1884
1885Properties / Entry arguments:
1886 - tee-os-path: Filename of file to read into entry. This is typically
Simon Glassad5cfe12023-01-07 14:07:14 -07001887 called tee.bin or tee.elf
Roger Quadros5cdcea02022-02-19 20:50:04 +02001888
1889This entry holds the run-time firmware, typically started by U-Boot SPL.
1890See the U-Boot README for your architecture or board for how to use it. See
1891https://github.com/OP-TEE/optee_os for more information about OP-TEE.
1892
Simon Glassad5cfe12023-01-07 14:07:14 -07001893Note that if the file is in ELF format, it must go in a FIT. In that case,
1894this entry will mark itself as absent, providing the data only through the
1895read_elf_segments() method.
1896
1897Marking this entry as absent means that it if is used in the wrong context
1898it can be automatically dropped. Thus it is possible to add an OP-TEE entry
1899like this::
1900
1901 binman {
1902 tee-os {
1903 };
1904 };
1905
1906and pass either an ELF or plain binary in with -a tee-os-path <filename>
1907and have binman do the right thing:
1908
1909 - include the entry if tee.bin is provided and it does NOT have the v1
1910 header
1911 - drop it otherwise
1912
1913When used within a FIT, we can do::
1914
1915 binman {
1916 fit {
1917 tee-os {
1918 };
1919 };
1920 };
1921
1922which will split the ELF into separate nodes for each segment, if an ELF
1923file is provided (see :ref:`etype_fit`), or produce a single node if the
1924OP-TEE binary v1 format is provided (see optee_doc_) .
1925
1926.. _optee_doc: https://optee.readthedocs.io/en/latest/architecture/core.html#partitioning-of-the-binary
1927
Roger Quadros5cdcea02022-02-19 20:50:04 +02001928
1929
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06001930.. _etype_text:
1931
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001932Entry: text: An entry which contains text
1933-----------------------------------------
1934
1935The text can be provided either in the node itself or by a command-line
1936argument. There is a level of indirection to allow multiple text strings
1937and sharing of text.
1938
1939Properties / Entry arguments:
1940 text-label: The value of this string indicates the property / entry-arg
1941 that contains the string to place in the entry
1942 <xxx> (actual name is the value of text-label): contains the string to
1943 place in the entry.
Simon Glass47f6a622019-07-08 13:18:40 -06001944 <text>: The text to place in the entry (overrides the above mechanism).
1945 This is useful when the text is constant.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001946
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +13001947Example node::
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001948
1949 text {
1950 size = <50>;
1951 text-label = "message";
1952 };
1953
1954You can then use:
1955
1956 binman -amessage="this is my message"
1957
1958and binman will insert that string into the entry.
1959
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +13001960It is also possible to put the string directly in the node::
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001961
1962 text {
1963 size = <8>;
1964 text-label = "message";
1965 message = "a message directly in the node"
1966 };
1967
Simon Glass0ac96b62021-03-18 20:25:15 +13001968or just::
Simon Glass47f6a622019-07-08 13:18:40 -06001969
1970 text {
1971 size = <8>;
1972 text = "some text directly in the node"
1973 };
1974
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06001975The text is not itself nul-terminated. This can be achieved, if required,
1976by setting the size of the entry to something larger than the text.
1977
1978
1979
Neha Malcom Francis3b788942023-07-22 00:14:24 +05301980.. _etype_ti_board_config:
1981
1982Entry: ti-board-config: An entry containing a TI schema validated board config binary
1983-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1984
1985This etype supports generation of two kinds of board configuration
1986binaries: singular board config binary as well as combined board config
1987binary.
1988
1989Properties / Entry arguments:
1990 - config-file: File containing board configuration data in YAML
1991 - schema-file: File containing board configuration YAML schema against
1992 which the config file is validated
1993
1994Output files:
1995 - board config binary: File containing board configuration binary
1996
1997These above parameters are used only when the generated binary is
1998intended to be a single board configuration binary. Example::
1999
2000 my-ti-board-config {
2001 ti-board-config {
2002 config = "board-config.yaml";
2003 schema = "schema.yaml";
2004 };
2005 };
2006
2007To generate a combined board configuration binary, we pack the
2008needed individual binaries into a ti-board-config binary. In this case,
2009the available supported subnode names are board-cfg, pm-cfg, sec-cfg and
2010rm-cfg. The final binary is prepended with a header containing details about
2011the included board config binaries. Example::
2012
2013 my-combined-ti-board-config {
2014 ti-board-config {
2015 board-cfg {
2016 config = "board-cfg.yaml";
2017 schema = "schema.yaml";
2018 };
2019 sec-cfg {
2020 config = "sec-cfg.yaml";
2021 schema = "schema.yaml";
2022 };
2023 }
2024 }
2025
2026
2027
Neha Malcom Francis59be2552023-12-05 15:12:18 +05302028.. _etype_ti_dm:
2029
2030Entry: ti-dm: TI Device Manager (DM) blob
2031-----------------------------------------
2032
2033Properties / Entry arguments:
2034 - ti-dm-path: Filename of file to read into the entry, typically ti-dm.bin
2035
2036This entry holds the device manager responsible for resource and power management
2037in K3 devices. See https://software-dl.ti.com/tisci/esd/latest/ for more information
2038about TI DM.
2039
2040
2041
Neha Malcom Francis5f5f0a62023-07-22 00:14:25 +05302042.. _etype_ti_secure:
2043
2044Entry: ti-secure: Entry containing a TI x509 certificate binary
2045---------------------------------------------------------------
2046
2047Properties / Entry arguments:
2048 - content: List of phandles to entries to sign
2049 - keyfile: Filename of file containing key to sign binary with
2050 - sha: Hash function to be used for signing
Simon Glass0acb07f2024-06-23 11:55:04 -06002051 - auth-in-place: This is an integer field that contains two pieces
2052 of information:
2053
2054 - Lower Byte - Remains 0x02 as per our use case
2055 ( 0x02: Move the authenticated binary back to the header )
2056 - Upper Byte - The Host ID of the core owning the firewall
Neha Malcom Francis5f5f0a62023-07-22 00:14:25 +05302057
2058Output files:
2059 - input.<unique_name> - input file passed to openssl
2060 - config.<unique_name> - input file generated for openssl (which is
2061 used as the config file)
2062 - cert.<unique_name> - output file generated by openssl (which is
2063 used as the entry contents)
2064
Simon Glass0acb07f2024-06-23 11:55:04 -06002065Depending on auth-in-place information in the inputs, we read the
2066firewall nodes that describe the configurations of firewall that TIFS
2067will be doing after reading the certificate.
2068
2069The syntax of the firewall nodes are as such::
2070
2071 firewall-257-0 {
2072 id = <257>; /* The ID of the firewall being configured */
2073 region = <0>; /* Region number to configure */
2074
2075 control = /* The control register */
2076 <(FWCTRL_EN | FWCTRL_LOCK | FWCTRL_BG | FWCTRL_CACHE)>;
2077
2078 permissions = /* The permission registers */
2079 <((FWPRIVID_ALL << FWPRIVID_SHIFT) |
2080 FWPERM_SECURE_PRIV_RWCD |
2081 FWPERM_SECURE_USER_RWCD |
2082 FWPERM_NON_SECURE_PRIV_RWCD |
2083 FWPERM_NON_SECURE_USER_RWCD)>;
2084
2085 /* More defines can be found in k3-security.h */
2086
2087 start_address = /* The Start Address of the firewall */
2088 <0x0 0x0>;
2089 end_address = /* The End Address of the firewall */
2090 <0xff 0xffffffff>;
2091 };
2092
2093
Neha Malcom Francis5f5f0a62023-07-22 00:14:25 +05302094openssl signs the provided data, using the TI templated config file and
2095writes the signature in this entry. This allows verification that the
2096data is genuine.
2097
2098
2099
2100.. _etype_ti_secure_rom:
2101
2102Entry: ti-secure-rom: Entry containing a TI x509 certificate binary for images booted by ROM
2103--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2104
2105Properties / Entry arguments:
2106 - keyfile: Filename of file containing key to sign binary with
2107 - combined: boolean if device follows combined boot flow
2108 - countersign: boolean if device contains countersigned system firmware
2109 - load: load address of SPL
2110 - sw-rev: software revision
2111 - sha: Hash function to be used for signing
2112 - core: core on which bootloader runs, valid cores are 'secure' and 'public'
2113 - content: phandle of SPL in case of legacy bootflow or phandles of component binaries
2114 in case of combined bootflow
Neha Malcom Francis14e93422023-10-23 13:31:02 +05302115 - core-opts (optional): lockstep (0) or split (2) mode set to 0 by default
Neha Malcom Francis5f5f0a62023-07-22 00:14:25 +05302116
2117The following properties are only for generating a combined bootflow binary:
2118 - sysfw-inner-cert: boolean if binary contains sysfw inner certificate
2119 - dm-data: boolean if binary contains dm-data binary
2120 - content-sbl: phandle of SPL binary
2121 - content-sysfw: phandle of sysfw binary
2122 - content-sysfw-data: phandle of sysfw-data or tifs-data binary
2123 - content-sysfw-inner-cert (optional): phandle of sysfw inner certificate binary
2124 - content-dm-data (optional): phandle of dm-data binary
2125 - load-sysfw: load address of sysfw binary
2126 - load-sysfw-data: load address of sysfw-data or tifs-data binary
2127 - load-sysfw-inner-cert (optional): load address of sysfw inner certificate binary
2128 - load-dm-data (optional): load address of dm-data binary
2129
2130Output files:
2131 - input.<unique_name> - input file passed to openssl
2132 - config.<unique_name> - input file generated for openssl (which is
2133 used as the config file)
2134 - cert.<unique_name> - output file generated by openssl (which is
2135 used as the entry contents)
2136
2137openssl signs the provided data, using the TI templated config file and
2138writes the signature in this entry. This allows verification that the
2139data is genuine.
2140
2141
2142
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002143.. _etype_u_boot:
2144
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002145Entry: u-boot: U-Boot flat binary
2146---------------------------------
2147
2148Properties / Entry arguments:
2149 - filename: Filename of u-boot.bin (default 'u-boot.bin')
2150
2151This is the U-Boot binary, containing relocation information to allow it
2152to relocate itself at runtime. The binary typically includes a device tree
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002153blob at the end of it.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002154
Simon Glass18ed9962023-01-07 14:07:11 -07002155U-Boot can access binman symbols at runtime. See :ref:`binman_fdt`.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002156
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002157Note that this entry is automatically replaced with u-boot-expanded unless
Simon Glass7098b7f2021-03-21 18:24:30 +13002158--no-expanded is used or the node has a 'no-expanded' property.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002159
2160
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002161
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002162.. _etype_u_boot_dtb:
2163
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002164Entry: u-boot-dtb: U-Boot device tree
2165-------------------------------------
2166
2167Properties / Entry arguments:
2168 - filename: Filename of u-boot.dtb (default 'u-boot.dtb')
2169
2170This is the U-Boot device tree, containing configuration information for
2171U-Boot. U-Boot needs this to know what devices are present and which drivers
2172to activate.
2173
Simon Glasse219aa42018-09-14 04:57:24 -06002174Note: This is mostly an internal entry type, used by others. This allows
2175binman to know which entries contain a device tree.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002176
2177
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002178
2179.. _etype_u_boot_dtb_with_ucode:
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002180
2181Entry: u-boot-dtb-with-ucode: A U-Boot device tree file, with the microcode removed
2182-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2183
2184Properties / Entry arguments:
2185 - filename: Filename of u-boot.dtb (default 'u-boot.dtb')
2186
2187See Entry_u_boot_ucode for full details of the three entries involved in
2188this process. This entry provides the U-Boot device-tree file, which
2189contains the microcode. If the microcode is not being collated into one
2190place then the offset and size of the microcode is recorded by this entry,
Simon Glass537e0062021-03-18 20:24:54 +13002191for use by u-boot-with-ucode_ptr. If it is being collated, then this
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002192entry deletes the microcode from the device tree (to save space) and makes
Simon Glass537e0062021-03-18 20:24:54 +13002193it available to u-boot-ucode.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002194
2195
2196
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002197.. _etype_u_boot_elf:
2198
Simon Glassb1714232018-09-14 04:57:35 -06002199Entry: u-boot-elf: U-Boot ELF image
2200-----------------------------------
2201
2202Properties / Entry arguments:
2203 - filename: Filename of u-boot (default 'u-boot')
2204
2205This is the U-Boot ELF image. It does not include a device tree but can be
2206relocated to any address for execution.
2207
2208
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002209
2210.. _etype_u_boot_env:
Simon Glassb1714232018-09-14 04:57:35 -06002211
Simon Glass136dd352020-10-26 17:39:59 -06002212Entry: u-boot-env: An entry which contains a U-Boot environment
2213---------------------------------------------------------------
2214
2215Properties / Entry arguments:
2216 - filename: File containing the environment text, with each line in the
2217 form var=value
2218
2219
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002220
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002221.. _etype_u_boot_expanded:
2222
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002223Entry: u-boot-expanded: U-Boot flat binary broken out into its component parts
2224------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2225
2226This is a section containing the U-Boot binary and a devicetree. Using this
2227entry type automatically creates this section, with the following entries
2228in it:
2229
2230 u-boot-nodtb
2231 u-boot-dtb
2232
2233Having the devicetree separate allows binman to update it in the final
2234image, so that the entries positions are provided to the running U-Boot.
2235
2236
Simon Glass136dd352020-10-26 17:39:59 -06002237
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002238.. _etype_u_boot_img:
2239
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002240Entry: u-boot-img: U-Boot legacy image
2241--------------------------------------
2242
2243Properties / Entry arguments:
2244 - filename: Filename of u-boot.img (default 'u-boot.img')
2245
2246This is the U-Boot binary as a packaged image, in legacy format. It has a
2247header which allows it to be loaded at the correct address for execution.
2248
2249You should use FIT (Flat Image Tree) instead of the legacy image for new
2250applications.
2251
2252
2253
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002254.. _etype_u_boot_nodtb:
2255
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002256Entry: u-boot-nodtb: U-Boot flat binary without device tree appended
2257--------------------------------------------------------------------
2258
2259Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glass537e0062021-03-18 20:24:54 +13002260 - filename: Filename to include (default 'u-boot-nodtb.bin')
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002261
2262This is the U-Boot binary, containing relocation information to allow it
2263to relocate itself at runtime. It does not include a device tree blob at
Simon Glass537e0062021-03-18 20:24:54 +13002264the end of it so normally cannot work without it. You can add a u-boot-dtb
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002265entry after this one, or use a u-boot entry instead, normally expands to a
2266section containing u-boot and u-boot-dtb
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002267
2268
2269
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002270.. _etype_u_boot_spl:
2271
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002272Entry: u-boot-spl: U-Boot SPL binary
2273------------------------------------
2274
2275Properties / Entry arguments:
2276 - filename: Filename of u-boot-spl.bin (default 'spl/u-boot-spl.bin')
2277
2278This is the U-Boot SPL (Secondary Program Loader) binary. This is a small
2279binary which loads before U-Boot proper, typically into on-chip SRAM. It is
2280responsible for locating, loading and jumping to U-Boot. Note that SPL is
2281not relocatable so must be loaded to the correct address in SRAM, or written
Simon Glass8425a1f2018-07-17 13:25:48 -06002282to run from the correct address if direct flash execution is possible (e.g.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002283on x86 devices).
2284
Simon Glass18ed9962023-01-07 14:07:11 -07002285SPL can access binman symbols at runtime. See :ref:`binman_fdt`.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002286
2287in the binman README for more information.
2288
2289The ELF file 'spl/u-boot-spl' must also be available for this to work, since
2290binman uses that to look up symbols to write into the SPL binary.
2291
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002292Note that this entry is automatically replaced with u-boot-spl-expanded
Simon Glass7098b7f2021-03-21 18:24:30 +13002293unless --no-expanded is used or the node has a 'no-expanded' property.
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002294
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002295
2296
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002297.. _etype_u_boot_spl_bss_pad:
2298
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002299Entry: u-boot-spl-bss-pad: U-Boot SPL binary padded with a BSS region
2300---------------------------------------------------------------------
2301
2302Properties / Entry arguments:
2303 None
2304
Simon Glass308939b2021-03-18 20:24:55 +13002305This holds the padding added after the SPL binary to cover the BSS (Block
2306Started by Symbol) region. This region holds the various variables used by
2307SPL. It is set to 0 by SPL when it starts up. If you want to append data to
2308the SPL image (such as a device tree file), you must pad out the BSS region
2309to avoid the data overlapping with U-Boot variables. This entry is useful in
2310that case. It automatically pads out the entry size to cover both the code,
2311data and BSS.
2312
2313The contents of this entry will a certain number of zero bytes, determined
2314by __bss_size
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002315
2316The ELF file 'spl/u-boot-spl' must also be available for this to work, since
2317binman uses that to look up the BSS address.
2318
2319
2320
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002321.. _etype_u_boot_spl_dtb:
2322
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002323Entry: u-boot-spl-dtb: U-Boot SPL device tree
2324---------------------------------------------
2325
2326Properties / Entry arguments:
2327 - filename: Filename of u-boot.dtb (default 'spl/u-boot-spl.dtb')
2328
2329This is the SPL device tree, containing configuration information for
2330SPL. SPL needs this to know what devices are present and which drivers
2331to activate.
2332
2333
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002334
2335.. _etype_u_boot_spl_elf:
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002336
Simon Glassb1714232018-09-14 04:57:35 -06002337Entry: u-boot-spl-elf: U-Boot SPL ELF image
2338-------------------------------------------
2339
2340Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glass5dcc21d2019-07-08 13:18:45 -06002341 - filename: Filename of SPL u-boot (default 'spl/u-boot-spl')
Simon Glassb1714232018-09-14 04:57:35 -06002342
2343This is the U-Boot SPL ELF image. It does not include a device tree but can
2344be relocated to any address for execution.
2345
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002346
2347
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002348.. _etype_u_boot_spl_expanded:
2349
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002350Entry: u-boot-spl-expanded: U-Boot SPL flat binary broken out into its component parts
2351--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2352
2353Properties / Entry arguments:
2354 - spl-dtb: Controls whether this entry is selected (set to 'y' or '1' to
2355 select)
2356
2357This is a section containing the U-Boot binary, BSS padding if needed and a
2358devicetree. Using this entry type automatically creates this section, with
2359the following entries in it:
2360
2361 u-boot-spl-nodtb
2362 u-boot-spl-bss-pad
2363 u-boot-dtb
2364
2365Having the devicetree separate allows binman to update it in the final
2366image, so that the entries positions are provided to the running U-Boot.
2367
2368This entry is selected based on the value of the 'spl-dtb' entryarg. If
2369this is non-empty (and not 'n' or '0') then this expanded entry is selected.
Simon Glassb1714232018-09-14 04:57:35 -06002370
2371
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002372
2373.. _etype_u_boot_spl_nodtb:
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002374
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002375Entry: u-boot-spl-nodtb: SPL binary without device tree appended
2376----------------------------------------------------------------
2377
2378Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glass537e0062021-03-18 20:24:54 +13002379 - filename: Filename to include (default 'spl/u-boot-spl-nodtb.bin')
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002380
2381This is the U-Boot SPL binary, It does not include a device tree blob at
2382the end of it so may not be able to work without it, assuming SPL needs
Simon Glass537e0062021-03-18 20:24:54 +13002383a device tree to operate on your platform. You can add a u-boot-spl-dtb
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002384entry after this one, or use a u-boot-spl entry instead' which normally
2385expands to a section containing u-boot-spl-dtb, u-boot-spl-bss-pad and
2386u-boot-spl-dtb
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002387
Simon Glass18ed9962023-01-07 14:07:11 -07002388SPL can access binman symbols at runtime. See :ref:`binman_fdt`.
Simon Glass31e04cb2021-03-18 20:24:56 +13002389
Simon Glass31e04cb2021-03-18 20:24:56 +13002390The ELF file 'spl/u-boot-spl' must also be available for this to work, since
2391binman uses that to look up symbols to write into the SPL binary.
2392
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002393
2394
Lukas Funkeb4937da2023-07-18 13:53:15 +02002395.. _etype_u_boot_spl_pubkey_dtb:
2396
2397Entry: u-boot-spl-pubkey-dtb: U-Boot SPL device tree including public key
2398-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2399
2400Properties / Entry arguments:
2401 - key-name-hint: Public key name without extension (.crt).
2402 Default is determined by underlying
2403 bintool (fdt_add_pubkey), usually 'key'.
2404 - algo: (Optional) Algorithm used for signing. Default is determined by
2405 underlying bintool (fdt_add_pubkey), usually 'sha1,rsa2048'
2406 - required: (Optional) If present this indicates that the key must be
2407 verified for the image / configuration to be
2408 considered valid
2409
2410The following example shows an image containing an SPL which
2411is packed together with the dtb. Binman will add a signature
2412node to the dtb.
2413
2414Example node::
2415
2416 image {
2417 ...
2418 spl {
2419 filename = "spl.bin"
2420
2421 u-boot-spl-nodtb {
2422 };
2423 u-boot-spl-pubkey-dtb {
2424 algo = "sha384,rsa4096";
2425 required = "conf";
2426 key-name-hint = "dev";
2427 };
2428 };
2429 ...
2430 }
2431
2432
2433
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002434.. _etype_u_boot_spl_with_ucode_ptr:
2435
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002436Entry: u-boot-spl-with-ucode-ptr: U-Boot SPL with embedded microcode pointer
2437----------------------------------------------------------------------------
2438
Simon Glass3fb4f422018-09-14 04:57:32 -06002439This is used when SPL must set up the microcode for U-Boot.
2440
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002441See Entry_u_boot_ucode for full details of the entries involved in this
2442process.
2443
2444
2445
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002446.. _etype_u_boot_tpl:
2447
Simon Glass8425a1f2018-07-17 13:25:48 -06002448Entry: u-boot-tpl: U-Boot TPL binary
2449------------------------------------
2450
2451Properties / Entry arguments:
2452 - filename: Filename of u-boot-tpl.bin (default 'tpl/u-boot-tpl.bin')
2453
2454This is the U-Boot TPL (Tertiary Program Loader) binary. This is a small
2455binary which loads before SPL, typically into on-chip SRAM. It is
2456responsible for locating, loading and jumping to SPL, the next-stage
2457loader. Note that SPL is not relocatable so must be loaded to the correct
2458address in SRAM, or written to run from the correct address if direct
2459flash execution is possible (e.g. on x86 devices).
2460
Simon Glass18ed9962023-01-07 14:07:11 -07002461SPL can access binman symbols at runtime. See :ref:`binman_fdt`.
Simon Glass8425a1f2018-07-17 13:25:48 -06002462
2463in the binman README for more information.
2464
2465The ELF file 'tpl/u-boot-tpl' must also be available for this to work, since
2466binman uses that to look up symbols to write into the TPL binary.
2467
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002468Note that this entry is automatically replaced with u-boot-tpl-expanded
Simon Glass7098b7f2021-03-21 18:24:30 +13002469unless --no-expanded is used or the node has a 'no-expanded' property.
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002470
Simon Glass8425a1f2018-07-17 13:25:48 -06002471
2472
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002473.. _etype_u_boot_tpl_bss_pad:
2474
Simon Glass63f41d42021-03-18 20:24:58 +13002475Entry: u-boot-tpl-bss-pad: U-Boot TPL binary padded with a BSS region
2476---------------------------------------------------------------------
2477
2478Properties / Entry arguments:
2479 None
2480
2481This holds the padding added after the TPL binary to cover the BSS (Block
2482Started by Symbol) region. This region holds the various variables used by
2483TPL. It is set to 0 by TPL when it starts up. If you want to append data to
2484the TPL image (such as a device tree file), you must pad out the BSS region
2485to avoid the data overlapping with U-Boot variables. This entry is useful in
2486that case. It automatically pads out the entry size to cover both the code,
2487data and BSS.
2488
2489The contents of this entry will a certain number of zero bytes, determined
2490by __bss_size
2491
2492The ELF file 'tpl/u-boot-tpl' must also be available for this to work, since
2493binman uses that to look up the BSS address.
2494
2495
2496
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002497.. _etype_u_boot_tpl_dtb:
2498
Simon Glass8425a1f2018-07-17 13:25:48 -06002499Entry: u-boot-tpl-dtb: U-Boot TPL device tree
2500---------------------------------------------
2501
2502Properties / Entry arguments:
2503 - filename: Filename of u-boot.dtb (default 'tpl/u-boot-tpl.dtb')
2504
2505This is the TPL device tree, containing configuration information for
2506TPL. TPL needs this to know what devices are present and which drivers
2507to activate.
2508
2509
2510
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002511.. _etype_u_boot_tpl_dtb_with_ucode:
2512
Simon Glass3fb4f422018-09-14 04:57:32 -06002513Entry: u-boot-tpl-dtb-with-ucode: U-Boot TPL with embedded microcode pointer
2514----------------------------------------------------------------------------
2515
2516This is used when TPL must set up the microcode for U-Boot.
2517
2518See Entry_u_boot_ucode for full details of the entries involved in this
2519process.
2520
2521
2522
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002523.. _etype_u_boot_tpl_elf:
2524
Simon Glassa899f712019-07-08 13:18:46 -06002525Entry: u-boot-tpl-elf: U-Boot TPL ELF image
2526-------------------------------------------
2527
2528Properties / Entry arguments:
2529 - filename: Filename of TPL u-boot (default 'tpl/u-boot-tpl')
2530
2531This is the U-Boot TPL ELF image. It does not include a device tree but can
2532be relocated to any address for execution.
2533
2534
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002535
2536.. _etype_u_boot_tpl_expanded:
Simon Glassa899f712019-07-08 13:18:46 -06002537
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002538Entry: u-boot-tpl-expanded: U-Boot TPL flat binary broken out into its component parts
2539--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2540
2541Properties / Entry arguments:
2542 - tpl-dtb: Controls whether this entry is selected (set to 'y' or '1' to
2543 select)
2544
2545This is a section containing the U-Boot binary, BSS padding if needed and a
2546devicetree. Using this entry type automatically creates this section, with
2547the following entries in it:
2548
2549 u-boot-tpl-nodtb
2550 u-boot-tpl-bss-pad
2551 u-boot-dtb
2552
2553Having the devicetree separate allows binman to update it in the final
2554image, so that the entries positions are provided to the running U-Boot.
2555
2556This entry is selected based on the value of the 'tpl-dtb' entryarg. If
2557this is non-empty (and not 'n' or '0') then this expanded entry is selected.
2558
2559
2560
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002561.. _etype_u_boot_tpl_nodtb:
2562
Simon Glassc98de972021-03-18 20:24:57 +13002563Entry: u-boot-tpl-nodtb: TPL binary without device tree appended
2564----------------------------------------------------------------
2565
2566Properties / Entry arguments:
2567 - filename: Filename to include (default 'tpl/u-boot-tpl-nodtb.bin')
2568
2569This is the U-Boot TPL binary, It does not include a device tree blob at
2570the end of it so may not be able to work without it, assuming TPL needs
2571a device tree to operate on your platform. You can add a u-boot-tpl-dtb
Simon Glass718b5292021-03-18 20:25:07 +13002572entry after this one, or use a u-boot-tpl entry instead, which normally
2573expands to a section containing u-boot-tpl-dtb, u-boot-tpl-bss-pad and
2574u-boot-tpl-dtb
Simon Glassc98de972021-03-18 20:24:57 +13002575
Simon Glass18ed9962023-01-07 14:07:11 -07002576TPL can access binman symbols at runtime. See :ref:`binman_fdt`.
Simon Glassc98de972021-03-18 20:24:57 +13002577
Simon Glassc98de972021-03-18 20:24:57 +13002578The ELF file 'tpl/u-boot-tpl' must also be available for this to work, since
2579binman uses that to look up symbols to write into the TPL binary.
2580
2581
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002582
2583.. _etype_u_boot_tpl_with_ucode_ptr:
Simon Glassc98de972021-03-18 20:24:57 +13002584
Simon Glass3fb4f422018-09-14 04:57:32 -06002585Entry: u-boot-tpl-with-ucode-ptr: U-Boot TPL with embedded microcode pointer
2586----------------------------------------------------------------------------
2587
2588See Entry_u_boot_ucode for full details of the entries involved in this
2589process.
2590
2591
2592
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002593.. _etype_u_boot_ucode:
2594
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002595Entry: u-boot-ucode: U-Boot microcode block
2596-------------------------------------------
2597
2598Properties / Entry arguments:
2599 None
2600
2601The contents of this entry are filled in automatically by other entries
2602which must also be in the image.
2603
2604U-Boot on x86 needs a single block of microcode. This is collected from
2605the various microcode update nodes in the device tree. It is also unable
2606to read the microcode from the device tree on platforms that use FSP
2607(Firmware Support Package) binaries, because the API requires that the
2608microcode is supplied before there is any SRAM available to use (i.e.
2609the FSP sets up the SRAM / cache-as-RAM but does so in the call that
2610requires the microcode!). To keep things simple, all x86 platforms handle
2611microcode the same way in U-Boot (even non-FSP platforms). This is that
2612a table is placed at _dt_ucode_base_size containing the base address and
2613size of the microcode. This is either passed to the FSP (for FSP
2614platforms), or used to set up the microcode (for non-FSP platforms).
2615This all happens in the build system since it is the only way to get
2616the microcode into a single blob and accessible without SRAM.
2617
2618There are two cases to handle. If there is only one microcode blob in
2619the device tree, then the ucode pointer it set to point to that. This
2620entry (u-boot-ucode) is empty. If there is more than one update, then
2621this entry holds the concatenation of all updates, and the device tree
2622entry (u-boot-dtb-with-ucode) is updated to remove the microcode. This
2623last step ensures that that the microcode appears in one contiguous
2624block in the image and is not unnecessarily duplicated in the device
2625tree. It is referred to as 'collation' here.
2626
2627Entry types that have a part to play in handling microcode:
2628
2629 Entry_u_boot_with_ucode_ptr:
2630 Contains u-boot-nodtb.bin (i.e. U-Boot without the device tree).
2631 It updates it with the address and size of the microcode so that
2632 U-Boot can find it early on start-up.
2633 Entry_u_boot_dtb_with_ucode:
2634 Contains u-boot.dtb. It stores the microcode in a
2635 'self.ucode_data' property, which is then read by this class to
2636 obtain the microcode if needed. If collation is performed, it
2637 removes the microcode from the device tree.
2638 Entry_u_boot_ucode:
2639 This class. If collation is enabled it reads the microcode from
2640 the Entry_u_boot_dtb_with_ucode entry, and uses it as the
2641 contents of this entry.
2642
2643
2644
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07002645.. _etype_u_boot_vpl:
2646
2647Entry: u-boot-vpl: U-Boot VPL binary
2648------------------------------------
2649
2650Properties / Entry arguments:
2651 - filename: Filename of u-boot-vpl.bin (default 'vpl/u-boot-vpl.bin')
2652
2653This is the U-Boot VPL (Verifying Program Loader) binary. This is a small
2654binary which loads before SPL, typically into on-chip SRAM. It is
2655responsible for locating, loading and jumping to SPL, the next-stage
2656loader. Note that VPL is not relocatable so must be loaded to the correct
2657address in SRAM, or written to run from the correct address if direct
2658flash execution is possible (e.g. on x86 devices).
2659
Simon Glass18ed9962023-01-07 14:07:11 -07002660SPL can access binman symbols at runtime. See :ref:`binman_fdt`.
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07002661
2662in the binman README for more information.
2663
2664The ELF file 'vpl/u-boot-vpl' must also be available for this to work, since
2665binman uses that to look up symbols to write into the VPL binary.
2666
Simon Glass6b5110b2024-07-20 11:49:39 +01002667Note that this entry is automatically replaced with u-boot-vpl-expanded
2668unless --no-expanded is used or the node has a 'no-expanded' property.
2669
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07002670
2671
2672.. _etype_u_boot_vpl_bss_pad:
2673
2674Entry: u-boot-vpl-bss-pad: U-Boot VPL binary padded with a BSS region
2675---------------------------------------------------------------------
2676
2677Properties / Entry arguments:
2678 None
2679
2680This holds the padding added after the VPL binary to cover the BSS (Block
2681Started by Symbol) region. This region holds the various variables used by
2682VPL. It is set to 0 by VPL when it starts up. If you want to append data to
2683the VPL image (such as a device tree file), you must pad out the BSS region
2684to avoid the data overlapping with U-Boot variables. This entry is useful in
2685that case. It automatically pads out the entry size to cover both the code,
2686data and BSS.
2687
2688The contents of this entry will a certain number of zero bytes, determined
2689by __bss_size
2690
2691The ELF file 'vpl/u-boot-vpl' must also be available for this to work, since
2692binman uses that to look up the BSS address.
2693
2694
2695
2696.. _etype_u_boot_vpl_dtb:
2697
2698Entry: u-boot-vpl-dtb: U-Boot VPL device tree
2699---------------------------------------------
2700
2701Properties / Entry arguments:
2702 - filename: Filename of u-boot.dtb (default 'vpl/u-boot-vpl.dtb')
2703
2704This is the VPL device tree, containing configuration information for
2705VPL. VPL needs this to know what devices are present and which drivers
2706to activate.
2707
2708
2709
2710.. _etype_u_boot_vpl_elf:
2711
2712Entry: u-boot-vpl-elf: U-Boot VPL ELF image
2713-------------------------------------------
2714
2715Properties / Entry arguments:
2716 - filename: Filename of VPL u-boot (default 'vpl/u-boot-vpl')
2717
2718This is the U-Boot VPL ELF image. It does not include a device tree but can
2719be relocated to any address for execution.
2720
2721
2722
2723.. _etype_u_boot_vpl_expanded:
2724
2725Entry: u-boot-vpl-expanded: U-Boot VPL flat binary broken out into its component parts
2726--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2727
2728Properties / Entry arguments:
2729 - vpl-dtb: Controls whether this entry is selected (set to 'y' or '1' to
2730 select)
2731
2732This is a section containing the U-Boot binary, BSS padding if needed and a
2733devicetree. Using this entry type automatically creates this section, with
2734the following entries in it:
2735
2736 u-boot-vpl-nodtb
2737 u-boot-vpl-bss-pad
2738 u-boot-dtb
2739
2740Having the devicetree separate allows binman to update it in the final
2741image, so that the entries positions are provided to the running U-Boot.
2742
2743This entry is selected based on the value of the 'vpl-dtb' entryarg. If
2744this is non-empty (and not 'n' or '0') then this expanded entry is selected.
2745
2746
2747
2748.. _etype_u_boot_vpl_nodtb:
2749
2750Entry: u-boot-vpl-nodtb: VPL binary without device tree appended
2751----------------------------------------------------------------
2752
2753Properties / Entry arguments:
2754 - filename: Filename to include (default 'vpl/u-boot-vpl-nodtb.bin')
2755
2756This is the U-Boot VPL binary, It does not include a device tree blob at
2757the end of it so may not be able to work without it, assuming VPL needs
Simon Glass6b5110b2024-07-20 11:49:39 +01002758a device tree to operate on your platform. You can add a u-boot-vpl-dtb
2759entry after this one, or use a u-boot-vpl entry instead, which normally
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07002760expands to a section containing u-boot-vpl-dtb, u-boot-vpl-bss-pad and
2761u-boot-vpl-dtb
2762
Simon Glass18ed9962023-01-07 14:07:11 -07002763VPL can access binman symbols at runtime. See :ref:`binman_fdt`.
Simon Glassda6a9082023-01-07 14:07:10 -07002764
2765The ELF file 'vpl/u-boot-vpl' must also be available for this to work, since
2766binman uses that to look up symbols to write into the VPL binary.
2767
2768
2769
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002770.. _etype_u_boot_with_ucode_ptr:
2771
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002772Entry: u-boot-with-ucode-ptr: U-Boot with embedded microcode pointer
2773--------------------------------------------------------------------
2774
2775Properties / Entry arguments:
Masahiro Yamadaa7a0ca42019-12-14 13:47:26 +09002776 - filename: Filename of u-boot-nodtb.bin (default 'u-boot-nodtb.bin')
Simon Glassee21d3a2018-09-14 04:57:07 -06002777 - optional-ucode: boolean property to make microcode optional. If the
2778 u-boot.bin image does not include microcode, no error will
2779 be generated.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002780
2781See Entry_u_boot_ucode for full details of the three entries involved in
2782this process. This entry updates U-Boot with the offset and size of the
2783microcode, to allow early x86 boot code to find it without doing anything
Simon Glass537e0062021-03-18 20:24:54 +13002784complicated. Otherwise it is the same as the u-boot entry.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002785
2786
2787
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002788.. _etype_vblock:
2789
Simon Glass5c350162018-07-17 13:25:47 -06002790Entry: vblock: An entry which contains a Chromium OS verified boot block
2791------------------------------------------------------------------------
2792
2793Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glass17b84eb2019-05-17 22:00:53 -06002794 - content: List of phandles to entries to sign
Simon Glass5c350162018-07-17 13:25:47 -06002795 - keydir: Directory containing the public keys to use
2796 - keyblock: Name of the key file to use (inside keydir)
2797 - signprivate: Name of provide key file to use (inside keydir)
2798 - version: Version number of the vblock (typically 1)
2799 - kernelkey: Name of the kernel key to use (inside keydir)
2800 - preamble-flags: Value of the vboot preamble flags (typically 0)
2801
Simon Glass639505b2018-09-14 04:57:11 -06002802Output files:
2803 - input.<unique_name> - input file passed to futility
2804 - vblock.<unique_name> - output file generated by futility (which is
2805 used as the entry contents)
2806
Jagdish Gediya311d4842018-09-03 21:35:08 +05302807Chromium OS signs the read-write firmware and kernel, writing the signature
Simon Glass5c350162018-07-17 13:25:47 -06002808in this block. This allows U-Boot to verify that the next firmware stage
2809and kernel are genuine.
2810
2811
2812
Simon Glassc3fe97f2023-03-02 17:02:45 -07002813.. _etype_x509_cert:
2814
2815Entry: x509-cert: An entry which contains an X509 certificate
2816-------------------------------------------------------------
2817
2818Properties / Entry arguments:
2819 - content: List of phandles to entries to sign
2820
2821Output files:
2822 - input.<unique_name> - input file passed to openssl
2823 - cert.<unique_name> - output file generated by openssl (which is
2824 used as the entry contents)
2825
2826openssl signs the provided data, writing the signature in this entry. This
2827allows verification that the data is genuine
2828
2829
2830
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002831.. _etype_x86_reset16:
2832
Simon Glass0b074d62019-08-24 07:22:48 -06002833Entry: x86-reset16: x86 16-bit reset code for U-Boot
2834----------------------------------------------------
2835
2836Properties / Entry arguments:
2837 - filename: Filename of u-boot-x86-reset16.bin (default
2838 'u-boot-x86-reset16.bin')
2839
2840x86 CPUs start up in 16-bit mode, even if they are 32-bit CPUs. This code
2841must be placed at a particular address. This entry holds that code. It is
2842typically placed at offset CONFIG_RESET_VEC_LOC. The code is responsible
2843for jumping to the x86-start16 code, which continues execution.
2844
2845For 64-bit U-Boot, the 'x86_reset16_spl' entry type is used instead.
2846
2847
2848
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002849.. _etype_x86_reset16_spl:
2850
Simon Glass0b074d62019-08-24 07:22:48 -06002851Entry: x86-reset16-spl: x86 16-bit reset code for U-Boot
2852--------------------------------------------------------
2853
2854Properties / Entry arguments:
2855 - filename: Filename of u-boot-x86-reset16.bin (default
2856 'u-boot-x86-reset16.bin')
2857
2858x86 CPUs start up in 16-bit mode, even if they are 32-bit CPUs. This code
2859must be placed at a particular address. This entry holds that code. It is
2860typically placed at offset CONFIG_RESET_VEC_LOC. The code is responsible
2861for jumping to the x86-start16 code, which continues execution.
2862
2863For 32-bit U-Boot, the 'x86_reset_spl' entry type is used instead.
2864
2865
2866
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002867.. _etype_x86_reset16_tpl:
2868
Simon Glass0b074d62019-08-24 07:22:48 -06002869Entry: x86-reset16-tpl: x86 16-bit reset code for U-Boot
2870--------------------------------------------------------
2871
2872Properties / Entry arguments:
2873 - filename: Filename of u-boot-x86-reset16.bin (default
2874 'u-boot-x86-reset16.bin')
2875
2876x86 CPUs start up in 16-bit mode, even if they are 32-bit CPUs. This code
2877must be placed at a particular address. This entry holds that code. It is
2878typically placed at offset CONFIG_RESET_VEC_LOC. The code is responsible
2879for jumping to the x86-start16 code, which continues execution.
2880
2881For 32-bit U-Boot, the 'x86_reset_tpl' entry type is used instead.
2882
2883
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002884
2885.. _etype_x86_start16:
Simon Glass0b074d62019-08-24 07:22:48 -06002886
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002887Entry: x86-start16: x86 16-bit start-up code for U-Boot
2888-------------------------------------------------------
2889
2890Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glassabab18c2019-08-24 07:22:49 -06002891 - filename: Filename of u-boot-x86-start16.bin (default
2892 'u-boot-x86-start16.bin')
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002893
2894x86 CPUs start up in 16-bit mode, even if they are 32-bit CPUs. This code
Simon Glassabab18c2019-08-24 07:22:49 -06002895must be placed in the top 64KB of the ROM. The reset code jumps to it. This
2896entry holds that code. It is typically placed at offset
2897CONFIG_SYS_X86_START16. The code is responsible for changing to 32-bit mode
2898and jumping to U-Boot's entry point, which requires 32-bit mode (for 32-bit
2899U-Boot).
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002900
2901For 64-bit U-Boot, the 'x86_start16_spl' entry type is used instead.
2902
2903
2904
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002905.. _etype_x86_start16_spl:
2906
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002907Entry: x86-start16-spl: x86 16-bit start-up code for SPL
2908--------------------------------------------------------
2909
2910Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glassabab18c2019-08-24 07:22:49 -06002911 - filename: Filename of spl/u-boot-x86-start16-spl.bin (default
2912 'spl/u-boot-x86-start16-spl.bin')
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002913
Simon Glassabab18c2019-08-24 07:22:49 -06002914x86 CPUs start up in 16-bit mode, even if they are 32-bit CPUs. This code
2915must be placed in the top 64KB of the ROM. The reset code jumps to it. This
2916entry holds that code. It is typically placed at offset
2917CONFIG_SYS_X86_START16. The code is responsible for changing to 32-bit mode
2918and jumping to U-Boot's entry point, which requires 32-bit mode (for 32-bit
2919U-Boot).
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002920
Simon Glassabab18c2019-08-24 07:22:49 -06002921For 32-bit U-Boot, the 'x86-start16' entry type is used instead.
Simon Glass7a61c6b2018-07-17 13:25:37 -06002922
2923
2924
Simon Glassa7c97782022-08-07 16:33:25 -06002925.. _etype_x86_start16_tpl:
2926
Simon Glassed40e962018-09-14 04:57:10 -06002927Entry: x86-start16-tpl: x86 16-bit start-up code for TPL
2928--------------------------------------------------------
2929
2930Properties / Entry arguments:
Simon Glassabab18c2019-08-24 07:22:49 -06002931 - filename: Filename of tpl/u-boot-x86-start16-tpl.bin (default
2932 'tpl/u-boot-x86-start16-tpl.bin')
Simon Glassed40e962018-09-14 04:57:10 -06002933
Simon Glassabab18c2019-08-24 07:22:49 -06002934x86 CPUs start up in 16-bit mode, even if they are 32-bit CPUs. This code
2935must be placed in the top 64KB of the ROM. The reset code jumps to it. This
2936entry holds that code. It is typically placed at offset
2937CONFIG_SYS_X86_START16. The code is responsible for changing to 32-bit mode
2938and jumping to U-Boot's entry point, which requires 32-bit mode (for 32-bit
2939U-Boot).
Simon Glassed40e962018-09-14 04:57:10 -06002940
Simon Glassabab18c2019-08-24 07:22:49 -06002941If TPL is not being used, the 'x86-start16-spl or 'x86-start16' entry types
Simon Glassed40e962018-09-14 04:57:10 -06002942may be used instead.
2943
2944
2945
Lukas Funkefebfc6d2023-08-03 17:22:15 +02002946.. _etype_xilinx_bootgen:
2947
2948Entry: xilinx-bootgen: Signed SPL boot image for Xilinx ZynqMP devices
2949----------------------------------------------------------------------
2950
2951Properties / Entry arguments:
2952 - auth-params: (Optional) Authentication parameters passed to bootgen
2953 - fsbl-config: (Optional) FSBL parameters passed to bootgen
2954 - keysrc-enc: (Optional) Key source when using decryption engine
2955 - pmufw-filename: Filename of PMU firmware. Default: pmu-firmware.elf
2956 - psk-key-name-hint: Name of primary secret key to use for signing the
2957 secondardy public key. Format: .pem file
2958 - ssk-key-name-hint: Name of secondardy secret key to use for signing
2959 the boot image. Format: .pem file
2960
2961The etype is used to create a boot image for Xilinx ZynqMP
2962devices.
2963
2964Information for signed images:
2965
2966In AMD/Xilinx SoCs, two pairs of public and secret keys are used
2967- primary and secondary. The function of the primary public/secret key pair
2968is to authenticate the secondary public/secret key pair.
2969The function of the secondary key is to sign/verify the boot image. [1]
2970
2971AMD/Xilinx uses the following terms for private/public keys [1]:
2972
2973 PSK = Primary Secret Key (Used to sign Secondary Public Key)
2974 PPK = Primary Public Key (Used to verify Secondary Public Key)
2975 SSK = Secondary Secret Key (Used to sign the boot image/partitions)
2976 SPK = Used to verify the actual boot image
2977
2978The following example builds a signed boot image. The fuses of
2979the primary public key (ppk) should be fused together with the RSA_EN flag.
2980
2981Example node::
2982
2983 spl {
2984 filename = "boot.signed.bin";
2985
2986 xilinx-bootgen {
2987 psk-key-name-hint = "psk0";
2988 ssk-key-name-hint = "ssk0";
2989 auth-params = "ppk_select=0", "spk_id=0x00000000";
2990
2991 u-boot-spl-nodtb {
2992 };
2993 u-boot-spl-pubkey-dtb {
2994 algo = "sha384,rsa4096";
2995 required = "conf";
2996 key-name-hint = "dev";
2997 };
2998 };
2999 };
3000
3001For testing purposes, e.g. if no RSA_EN should be fused, one could add
3002the "bh_auth_enable" flag in the fsbl-config field. This will skip the
3003verification of the ppk fuses and boot the image, even if ppk hash is
3004invalid.
3005
3006Example node::
3007
3008 xilinx-bootgen {
3009 psk-key-name-hint = "psk0";
3010 psk-key-name-hint = "ssk0";
3011 ...
3012 fsbl-config = "bh_auth_enable";
3013 ...
3014 };
3015
3016[1] https://docs.xilinx.com/r/en-US/ug1283-bootgen-user-guide/Using-Authentication
3017
3018
3019
3020