
On Mon, Dec 5, 2011 at 2:25 PM, Wolfgang Denk wd@denx.de wrote:
Dear Gabe Black,
In message 1322912821-32677-1-git-send-email-gabeblack@chromium.org you wrote:
Coreboot uses a very simple "file system" called CBFS to keep track of
and
allow access to multiple "files" in a ROM image. This change adds CBFS support and some commands to use it to u-boot. These commands are:
cbfsinit - Initialize CBFS support and pull all metadata into RAM. The
end of
the ROM is an optional parameter which defaults to the standard
0xffffffff and
can be used to support multiple CBFSes in a system. The last one set up
with
cbfsinit is the one that will be used.
cbfsinfo - Print information from the CBFS header.
cbfsls - Print out the size, type, and name of all the files in the
current
CBFS. Recognized types are translated into symbolic names.
cbfsload - Load a file from CBFS into memory. Like the similar command
for fat
filesystems, you can optionally provide a maximum size.
Also, if u-boot needs something out of CBFS very early before the heap is configured, it won't be able to use the normal CBFS support which caches
some
information in memory it allocates from the heap. This change adds a new cbfs_file_find_uncached function which searchs a CBFS instance without
touching
the heap.
Support for CBFS is compiled in when the CONFIG_CMD_CBFS option is
specified.
Signed-off-by: Gabe Black gabeblack@chromium.org
Checkpatch reports 2 errors, 15 warnings
A few of these are checkpatch getting confused by inline assembly, but I'll fix up the rest and the things below.
Please clean up and resubmit.
Also, please use puts() instead of printf() when you have constant strings without formatting.
And fix your identifiers: CamelCaps identifiers are not allowed in U-Boot.
Best regards,
Wolfgang Denk
-- DENX Software Engineering GmbH, MD: Wolfgang Denk & Detlev Zundel HRB 165235 Munich, Office: Kirchenstr.5, D-82194 Groebenzell, Germany Phone: (+49)-8142-66989-10 Fax: (+49)-8142-66989-80 Email: wd@denx.de The human race is faced with a cruel choice: work or daytime tele- vision.