README revision 1.4
1$NetBSD: README,v 1.4 2006/03/08 23:46:23 lukem Exp $ 2 3NetBSD for the Linksys NSLU2 (a.k.a. "Slug") 4~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5 6The NSLU2 (Network Storage Link for USB 2.0 Disk Drives) is a small, cheap 7NAS device consisting of an Intel IXP420 (Xscale) CPU, a 10/100mbit Ethernet 8port, and two USB 2.0 ports. It has 32MB of SDRAM and 8MB of Flash memory, 9and runs RedBoot/Linux out of the box. 10 11It is eminently hackable. 12 13The guys over at http://www.nslu2-linux.org/ have done a good job of 14documenting just about every aspect of the hardware and original firmware. 15They also provide a custom "Unslung" Linux distribution to replace the 16original hobbled kernel/userland. 17 18Because of the amount of documentation available, and the fact that Slugs 19are available so cheaply (I paid just over UKP 50 for mine, brand new) I 20decided to buy one and port NetBSD to it. 21 22This is the result of that effort. 23 24Note: The Slug's IXP420 CPU runs in big-endian mode, so when building a 25cross toolchain you must pass "-m evbarm -a armeb" to build.sh. 26 27 28 29Current status 30============== 31 32The following bits of Slug hardware are not (yet?) supported: 33 34 - NPE Ethernet 35 Someone will have to port Intel's IXP425 access library before this can 36 be made to work. If that someone is you, the source code is available 37 online here: 38 39 http://www.intel.com/design/network/products/npfamily/ixp425.htm 40 41 Look under "Tools & Software", then select "Register/Login" to download 42 "Intel(R) IXP400 Software". Documentation is available in the 43 "Technical Documents" section. 44 45 The easiest option will be to download the non-crypto version of the 46 Access Library. The crypto-enabled version requires a lot more form 47 filling. The Slug's IXP420 has no crypto capabilities anyway. 48 49 - Flash ROM 50 You can write gzboot kernels (when support is added) to Flash using 51 RedBoot, so all is not lost. 52 53 - Buzzer 54 In the absence of a decent API to expose the onboard buzzer to userland, 55 this is not yet supported. I envisage using timer1 to generate an 56 interrupt at the required rate (1-2 kHz). The handler will toggle the 57 buzzer GPIO pin. Obviously timer1 will be configured only when necessary 58 as a 1-2 kHz interrupt rate will sap a fair bit of CPU horsepower. 59 60Everything else is fully supported, including the power/reset buttons and 61disk activity/status LEDs. 62 63Non-hardware items on the TODO list include: 64 65 - gzboot support. 66 The Slug's 8MB of Flash is split into 5 segments: 67 68 1 0x50000000-0x5003ffff: RedBoot (with some additional bits at the end). 69 2 0x50040000-0x5005ffff: Sysconf (used by the Linksys firmware). 70 3 0x50060000-0x5015ffff: Self-extracting compressed kernel image. 71 4 0x50160000-0x507dffff: Compressed ramdisk image. 72 5 0x507e0000-0x507fffff: SerComm Flash trailer. 73 74 Segments 1, 2, and 5 should be considered immutable. Segments 3 and 4 75 have a 16-byte header, the first 4 bytes of which describe the length 76 of the image contained in that segment (not including the header). 77 78 On power-up, RedBoot copies the image in segment 3 into SDRAM at 0x01d00000, 79 and the image in segment 4 into SDRAM at 0x01000000. RedBoot then jumps to 80 0x01d00000. This is just a regular ARM Linux compressed kernel bootloader. 81 82 So, we need to create a version of gzboot linked not at Flash address 83 0x50060000, but at 0x01d00000 instead. The only downside is that it looks 84 like the combined size of gzboot plus compressed kernel cannot exceed 1MB. 85 86 To support an md(4) root filesystem, we will need to modify gzboot to 87 decompress the ramdisk image from segment 4 and copy it to the correct 88 place in the decompressed kernel image. 89 90 - Move the kernel link address closer to the start of SDRAM. We waste a 91 little under 2MB with the current setup. 92 93 94 95Getting NetBSD onto the NSLU2 96============================= 97 98Thanks to the efforts of the guys over at www.nslu2-linux.org, hacking the 99Slug is a pretty easy proposition, but some soldering skills are essential. 100For a first-time install of NetBSD (at least until someone comes up with a 101nice easy binary install image) you will almost certainly require access to 102the serial console. This means firing up your trusty soldering iron and 103hooking up a MAX3232 chip to your Slug. While your soldering iron is hot, 104you should seriously consider de-restricting your Slug's CPU core clock 105speed (133MHz stock, 266MHz de-restricted) by removing a single surface- 106mount resistor. Full instructions for both the these mods are on the above 107website. 108 109Once you have console access you can interrupt RedBoot's auto-boot process 110using CTRL-C. You are now in a position to download a NetBSD kernel into 111SDRAM. 112 113You will have to configure a TFTP server on a machine hooked up to the same 114Ethernet segment as the Slug. This machine's Ethernet interface must also 115be configured to have an address in the 192.168.0.0/24 subnet since the 116Slug's Ethernet *always* defaults to 192.168.0.1 when running RedBoot. 117There seems to be no way to alter this, so the best course of action will 118probably be to set up an alias on the server's interface. 192.168.0.2 is 119a good choice. 120 121Assuming you've done all that and have dropped a suitable kernel image 122into the TFTP directory, the following commands will load and run the 123kernel. 124 125redboot> ip_address -h 192.168.0.2 126redboot> load -r -b 0x200000 netbsd.bin 127redboot> go 128 129At this point your only real option is to mount the root filesystem from 130a USB disk device as the onboard Ethernet is not (yet?) supported. However, 131there's nothing to stop you using a USB-Ethernet interface... 132 133Note that the kernel will always report the CPU core clock speed as 266MHz 134even if your Slug's CPU clock is running at a stock 133MHz. 135 136 137 138Burning a NetBSD kernel into Flash 139================================== 140 141TBD (waiting for gzboot support). 142 143