
Hi Stefan,
On Fri, 5 Aug 2022 at 01:51, Stefan Herbrechtsmeier stefan.herbrechtsmeier-oss@weidmueller.com wrote:
Hi Simon,
Am 04.08.2022 um 15:57 schrieb Simon Glass:
Hi Stefan,
On Thu, 4 Aug 2022 at 01:50, Stefan Herbrechtsmeier stefan.herbrechtsmeier-oss@weidmueller.com wrote:
Hi Simon,
Am 03.08.2022 um 20:14 schrieb Simon Glass:
Hi Stefan,
On Tue, 2 Aug 2022 at 07:45, Stefan Herbrechtsmeier stefan.herbrechtsmeier-oss@weidmueller.com wrote:
Hi Simon,
Am 02.08.2022 um 14:41 schrieb Simon Glass:
Hi Stefan,
On Tue, 2 Aug 2022 at 06:29, Stefan Herbrechtsmeier stefan.herbrechtsmeier-oss@weidmueller.com wrote: > > From: Stefan Herbrechtsmeier stefan.herbrechtsmeier@weidmueller.com > > Remove header from compressed data because this is uncommon, not > supported by U-Boot and incompatible with external compressed artifacts. > > The header was introduced as part of commit eb0f4a4cb402 ("binman: > Support replacing data in a cbfs") to allow device tree entries to be > larger that the compressed contents. Regarding the commit "this is > necessary to cope with a compressed device tree being updated in such a > way that it shrinks after the entry size is already set (an obscure > case)". This case need to be fixed without influence the compressed data > by itself.
I was not able to find a way around this due to the chicken-and egg problem. Compressed data has an unpredictable size and adding an extra uncompressed byte may increase or decrease the compressed size.
Is it possible to use the `pad-after` attribute to record the unused space. In this case it is possible to calculate the size of the compressed data.
Well if you update that attribute it can change the size of the DTB which is the chicken-and-egg problem again. As far as I know, if people set the size of the region to something a bit larger than needed, the problem is avoided. But the image generation does need to be deterministic.
Does this means the size is only needed for the creation of the fitImage and not for decompression in u-boot?
Possibly, but of course we cannot do that. As you say, U-Boot mainline does not expect or support the header, at present.
Do you have a test for this use case?
There are various ones, e.g. testCompressDtb()
Thanks. Now I understand the problem and why you call it a chicken-and-egg problem. It wasn't clear to me that the attributes are inside the DTB.
OK good.
But I wonder how the decompression of the DTB works if the fitImage implementation doesn't support the header.
It doesn't. Something needs to change here for compression to work.
So my solution was to add the header.
Is the header used outside of binman? I don't spot it in the decompress fitImage implementation.
It is used in the Chromium OS verified boot implementation, but not elsewhere.
It is optional though, so can we perhaps have a property in the description to enable it?
Is this header needed and supported outside of binman?
At the moment the header is incompatible and not well documented. It took me some time to find out why my gzip compression via binman doesn't work as expected because I assume a compatibility between binman compress and fitImage decompress.
Yes I understand that, however you can pass a parameter to not include the size value.
Do we need the header outside of the DTB? Otherwise we could handle this special or we could add a special compression type.
It would also be possible to add a property to the image (top-level section) that indicates whether this field is present, such property to apply to the whole image. We could have it default to off, if you like.
Do we really need the header outside of the DTB entry?
That's an interesting question. It is possible that we only need it if DTB is present and is compressed. It should be possible to check this by adjusting the tests and checking for failures.
But I am not sure it is a good idea, since it is wildly inconsistent. I do prefer things to be deterministic - i.e. you specify what you want and you get it. If binman starts adopting obscure conventions it could be confusing.
I add tests for gzip, lz4 and lzma_alone and all support padding at the end and don't need the header. Even the testCompressDtb works without the header. Furthermore I add bzip2, lzop, xz and zstd support to bintool and only zstd doesn't support padding. Do we really need the header or could we add an error if DTB is used together with zstd?
OK great!
Yes, I tried pretty hard to avoid it, but could not make it work. Would you like me to take a look at the situations that spark it? It might be around replacing things, too.
I really tried to avoid banning things, since it is such a pain and confusing for people. But since this is error (and a corner case) I think it would be fine to require a particular property to enable the advanced functionality.
Should I commit bzip2, lzop, xz and zstd support to bintool?
Yes please.
Regards, Simon