[U-Boot] [PATCH] efi_loader: Use system fdt as fallback

When the user did not pass any device tree or the boot script didn't find any, let's use the system device tree as last resort to get something the payload (Linux) may understand.
This means that on systems that use the same device tree for U-Boot and Linux we can just share it and there's no need to manually provide a device tree in the target image.
While at it, also copy and pad the device tree by 64kb to give us space for modifications.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf agraf@suse.de --- cmd/bootefi.c | 37 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ 1 file changed, 31 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
diff --git a/cmd/bootefi.c b/cmd/bootefi.c index f502996..9b8af65 100644 --- a/cmd/bootefi.c +++ b/cmd/bootefi.c @@ -12,6 +12,10 @@ #include <errno.h> #include <libfdt.h> #include <libfdt_env.h> +#include <malloc.h> +#include <asm/global_data.h> + +DECLARE_GLOBAL_DATA_PTR;
/* * When booting using the "bootefi" command, we don't know which @@ -97,6 +101,21 @@ static struct efi_object bootefi_device_obj = { }, };
+static void *copy_fdt(void *fdt) +{ + u64 fdt_size = fdt_totalsize(fdt); + void *new_fdt; + + /* Give us 64kb breathing room */ + fdt_size += 64 * 1024; + + new_fdt = malloc(fdt_size); + memcpy(new_fdt, fdt, fdt_totalsize(fdt)); + fdt_set_totalsize(new_fdt, fdt_size); + + return new_fdt; +} + /* * Load an EFI payload into a newly allocated piece of memory, register all * EFI objects it would want to access and jump to it. @@ -106,6 +125,7 @@ static unsigned long do_bootefi_exec(void *efi) ulong (*entry)(void *image_handle, struct efi_system_table *st); ulong fdt_pages, fdt_size, fdt_start, fdt_end; bootm_headers_t img = { 0 }; + void *fdt = working_fdt;
/* * gd lives in a fixed register which may get clobbered while we execute @@ -115,28 +135,33 @@ static unsigned long do_bootefi_exec(void *efi)
/* Update system table to point to our currently loaded FDT */
- if (working_fdt) { + /* Fall back to included fdt if none was manually loaded */ + if (!fdt && gd->fdt_blob) + fdt = (void *)gd->fdt_blob; + + if (fdt) { /* Prepare fdt for payload */ - if (image_setup_libfdt(&img, working_fdt, 0, NULL)) { + fdt = copy_fdt(fdt); + + if (image_setup_libfdt(&img, fdt, 0, NULL)) { printf("ERROR: Failed to process device tree\n"); return -EINVAL; }
/* Link to it in the efi tables */ systab.tables[0].guid = EFI_FDT_GUID; - systab.tables[0].table = working_fdt; + systab.tables[0].table = fdt; systab.nr_tables = 1;
/* And reserve the space in the memory map */ - fdt_start = ((ulong)working_fdt) & ~EFI_PAGE_MASK; - fdt_end = ((ulong)working_fdt) + fdt_totalsize(working_fdt); + fdt_start = ((ulong)fdt) & ~EFI_PAGE_MASK; + fdt_end = ((ulong)fdt) + fdt_totalsize(fdt); fdt_size = (fdt_end - fdt_start) + EFI_PAGE_MASK; fdt_pages = fdt_size >> EFI_PAGE_SHIFT; /* Give a bootloader the chance to modify the device tree */ fdt_pages += 2; efi_add_memory_map(fdt_start, fdt_pages, EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_DATA, true); - } else { printf("WARNING: No device tree loaded, expect boot to fail\n"); systab.nr_tables = 0;

Am 11.04.2016 um 16:55 schrieb Alexander Graf:
When the user did not pass any device tree or the boot script didn't find any, let's use the system device tree as last resort to get something the payload (Linux) may understand.
This means that on systems that use the same device tree for U-Boot and Linux we can just share it and there's no need to manually provide a device tree in the target image.
While at it, also copy and pad the device tree by 64kb to give us space for modifications.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf agraf@suse.de
Tested-by: Andreas Färber afaerber@suse.de
It definitely avoids a warning message. However, it does not always allow Linux to actually boot, e.g. on jetson-tk1 (patch sent).
Regards, Andreas

On 04/13/2016 02:58 PM, Andreas Färber wrote:
Am 11.04.2016 um 16:55 schrieb Alexander Graf:
When the user did not pass any device tree or the boot script didn't find any, let's use the system device tree as last resort to get something the payload (Linux) may understand.
This means that on systems that use the same device tree for U-Boot and Linux we can just share it and there's no need to manually provide a device tree in the target image.
While at it, also copy and pad the device tree by 64kb to give us space for modifications.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf agraf@suse.de
Tested-by: Andreas Färber afaerber@suse.de
It definitely avoids a warning message. However, it does not always allow Linux to actually boot, e.g. on jetson-tk1 (patch sent).
We could give the user a warning in the fallback case as well, but ideally I'd like to move to a model where all device trees really are interchangable and work with every component. So then we would warn the user about the preferred default case. I'm not sure that's a great idea.
Alex

Am 13.04.2016 um 15:15 schrieb Alexander Graf:
On 04/13/2016 02:58 PM, Andreas Färber wrote:
Am 11.04.2016 um 16:55 schrieb Alexander Graf:
When the user did not pass any device tree or the boot script didn't find any, let's use the system device tree as last resort to get something the payload (Linux) may understand.
This means that on systems that use the same device tree for U-Boot and Linux we can just share it and there's no need to manually provide a device tree in the target image.
While at it, also copy and pad the device tree by 64kb to give us space for modifications.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf agraf@suse.de
Tested-by: Andreas Färber afaerber@suse.de
It definitely avoids a warning message. However, it does not always allow Linux to actually boot, e.g. on jetson-tk1 (patch sent).
We could give the user a warning in the fallback case as well, but ideally I'd like to move to a model where all device trees really are interchangable and work with every component. So then we would warn the user about the preferred default case. I'm not sure that's a great idea.
I'm not saying we need a warning here, just that this solution by itself is not sufficient and other fixes (like supplying $fdtfile) are still necessary today.
Regards, Andreas

On Mon, Apr 11, 2016 at 04:55:26PM +0200, Alexander Graf wrote:
When the user did not pass any device tree or the boot script didn't find any, let's use the system device tree as last resort to get something the payload (Linux) may understand.
This means that on systems that use the same device tree for U-Boot and Linux we can just share it and there's no need to manually provide a device tree in the target image.
While at it, also copy and pad the device tree by 64kb to give us space for modifications.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf agraf@suse.de Tested-by: Andreas Färber afaerber@suse.de
Applied to u-boot/master, thanks!
participants (3)
-
Alexander Graf
-
Andreas Färber
-
Tom Rini