README.altboot revision 1.5
11.1Snisimura/// notes about altboot /// 21.1Snisimura 31.5Sphx$NetBSD: README.altboot,v 1.5 2011/06/02 16:41:32 phx Exp $ 41.1Snisimura 51.1SnisimuraAltboot is a functional bridge to fill the gap between a NAS product 61.1Snisimuracustom bootloader and the NetBSD kernel startup environment. Altboot 71.1Snisimurairons out and rectifies erroneously configured HW by product 81.3Sphxbootloaders and prepares a sane runtime, better suited for booting 91.1SnisimuraNetBSD kernels. 101.1Snisimura 111.1Snisimura- provides the foundation of a fast NetBSD porting cycle with functionalities 121.1Snisimura product bootloaders don't have. 131.1Snisimura- facilitates a flexible and clean NetBSD implementation tailoured 141.1Snisimura to target HW in detail, minimizing bumpy adjustments and hacks in 151.1Snisimura locore asm and machdeps in very early kernel startup stage. 161.1Snisimura- levels out differences among similar-but-not-the-same porting 171.1Snisimura targets to make it possible having common NetBSD kernels for them. 181.1Snisimura- builds and hands a bootinfo list to the NetBSD kernel. 191.1Snisimura 201.3SphxAltboot is known working on at least these models: 211.3Sphx 221.3Sphx- KuroBox or LinkStation with a popular U-Boot as the replacement of 231.3Sphx vendor proprietary 241.1Snisimura 251.1Snisimura U-Boot 1.1.4 LiSt 2.1.0 (Sep 21 2006 - 00:22:56) LinkStation / KuroBox 261.1Snisimura 271.1Snisimura- Synology 101g+ with vendor custom PPCboot 281.1Snisimura 291.1Snisimura PPCBoot 2.0.0 (Mar 1 2005 - 15:31:41) 301.1Snisimura 311.5Sphx- Synology 207, 407e with vendor custom PPCboot 321.5Sphx 331.5Sphx PPCBoot 2.0.0 (Jan 30 2007 - xx:xx:xx) 341.5Sphx 351.2Sphx- D-Link DSM-G600 with heavily restricted vendor custom U-Boot 361.2Sphx 371.2Sphx U-Boot 0.2.0 (May 26 2005 - 19:38:32) 381.2Sphx 391.3Sphx- QNAP TS-101 (V200) with vendor custom U-Boot 401.3Sphx 411.3Sphx U-Boot 1.1.2 (Aug 28 2005 - 13:37:25) QNAP System, Inc. 421.3Sphx 431.1SnisimuraThe standard use of altboot is to invoke it with a short script from 441.3SphxU-Boot/PPCboot, where the altboot.bin image is stored in an unoccupied 128KB 451.1Snisimurasection of the target's HW NOR flash. Combined with standard 461.1SnisimuraU-Boot/PPCboot functions, it is possible to boot a NetBSD kernel off 471.1Snisimurait right after power-on, without the help of manual intervention. Note 481.1Snisimurathat the original U-Boot/PPCboot still remains useful and altboot works 491.1Snisimuraas a functional extension for them. 501.1Snisimura 511.3SphxIn case the firmware was crippled by the vendor so that it only boots 521.3SphxLinux U-Boot images (D-Link), you can still use altboot by uploading 531.3Sphxaltboot.img instead of the Linux kernel. 541.3Sphx 551.1SnisimuraAltboot hands the following bootinfo records to the NetBSD/sandpoint 561.1Snisimurakernel. 571.1Snisimura- processor clock tick value driving MPC8241/8245. 581.1Snisimura- serial console selection. 591.1Snisimura- booted kernel filename and which device it was fetched from. 601.1Snisimura- Ethernet MAC address, if target HW lacks SEEPROM to store a unit unique 611.1Snisimura value. 621.1Snisimura- product family indication. 631.1Snisimura- preloaded kernel module names (under development). 641.1Snisimura 651.4SphxWhen no arguments are given, altboot defaults to boot a kernel called 661.4Sphx"netbsd" from the root partition of the first disk in multiuser mode. 671.4Sphx 681.4SphxBoot arguments may be passed in three ways: 691.4Sphx- On the command line, directly after the "go 0x1000000" command. 701.4Sphx- From the U-Boot "bootargs" environment variable, when started by "bootm". 711.4Sphx- By entering the interactive mode. 721.4Sphx 731.4SphxThe following boot arguments are recognized: 741.4Sphx- multi boot into multiuser 751.4Sphx- auto boot into multiuser 761.4Sphx- single boot into singleuser 771.4Sphx- ask ask for boot device 781.4Sphx- ddb drop into the kernel debugger 791.4Sphx- userconf change configured devices 801.4Sphx 811.4SphxThe following boot flags are recognized: 821.4Sphx- norm boot normally 831.4Sphx- quiet boot quietly 841.4Sphx- verb boot verbosely 851.4Sphx- silent boot silently 861.4Sphx- debug boot with debug output 871.4Sphx 881.4SphxAdditionally the special argument "altboot" is recognized, which replaces 891.4Sphxthe actually running altboot program with the loaded binary file and 901.4Sphxrestarts itself. Mainly useful for altboot testing. 911.4Sphx 921.4SphxMultiple arguments may be specified at once, although not all combinations 931.4Sphxmake sense. The format of an altboot command line is: 941.4Sphx 951.4Sphx [[<bootargs> ...] <devicename>:[<bootfile>]] 961.4Sphx 971.4SphxThe following device names are supported: 981.4Sphx- tftp boot from TFTP (address retrieved by DHCP) 991.4Sphx- nfs boot from NFS (address retrieved by DHCP) 1001.4Sphx- wd[N[P]] boot from disk N, partition P, defaults to wd0a 1011.4Sphx- mem boot from memory 1021.4Sphx 1031.4SphxFor tftp and nfs the bootfile is determined by DHCP, when missing. 1041.4SphxFor wd it defaults to "netbsd". 1051.4SphxFor mem the bootfile is actually a hexadecimal address to load from and 1061.4Sphxis mandatory. 1071.4Sphx 1081.1Snisimura ### ### ### 109