blob: a2913cd47be5e4c540ed47f894a838a61e7371f5 [file] [log] [blame]
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -06001.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+:
2
Simon Glass16047dc2024-07-17 09:30:52 +01003Standard Boot Overview
4======================
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -06005
6Introduction
7------------
8
9Standard boot provides a built-in way for U-Boot to automatically boot
10an Operating System without custom scripting and other customisation. It
11introduces the following concepts:
12
13 - bootdev - a device which can hold or access a distro (e.g. MMC, Ethernet)
14 - bootmeth - a method to scan a bootdev to find bootflows (e.g. distro boot)
15 - bootflow - a description of how to boot (provided by the distro)
16
17For Linux, the distro (Linux distribution, e.g. Debian, Fedora) is responsible
18for creating a bootflow for each kernel combination that it wants to offer.
19These bootflows are stored on media so they can be discovered by U-Boot. This
Simon Glass16047dc2024-07-17 09:30:52 +010020feature is typically called `distro boot` (see :doc:`../distro`) because it is
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060021a way for distributions to boot on any hardware.
22
23Traditionally U-Boot has relied on scripts to implement this feature. See
Paul Barker6c55d0d2022-07-29 14:31:58 +010024distro_bootcmd_ for details. This is done because U-Boot has no native support
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060025for scanning devices. While the scripts work remarkably well, they can be hard
26to understand and extend, and the feature does not include tests. They are also
27making it difficult to move away from ad-hoc CONFIGs, since they are implemented
28using the environment and a lot of #defines.
29
30Standard boot is a generalisation of distro boot. It provides a more built-in
31way to boot with U-Boot. The feature is extensible to different Operating
32Systems (such as Chromium OS) and devices (beyond just block and network
33devices). It supports EFI boot and EFI bootmgr too.
34
Simon Glass16047dc2024-07-17 09:30:52 +010035Finally, standard boot supports the operation of :doc:`../vbe`.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060036
37Bootflow
38--------
39
40A bootflow is a file that describes how to boot a distro. Conceptually there can
41be different formats for that file but at present U-Boot only supports the
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +020042BootLoaderSpec_ format which looks something like this::
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060043
44 menu autoboot Welcome to Fedora-Workstation-armhfp-31-1.9. Automatic boot in # second{,s}. Press a key for options.
45 menu title Fedora-Workstation-armhfp-31-1.9 Boot Options.
46 menu hidden
47
48 label Fedora-Workstation-armhfp-31-1.9 (5.3.7-301.fc31.armv7hl)
49 kernel /vmlinuz-5.3.7-301.fc31.armv7hl
50 append ro root=UUID=9732b35b-4cd5-458b-9b91-80f7047e0b8a rhgb quiet LANG=en_US.UTF-8 cma=192MB cma=256MB
51 fdtdir /dtb-5.3.7-301.fc31.armv7hl/
52 initrd /initramfs-5.3.7-301.fc31.armv7hl.img
53
54As you can see it specifies a kernel, a ramdisk (initrd) and a directory from
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +020055which to load Device Tree files. The details are described in distro_bootcmd_.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060056
57The bootflow is provided by the distro. It is not part of U-Boot. U-Boot's job
58is simply to interpret the file and carry out the instructions. This allows
59distros to boot on essentially any device supported by U-Boot.
60
61Typically the first available bootflow is selected and booted. If that fails,
62then the next one is tried.
63
64
65Bootdev
66-------
67
68Where does U-Boot find the media that holds the operating systems? That is the
69job of bootdev. A bootdev is simply a layer on top of a media device (such as
70MMC, NVMe). The bootdev accesses the device, including partitions and
71filesystems that might contain things related to an operating system.
72
73For example, an MMC bootdev provides access to the individual partitions on the
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -070074MMC device. It scans through these to find filesystems with the boot flag set,
75then provides a list of these for consideration.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060076
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -070077Some bootdevs are not visible until a bus is enumerated, e.g. flash sticks
78attached via USB. To deal with this, each bootdev has an associated 'hunter'
79which can hunt for bootdevs of a particular uclass type. For example, the SCSI
80bootdev scans the SCSI bus looking for devices, creating a bootdev for each
81Logical Unit Number (LUN) that it finds.
82
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060083
84Bootmeth
85--------
86
87Once the list of filesystems is provided, how does U-Boot find the bootflow
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +020088files in these filesystems? That is the job of bootmeth. Each boot method has
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060089its own way of doing this.
90
91For example, the distro bootmeth simply looks through the provided filesystem
92for a file called `extlinux/extlinux.conf`. This files constitutes a bootflow.
93If the distro bootmeth is used on multiple partitions it may produce multiple
94bootflows.
95
96Note: it is possible to have a bootmeth that uses a partition or a whole device
97directly, but it is more common to use a filesystem.
Mattijs Korpershoekb30baa92024-07-10 10:40:05 +020098For example, the Android bootmeth uses a whole device.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -060099
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600100Note that some bootmeths are 'global', meaning that they select the bootdev
101themselves. Examples include VBE and EFI boot manager. In this case, they
102provide a `read_bootflow()` method which checks whatever bootdevs it likes, then
103returns the bootflow, if found. Some of these bootmeths may be very slow, if
104they scan a lot of devices.
105
Martyn Welch93a0d162024-10-09 14:15:40 +0100106The extlinux bootmeth also allows for bootmeth specific configuration to be
107set. A bootmeth that wishes to support this provides the `set_property()`
108method. This allows string properties and values to be passed to the bootmeth.
109It is up to the bootmeth to determine what action to take when this method is
110called.
111
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600112
113Boot process
114------------
115
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200116U-Boot tries to use the 'lazy init' approach wherever possible and distro boot
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600117is no exception. The algorithm is::
118
119 while (get next bootdev)
120 while (get next bootmeth)
121 while (get next bootflow)
122 try to boot it
123
124So U-Boot works its way through the bootdevs, trying each bootmeth in turn to
125obtain bootflows, until it either boots or exhausts the available options.
126
127Instead of 500 lines of #defines and a 4KB boot script, all that is needed is
128the following command::
129
130 bootflow scan -lb
131
132which scans for available bootflows, optionally listing each find it finds (-l)
133and trying to boot it (-b).
134
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600135When global bootmeths are available, these are typically checked before the
136above bootdev scanning.
137
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600138
139Controlling ordering
140--------------------
141
Simon Glass2f27e472023-08-19 16:49:35 -0600142By default, faster bootdevs (or those which are assumed to be faster) are used
143first, since they are more likely to be able to boot the device quickly.
144
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600145Several options are available to control the ordering of boot scanning:
146
147
148boot_targets
149~~~~~~~~~~~~
150
151This environment variable can be used to control the list of bootdevs searched
152and their ordering, for example::
153
154 setenv boot_targets "mmc0 mmc1 usb pxe"
155
156Entries may be removed or re-ordered in this list to affect the boot order. If
157the variable is empty, the default ordering is used, based on the priority of
158bootdevs and their sequence numbers.
159
160
161bootmeths
162~~~~~~~~~
163
Simon Glass2f27e472023-08-19 16:49:35 -0600164By default bootmeths are checked in name order. Use `bootmeth list` to see the
165ordering. Note that the `extlinux` and `script` bootmeth is first, to preserve the behaviour
166used by the old distro scripts.
167
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600168This environment variable can be used to control the list of bootmeths used and
169their ordering for example::
170
Simon Glassb71d7f72023-05-10 16:34:46 -0600171 setenv bootmeths "extlinux efi"
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600172
173Entries may be removed or re-ordered in this list to affect the order the
174bootmeths are tried on each bootdev. If the variable is empty, the default
175ordering is used, based on the bootmeth sequence numbers, which can be
176controlled by aliases.
177
178The :ref:`usage/cmd/bootmeth:bootmeth command` (`bootmeth order`) operates in
179the same way as setting this variable.
180
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600181Bootdev uclass
182--------------
183
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200184The bootdev uclass provides a simple API call to obtain a bootflow from a
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600185device::
186
187 int bootdev_get_bootflow(struct udevice *dev, struct bootflow_iter *iter,
188 struct bootflow *bflow);
189
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200190This takes an iterator which indicates the bootdev, partition and bootmeth to
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600191use. It returns a bootflow. This is the core of the bootdev implementation. The
192bootdev drivers that implement this differ depending on the media they are
193reading from, but each is responsible for returning a valid bootflow if
194available.
195
196A helper called `bootdev_find_in_blk()` makes it fairly easy to implement this
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700197function for each media device uclass, in a few lines of code. For many types
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200198of bootdevs, the `get_bootflow` member can be NULL, indicating that the default
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700199handler is used. This is called `default_get_bootflow()` and it only works with
200block devices.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600201
202
203Bootdev drivers
204---------------
205
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200206A bootdev driver is typically fairly simple. Here is one for MMC::
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600207
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600208 static int mmc_bootdev_bind(struct udevice *dev)
209 {
210 struct bootdev_uc_plat *ucp = dev_get_uclass_plat(dev);
211
Simon Glass7e1f6a42023-01-17 10:48:08 -0700212 ucp->prio = BOOTDEVP_2_INTERNAL_FAST;
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600213
214 return 0;
215 }
216
217 struct bootdev_ops mmc_bootdev_ops = {
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600218 };
219
220 static const struct udevice_id mmc_bootdev_ids[] = {
221 { .compatible = "u-boot,bootdev-mmc" },
222 { }
223 };
224
225 U_BOOT_DRIVER(mmc_bootdev) = {
226 .name = "mmc_bootdev",
227 .id = UCLASS_BOOTDEV,
228 .ops = &mmc_bootdev_ops,
229 .bind = mmc_bootdev_bind,
230 .of_match = mmc_bootdev_ids,
231 };
232
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700233You may notice that the `get_bootflow` memory is not provided, so is NULL. This
234means that `default_get_bootflow()` is used. This simply obtains the
235block device and calls a bootdev helper function to do the rest. The
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600236implementation of `bootdev_find_in_blk()` checks the partition table, and
237attempts to read a file from a filesystem on the partition number given by the
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700238`@iter->part` parameter. If there are any bootable partitions in the table,
239then only bootable partitions are considered.
240
241Each bootdev has a priority, which indicates the order in which it is used,
242if `boot_targets` is not used. Faster bootdevs are used first, since they are
243more likely to be able to boot the device quickly.
244
245
246Environment Variables
247---------------------
248
249Various environment variables are used by standard boot. These allow the board
250to control where things are placed when booting the OS. You should ensure that
251your boards sets values for these.
252
253fdtfile
254 Name of the flattened device tree (FDT) file to load, e.g.
255 "rockchip/rk3399-rockpro64.dtb"
256
Heinrich Schuchardt75e86db2023-11-16 10:09:07 +0100257fdt_addr_r
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700258 Address at which to load the FDT, e.g. 0x01f00000
259
260fdtoverlay_addr_r (needed if overlays are used)
261 Address at which to load the overlay for the FDT, e.g. 0x02000000
262
263kernel_addr_r
264 Address at which to load the kernel, e.g. 0x02080000
265
266kernel_comp_addr_r
267 Address to which to decompress the kernel, e.g. 0x08000000
268
269kernel_comp_size
270 Size of available space for decompressed kernel, e.g. 0x2000000
271
272pxefile_addr_r
273 Address at which to load the PXE file, e.g. 0x00600000
274
275ramdisk_addr_r
276 Address at which to load the ramdisk, e.g. 0x06000000
277
278scriptaddr
279 Address at which to load the U-Boot script, e.g. 0x00500000
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600280
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700281script_offset_f
282 SPI flash offset from which to load the U-Boot script, e.g. 0xffe000
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600283
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700284script_size_f
285 Size of the script to load, e.g. 0x2000
286
Mattijs Korpershoekb30baa92024-07-10 10:40:05 +0200287vendor_boot_comp_addr_r
288 Address to which to load the vendor_boot Android image, e.g. 0xe0000000
289
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700290Some variables are set by script bootmeth:
291
292devtype
293 Device type being used for boot, e.g. mmc
294
295devnum
296 Device number being used for boot, e.g. 1
297
298distro_bootpart
299 Partition being used for boot, e.g. 2
300
301prefix
302 Directory containing the script
303
304mmc_bootdev
305 Device number being used for boot (e.g. 1). This is only used by MMC on
306 sunxi boards.
307
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600308
309Device hierarchy
310----------------
311
312A bootdev device is a child of the media device. In this example, you can see
313that the bootdev is a sibling of the block device and both are children of
314media device::
315
316 mmc 0 [ + ] bcm2835-sdhost | |-- mmc@7e202000
317 blk 0 [ + ] mmc_blk | | |-- mmc@7e202000.blk
318 bootdev 0 [ ] mmc_bootdev | | `-- mmc@7e202000.bootdev
319 mmc 1 [ + ] sdhci-bcm2835 | |-- sdhci@7e300000
320 blk 1 [ ] mmc_blk | | |-- sdhci@7e300000.blk
321 bootdev 1 [ ] mmc_bootdev | | `-- sdhci@7e300000.bootdev
322
323The bootdev device is typically created automatically in the media uclass'
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700324`post_bind()` method by calling `bootdev_setup_for_dev()` or
Simon Glassb1d581d2023-07-30 11:15:14 -0600325`bootdev_setup_for_sibling_blk()`. The code typically something like this::
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600326
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700327 /* dev is the Ethernet device */
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600328 ret = bootdev_setup_for_dev(dev, "eth_bootdev");
329 if (ret)
330 return log_msg_ret("bootdev", ret);
331
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700332or::
333
334 /* blk is the block device (child of MMC device)
Simon Glassb1d581d2023-07-30 11:15:14 -0600335 ret = bootdev_setup_for_sibling_blk(blk, "mmc_bootdev");
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700336 if (ret)
337 return log_msg_ret("bootdev", ret);
338
339
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600340Here, `eth_bootdev` is the name of the Ethernet bootdev driver and `dev`
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200341is the Ethernet device. This function is safe to call even if standard boot is
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600342not enabled, since it does nothing in that case. It can be added to all uclasses
343which implement suitable media.
344
345
346The bootstd device
347------------------
348
349Standard boot requires a single instance of the bootstd device to make things
350work. This includes global information about the state of standard boot. See
351`struct bootstd_priv` for this structure, accessed with `bootstd_get_priv()`.
352
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200353Within the Device Tree, if you add bootmeth devices, they should be children of
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600354the bootstd device. See `arch/sandbox/dts/test.dts` for an example of this.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600355
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600356
357.. _`Automatic Devices`:
358
359Automatic devices
360-----------------
361
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200362It is possible to define all the required devices in the Device Tree manually,
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600363but it is not necessary. The bootstd uclass includes a `dm_scan_other()`
364function which creates the bootstd device if not found. If no bootmeth devices
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600365are found at all, it creates one for each available bootmeth driver.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600366
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200367If your Device Tree has any bootmeth device it must have all of them that you
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600368want to use, since no bootmeth devices will be created automatically in that
369case.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600370
371
372Using devicetree
373----------------
374
375If a bootdev is complicated or needs configuration information, it can be
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200376added to the Device Tree as a child of the media device. For example, imagine a
377bootdev which reads a bootflow from SPI flash. The Device Tree fragment might
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600378look like this::
379
380 spi@0 {
381 flash@0 {
382 reg = <0>;
383 compatible = "spansion,m25p16", "jedec,spi-nor";
384 spi-max-frequency = <40000000>;
385
386 bootdev {
387 compatible = "u-boot,sf-bootdev";
388 offset = <0x2000>;
389 size = <0x1000>;
390 };
391 };
392 };
393
394The `sf-bootdev` driver can implement a way to read from the SPI flash, using
395the offset and size provided, and return that bootflow file back to the caller.
Dario Binacchi3c9c6d72022-08-26 15:15:41 +0200396When distro boot wants to read the kernel it calls distro_getfile() which must
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600397provide a way to read from the SPI flash. See `distro_boot()` at distro_boot_
398for more details.
399
400Of course this is all internal to U-Boot. All the distro sees is another way
401to boot.
402
403
404Configuration
405-------------
406
407Standard boot is enabled with `CONFIG_BOOTSTD`. Each bootmeth has its own CONFIG
Simon Glassb71d7f72023-05-10 16:34:46 -0600408option also. For example, `CONFIG_BOOTMETH_EXTLINUX` enables support for
409booting from a disk using an `extlinux.conf` file.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600410
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200411To enable all features of standard boot, use `CONFIG_BOOTSTD_FULL`. This
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700412includes the full set of commands, more error messages when things go wrong and
413bootmeth ordering with the bootmeths environment variable.
414
Simon Glass2e5161eb2023-01-28 15:00:21 -0700415You should probably also enable `CONFIG_BOOTSTD_DEFAULTS`, which provides
416several filesystem and network features (if `CONFIG_NET` is enabled) so that
417a good selection of boot options is available.
418
Simon Glassf1d8e0f2024-07-17 09:31:04 +0100419Some devicetree properties are supported in the bootstd node when
420`CONFIG_BOOTSTD_FULL` is enabled:
421
422 filename-prefixes
423 List of prefixes to use when searching for files on block devices. This
424 defaults to {"/", "/boot/"} if not provided.
425
426 bootdev-order
427 Lists the bootdev ordering to use. Note that the deprecated
428 `boot_targets` environment variable overrides this, if present.
429
430 theme (subnode)
431 Sets the theme to use for menus. See :doc:`/develop/expo`.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600432
433Available bootmeth drivers
434--------------------------
435
Simon Glass6d5d1212024-07-17 09:30:54 +0100436Bootmeth drivers are provided for booting from various media:
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600437
Mattijs Korpershoekcb6fa2f2024-07-24 14:41:25 +0200438 - :doc:`Android <android>` bootflow (boot image v4)
Simon Glass53898fb2024-07-17 09:31:02 +0100439 - :doc:`ChromiumOS <cros>` ChromiumOS boot from a disk
440 - EFI boot using bootefi from disk
441 - EFI boot using boot manager
Simon Glass6d5d1212024-07-17 09:30:54 +0100442 - :doc:`extlinux / syslinux <extlinux>` boot from a storage device
Simon Glass08379df2024-07-17 09:30:55 +0100443 - :doc:`extlinux / syslinux <extlinux>` boot from a network (PXE)
Simon Glass53898fb2024-07-17 09:31:02 +0100444 - :doc:`sandbox <sandbox>` used only for testing
Simon Glass257ddc22024-07-17 09:31:01 +0100445 - :doc:`U-Boot scripts <script>` from disk, network or SPI flash
Simon Glass01bd6f62024-07-17 09:30:56 +0100446 - :doc:`QFW <qfw>`: QEMU firmware interface
Simon Glass53898fb2024-07-17 09:31:02 +0100447 - :doc:`VBE </develop/vbe>`: Verified Boot for Embedded
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600448
Simon Glassdc1917d2024-07-17 09:30:53 +0100449Each driver is controlled by a Kconfig option. If no bootmeth driver is
450selected by a compatible string in the devicetree, all available bootmeth
451drivers are bound automatically.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600452
453Command interface
454-----------------
455
456Three commands are available:
457
458`bootdev`
459 Allows listing of available bootdevs, selecting a particular one and
Simon Glass16047dc2024-07-17 09:30:52 +0100460 getting information about it. See :doc:`/usage/cmd/bootdev`
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600461
462`bootflow`
463 Allows scanning one or more bootdevs for bootflows, listing available
464 bootflows, selecting one, obtaining information about it and booting it.
Simon Glass16047dc2024-07-17 09:30:52 +0100465 See :doc:`/usage/cmd/bootflow`
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600466
467`bootmeth`
Martyn Welch93a0d162024-10-09 14:15:40 +0100468 Allow listing of available bootmethds, setting the order in which they are
469 tried and bootmeth specific configuration. See :doc:`/usage/cmd/bootmeth`
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600470
471.. _BootflowStates:
472
473Bootflow states
474---------------
475
476Here is a list of states that a bootflow can be in:
477
478======= =======================================================================
479State Meaning
480======= =======================================================================
481base Starting-out state, indicates that no media/partition was found. For an
482 SD card socket it may indicate that the card is not inserted.
483media Media was found (e.g. SD card is inserted) but no partition information
484 was found. It might lack a partition table or have a read error.
485part Partition was found but a filesystem could not be read. This could be
486 because the partition does not hold a filesystem or the filesystem is
487 very corrupted.
488fs Filesystem was found but the file could not be read. It could be
489 missing or in the wrong subdirectory.
490file File was found and its size detected, but it could not be read. This
491 could indicate filesystem corruption.
492ready File was loaded and is ready for use. In this state the bootflow is
493 ready to be booted.
494======= =======================================================================
495
496
Simon Glasse27d7df2023-09-14 10:55:55 -0600497Migrating from distro_boot
498--------------------------
499
500To migrate from distro_boot:
501
502#. Update your board header files to remove the BOOTENV and BOOT_TARGET_xxx
503 defines. Standard boot finds available boot devices automatically.
504
505#. Remove the "boot_targets" variable unless you need it. Standard boot uses a
506 default order from fastest to slowest, which generally matches the order used
507 by boards.
508
509#. Make sure that CONFIG_BOOTSTD_DEFAULTS is enabled by your board, so it can
510 boot common Linux distributions.
511
512An example patch is at migrate_patch_.
513
514If you are using custom boot scripts for your board, consider creating your
515own bootmeth to hold the logic. There are various examples at
516`boot/bootmeth_...`.
517
518
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600519Theory of operation
520-------------------
521
522This describes how standard boot progresses through to booting an operating
523system.
524
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200525To start, all the necessary devices must be bound, including bootstd, which
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600526provides the top-level `struct bootstd_priv` containing optional configuration
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200527information. The bootstd device also holds the various lists used while
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600528scanning. This step is normally handled automatically by driver model, as
529described in `Automatic Devices`_.
530
531Bootdevs are also required, to provide access to the media to use. These are not
532useful by themselves: bootmeths are needed to provide the means of scanning
533those bootdevs. So, all up, we need a single bootstd device, one or more bootdev
534devices and one or more bootmeth devices.
535
536Once these are ready, typically a `bootflow scan` command is issued. This kicks
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200537off the iteration process, which involves hunting for bootdevs and looking
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700538through the bootdevs and their partitions one by one to find bootflows.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600539
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700540Iteration is kicked off using `bootflow_scan_first()`.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600541
542The iterator is set up with `bootflow_iter_init()`. This simply creates an
543empty one with the given flags. Flags are used to control whether each
544iteration is displayed, whether to return iterations even if they did not result
545in a valid bootflow, whether to iterate through just a single bootdev, etc.
546
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700547Then the iterator is set up to according to the parameters given:
548
549- When `dev` is provided, then a single bootdev is scanned. In this case,
Simon Glass99e68182023-02-22 12:17:03 -0700550 `BOOTFLOWIF_SKIP_GLOBAL` and `BOOTFLOWIF_SINGLE_DEV` are set. No hunters are
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700551 used in this case
552
553- Otherwise, when `label` is provided, then a single label or named bootdev is
Simon Glass99e68182023-02-22 12:17:03 -0700554 scanned. In this case `BOOTFLOWIF_SKIP_GLOBAL` is set and there are three
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700555 options (with an effect on the `iter_incr()` function described later):
556
557 - If `label` indicates a numeric bootdev number (e.g. "2") then
558 `BOOTFLOW_METHF_SINGLE_DEV` is set. In this case, moving to the next bootdev
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200559 simply stops, since there is only one. No hunters are used.
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700560 - If `label` indicates a particular media device (e.g. "mmc1") then
Simon Glass99e68182023-02-22 12:17:03 -0700561 `BOOTFLOWIF_SINGLE_MEDIA` is set. In this case, moving to the next bootdev
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700562 processes just the children of the media device. Hunters are used, in this
563 example just the "mmc" hunter.
Nam Caocb0d3fb2024-02-21 13:41:44 +0100564 - If `label` indicates a particular partition in a particular media device
565 (e.g. "mmc1:3") then `BOOTFLOWIF_SINGLE_PARTITION` is set. In this case,
566 only a single partition within a bootdev is processed. Hunters are used, in
567 this example just the "mmc" hunter.
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700568 - If `label` indicates a media uclass (e.g. "mmc") then
Simon Glass99e68182023-02-22 12:17:03 -0700569 `BOOTFLOWIF_SINGLE_UCLASS` is set. In this case, all bootdevs in that uclass
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700570 are used. Hunters are used, in this example just the "mmc" hunter
571
572- Otherwise, none of the above flags is set and iteration is set up to work
573 through `boot_targets` environment variable (or `bootdev-order` device tree
574 property) in order, running the relevant hunter first. In this case
575 `cur_label` is used to indicate the label being processed. If there is no list
576 of labels, then all bootdevs are processed in order of priority, running the
577 hunters as it goes.
578
579With the above it is therefore possible to iterate in a variety of ways.
580
581No attempt is made to determine the ordering of bootdevs, since this cannot be
582known in advance if we are using the hunters. Any hunter might discover a new
583bootdev and disturb the original ordering.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600584
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600585Next, the ordering of bootmeths is determined, by `bootmeth_setup_iter_order()`.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600586By default the ordering is again by sequence number, i.e. the `/aliases` node,
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200587or failing that the order in the Device Tree. But the `bootmeth order` command
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600588or `bootmeths` environment variable can be used to set up an ordering. If that
589has been done, the ordering is in `struct bootstd_priv`, so that ordering is
590simply copied into the iterator. Either way, the `method_order` array it set up,
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600591along with `num_methods`.
592
593Note that global bootmeths are always put at the end of the ordering. If any are
594present, `cur_method` is set to the first one, so that global bootmeths are done
595first. Once all have been used, these bootmeths are dropped from the iteration.
596When there are no global bootmeths, `cur_method` is set to 0.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600597
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700598At this point the iterator is ready to use, with the first bootmeth selected.
599Most of the other fields are 0. This means that the current partition
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600600is 0, which is taken to mean the whole device, since partition numbers start at
6011. It also means that `max_part` is 0, i.e. the maximum partition number we know
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600602about is 0, meaning that, as far as we know, there is no partition table on this
603bootdev.
604
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700605With the iterator ready, `bootflow_scan_first()` checks whether the current
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600606settings produce a valid bootflow. This is handled by `bootflow_check()`, which
607either returns 0 (if it got something) or an error if not (more on that later).
Simon Glass99e68182023-02-22 12:17:03 -0700608If the `BOOTFLOWIF_ALL` iterator flag is set, even errors are returned as
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600609incomplete bootflows, but normally an error results in moving onto the next
610iteration.
611
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700612Note that `bootflow_check()` handles global bootmeths explicitly, by calling
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600613`bootmeth_get_bootflow()` on each one. The `doing_global` flag indicates when
614the iterator is in that state.
615
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600616The `bootflow_scan_next()` function handles moving onto the next iteration and
617checking it. In fact it sits in a loop doing that repeatedly until it finds
618something it wants to return.
619
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700620The actual 'moving on' part is implemented in `iter_incr()`. This is a fairly
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600621simple function. It increments the first counter. If that hits its maximum, it
622sets it to zero and increments the second counter. You can think of all the
623counters together as a number with three digits which increment in order, with
624the least-sigificant digit on the right, counting like this:
625
626 ======== ======= =======
627 bootdev part method
628 ======== ======= =======
629 0 0 0
630 0 0 1
631 0 0 2
632 0 1 0
633 0 1 1
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600634 0 1 2
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600635 1 0 0
636 1 0 1
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600637 ...
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600638 ======== ======= =======
639
640The maximum value for `method` is `num_methods - 1` so when it exceeds that, it
641goes back to 0 and the next `part` is considered. The maximum value for that is
642`max_part`, which is initially zero for all bootdevs. If we find a partition
643table on that bootdev, `max_part` can be updated during the iteration to a
644higher value - see `bootdev_find_in_blk()` for that, described later. If that
645exceeds its maximum, then the next bootdev is used. In this way, iter_incr()
646works its way through all possibilities, moving forward one each time it is
647called.
648
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600649Note that global bootmeths introduce a subtlety into the above description.
650When `doing_global` is true, the iteration takes place only among the bootmeths,
651i.e. the last column above. The global bootmeths are at the end of the list.
652Assuming that they are entries 3 and 4 in the list, the iteration then looks
653like this:
654
655 ======== ======= ======= =======================================
656 bootdev part method notes
657 ======== ======= ======= =======================================
658 . . 3 doing_global = true, method_count = 5
659 . . 4
660 0 0 0 doing_global = false, method_count = 3
661 0 0 1
662 0 0 2
663 0 1 0
664 0 1 1
665 0 1 2
666 1 0 0
667 1 0 1
668 ...
669 ======== ======= ======= =======================================
670
671The changeover of the value of `doing_global` from true to false is handled in
672`iter_incr()` as well.
673
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700674Note that the value in the `bootdev` column above is not actually stored - it is
675just for illustration. In practice, `iter_incr()` uses the flags to determine
676whether to move to the next bootdev in the uclass, the next child of the media
677device, the next label, or the next priority level, depending on the flag
678settings (see `BOOTFLOW_METHF_SINGLE_DEV`, etc. above).
679
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600680There is no expectation that iteration will actually finish. Quite often a
681valid bootflow is found early on. With `bootflow scan -b`, that causes the
682bootflow to be immediately booted. Assuming it is successful, the iteration never
683completes.
684
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200685Also note that the iterator holds the **current** combination being considered.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600686So when `iter_incr()` is called, it increments to the next one and returns it,
687the new **current** combination.
688
689Note also the `err` field in `struct bootflow_iter`. This is normally 0 and has
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200690thus no effect on `iter_inc()`. But if it is non-zero, signalling an error,
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600691it indicates to the iterator what it should do when called. It can force moving
692to the next partition, or bootdev, for example. The special values
693`BF_NO_MORE_PARTS` and `BF_NO_MORE_DEVICES` handle this. When `iter_incr` sees
694`BF_NO_MORE_PARTS` it knows that it should immediately move to the next bootdev.
695When it sees `BF_NO_MORE_DEVICES` it knows that there is nothing more it can do
696so it should immediately return. The caller of `iter_incr()` is responsible for
697updating the `err` field, based on the return value it sees.
698
699The above describes the iteration process at a high level. It is basically a
700very simple increment function with a checker called `bootflow_check()` that
701checks the result of each iteration generated, to determine whether it can
702produce a bootflow.
703
704So what happens inside of `bootflow_check()`? It simply calls the uclass
705method `bootdev_get_bootflow()` to ask the bootdev to return a bootflow. It
706passes the iterator to the bootdev method, so that function knows what we are
707talking about. At first, the bootflow is set up in the state `BOOTFLOWST_BASE`,
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200708with just the `method` and `dev` initialised. But the bootdev may fill in more,
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600709e.g. updating the state, depending on what it finds. For global bootmeths the
710`bootmeth_get_bootflow()` function is called instead of
711`bootdev_get_bootflow()`.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600712
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600713Based on what the bootdev or bootmeth responds with, `bootflow_check()` either
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600714returns a valid bootflow, or a partial one with an error. A partial bootflow
715is one that has some fields set up, but did not reach the `BOOTFLOWST_READY`
Simon Glass99e68182023-02-22 12:17:03 -0700716state. As noted before, if the `BOOTFLOWIF_ALL` iterator flag is set, then all
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600717bootflows are returned, even partial ones. This can help with debugging.
718
719So at this point you can see that total control over whether a bootflow can
Simon Glassafaeb772022-07-30 15:52:35 -0600720be generated from a particular iteration, or not, rests with the bootdev (or
721global bootmeth). Each one can adopt its own approach.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600722
723Going down a level, what does the bootdev do in its `get_bootflow()` method?
724Let us consider the MMC bootdev. In that case the call to
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700725`bootdev_get_bootflow()` ends up in `default_get_bootflow()`. It locates the
726parent device of the bootdev, i.e. the `UCLASS_MMC` device itself, then finds
727the block device associated with it. It then calls the helper function
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600728`bootdev_find_in_blk()` to do all the work. This is common with just about any
729bootdev that is based on a media device.
730
731The `bootdev_find_in_blk()` helper is implemented in the bootdev uclass. It
732names the bootflow and copies the partition number in from the iterator. Then it
733calls the bootmeth device to check if it can support this device. This is
734important since some bootmeths only work with network devices, for example. If
735that check fails, it stops.
736
737Assuming the bootmeth is happy, or at least indicates that it is willing to try
738(by returning 0 from its `check()` method), the next step is to try the
739partition. If that works it tries to detect a file system. If that works then it
740calls the bootmeth device once more, this time to read the bootflow.
741
Simon Glass0fca7e82023-08-24 13:55:43 -0600742Note: Normally a filesystem is needed for the bootmeth to be called on block
743devices, but bootmeths which don't need that can set the BOOTMETHF_ANY_PART
744flag to indicate that they can scan any partition. An example is the ChromiumOS
745bootmeth which can store a kernel in a raw partition. Note also that sandbox is
746a special case, since in that case the host filesystem can be accessed even
747though the block device is NULL.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600748
Simon Glassb71d7f72023-05-10 16:34:46 -0600749If we take the example of the `bootmeth_extlinux` driver, this call ends up at
750`extlinux_read_bootflow()`. It has the filesystem ready, so tries various
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600751filenames to try to find the `extlinux.conf` file, reading it if possible. If
752all goes well the bootflow ends up in the `BOOTFLOWST_READY` state.
753
754At this point, we fall back from the bootmeth driver, to
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700755`bootdev_find_in_blk()`, then back to `default_get_bootflow()`, then to
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600756`bootdev_get_bootflow()`, then to `bootflow_check()` and finally to its caller,
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700757either `bootflow_scan_first()` or `bootflow_scan_next()`. In either case,
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600758the bootflow is returned as the result of this iteration, assuming it made it to
759the `BOOTFLOWST_READY` state.
760
761That is the basic operation of scanning for bootflows. The process of booting a
762bootflow is handled by the bootmeth driver for that bootflow. In the case of
Simon Glassb71d7f72023-05-10 16:34:46 -0600763extlinux boot, this parses and processes the `extlinux.conf` file that was read.
764See `extlinux_boot()` for how that works. The processing may involve reading
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600765additional files, which is handled by the `read_file()` method, which is
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200766`extlinux_read_file()` in this case. All bootmeths should support reading
Simon Glassb71d7f72023-05-10 16:34:46 -0600767files, since the bootflow is typically only the basic instructions and does not
768include the operating system itself, ramdisk, device tree, etc.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600769
770The vast majority of the bootstd code is concerned with iterating through
Quentin Schulze0ff5cc2024-06-12 16:58:48 +0200771partitions on bootdevs and using bootmeths to find bootflows.
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600772
773How about bootdevs which are not block devices? They are handled by the same
774methods as above, but with a different implementation. For example, the bootmeth
775for PXE boot (over a network) uses `tftp` to read files rather than `fs_read()`.
776But other than that it is very similar.
777
778
779Tests
780-----
781
782Tests are located in `test/boot` and cover the core functionality as well as
783the commands. All tests use sandbox so can be run on a standard Linux computer
784and in U-Boot's CI.
785
Simon Glass736612e2023-01-17 10:48:19 -0700786For testing, a DOS-formatted disk image is used with a FAT partition on it and
787a second unused partition. This is created in `setup_bootflow_image()`, with a
788canned one from the source tree used if it cannot be created (e.g. in CI).
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600789
790
791Bootflow internals
792------------------
793
794The bootstd device holds a linked list of scanned bootflows as well as the
795currently selected bootdev and bootflow (for use by commands). This is in
796`struct bootstd_priv`.
797
798Each bootdev device has its own `struct bootdev_uc_plat` which holds a
799list of scanned bootflows just for that device.
800
801The bootflow itself is documented in bootflow_h_. It includes various bits of
802information about the bootflow and a buffer to hold the file.
803
804
805Future
806------
807
808Apart from the to-do items below, different types of bootflow files may be
809implemented in future, e.g. Chromium OS support which is currently only
810available as a script in chromebook_coral.
811
812
813To do
814-----
815
816Some things that need to be done to completely replace the distro-boot scripts:
817
Simon Glass5fd48162023-08-24 19:39:24 -0600818- implement extensions (devicetree overlays with add-on boards)
Mattijs Korpershoekb30baa92024-07-10 10:40:05 +0200819- implement legacy (boot image v2) android boot flow
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600820
821Other ideas:
822
823- `bootflow prep` to load everything preparing for boot, so that `bootflow boot`
824 can just do the boot.
825- automatically load kernel, FDT, etc. to suitable addresses so the board does
826 not need to specify things like `pxefile_addr_r`
827
828
Paul Barker6c55d0d2022-07-29 14:31:58 +0100829.. _distro_bootcmd: https://github.com/u-boot/u-boot/blob/master/include/config_distro_bootcmd.h
Simon Glass83b9be62022-04-24 23:31:26 -0600830.. _BootLoaderSpec: http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/BootLoaderSpec/
831.. _distro_boot: https://github.com/u-boot/u-boot/blob/master/boot/distro.c
832.. _bootflow_h: https://github.com/u-boot/u-boot/blob/master/include/bootflow.h
Simon Glasse27d7df2023-09-14 10:55:55 -0600833.. _migrate_patch: https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/uboot/patch/20230727215433.578830-2-sjg@chromium.org/