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README.altboot revision 1.8
      1  1.1  nisimura /// notes about altboot ///
      2  1.1  nisimura 
      3  1.8       phx $NetBSD: README.altboot,v 1.8 2012/01/14 20:16:53 phx Exp $
      4  1.1  nisimura 
      5  1.1  nisimura Altboot is a functional bridge to fill the gap between a NAS product
      6  1.1  nisimura custom bootloader and the NetBSD kernel startup environment.  Altboot
      7  1.1  nisimura irons out and rectifies erroneously configured HW by product
      8  1.3       phx bootloaders and prepares a sane runtime, better suited for booting
      9  1.1  nisimura NetBSD kernels.
     10  1.1  nisimura 
     11  1.1  nisimura - provides the foundation of a fast NetBSD porting cycle with functionalities
     12  1.1  nisimura   product bootloaders don't have.
     13  1.1  nisimura - facilitates a flexible and clean NetBSD implementation tailoured
     14  1.1  nisimura   to target HW in detail, minimizing bumpy adjustments and hacks in
     15  1.1  nisimura   locore asm and machdeps in very early kernel startup stage.
     16  1.1  nisimura - levels out differences among similar-but-not-the-same porting
     17  1.1  nisimura   targets to make it possible having common NetBSD kernels for them.
     18  1.1  nisimura - builds and hands a bootinfo list to the NetBSD kernel.
     19  1.1  nisimura 
     20  1.3       phx Altboot is known working on at least these models:
     21  1.3       phx 
     22  1.7       phx - KuroBox or LinkStation with a popular U-Boot as replacement of
     23  1.7       phx   the vendor's proprietary one
     24  1.1  nisimura 
     25  1.1  nisimura    U-Boot 1.1.4 LiSt 2.1.0 (Sep 21 2006 - 00:22:56) LinkStation / KuroBox
     26  1.1  nisimura 
     27  1.1  nisimura - Synology 101g+ with vendor custom PPCboot
     28  1.1  nisimura 
     29  1.1  nisimura    PPCBoot 2.0.0 (Mar  1 2005 - 15:31:41)
     30  1.1  nisimura 
     31  1.6       phx - Synology 106j, 207, 407e with vendor custom PPCboot
     32  1.5       phx 
     33  1.5       phx    PPCBoot 2.0.0 (Jan 30 2007 - xx:xx:xx)
     34  1.5       phx 
     35  1.2       phx - D-Link DSM-G600 with heavily restricted vendor custom U-Boot
     36  1.2       phx 
     37  1.2       phx    U-Boot 0.2.0 (May 26 2005 - 19:38:32)
     38  1.2       phx 
     39  1.3       phx - QNAP TS-101 (V200) with vendor custom U-Boot
     40  1.3       phx 
     41  1.3       phx    U-Boot 1.1.2 (Aug 28 2005 - 13:37:25) QNAP System, Inc.
     42  1.3       phx 
     43  1.7       phx - Iomega StorCenter with vendor custom U-Boot
     44  1.7       phx 
     45  1.7       phx    U-Boot 1.0.0 (Sep  2 2005 - 14:49:11)
     46  1.7       phx 
     47  1.8       phx - Netronics NH230/231 and compatible with restricted vendor custom PPCboot
     48  1.8       phx 
     49  1.8       phx    PPCBoot 2.0.0-A9 (Feb 13 2006 - 14:56:11)
     50  1.8       phx 
     51  1.1  nisimura The standard use of altboot is to invoke it with a short script from
     52  1.3       phx U-Boot/PPCboot, where the altboot.bin image is stored in an unoccupied 128KB
     53  1.1  nisimura section of the target's HW NOR flash.  Combined with standard
     54  1.1  nisimura U-Boot/PPCboot functions, it is possible to boot a NetBSD kernel off
     55  1.1  nisimura it right after power-on, without the help of manual intervention.  Note
     56  1.1  nisimura that the original U-Boot/PPCboot still remains useful and altboot works
     57  1.1  nisimura as a functional extension for them.
     58  1.1  nisimura 
     59  1.3       phx In case the firmware was crippled by the vendor so that it only boots
     60  1.3       phx Linux U-Boot images (D-Link), you can still use altboot by uploading
     61  1.3       phx altboot.img instead of the Linux kernel.
     62  1.3       phx 
     63  1.7       phx Altboot passes the following bootinfo records to the NetBSD/sandpoint
     64  1.1  nisimura kernel.
     65  1.1  nisimura - processor clock tick value driving MPC8241/8245.
     66  1.1  nisimura - serial console selection.
     67  1.1  nisimura - booted kernel filename and which device it was fetched from.
     68  1.1  nisimura - Ethernet MAC address, if target HW lacks SEEPROM to store a unit unique
     69  1.1  nisimura   value.
     70  1.1  nisimura - product family indication.
     71  1.1  nisimura - preloaded kernel module names (under development).
     72  1.1  nisimura 
     73  1.4       phx When no arguments are given, altboot defaults to boot a kernel called
     74  1.4       phx "netbsd" from the root partition of the first disk in multiuser mode.
     75  1.4       phx 
     76  1.4       phx Boot arguments may be passed in three ways:
     77  1.4       phx - On the command line, directly after the "go 0x1000000" command.
     78  1.4       phx - From the U-Boot "bootargs" environment variable, when started by "bootm".
     79  1.4       phx - By entering the interactive mode.
     80  1.4       phx 
     81  1.4       phx The following boot arguments are recognized:
     82  1.4       phx - multi			boot into multiuser
     83  1.4       phx - auto			boot into multiuser
     84  1.4       phx - single		boot into singleuser
     85  1.4       phx - ask			ask for boot device
     86  1.4       phx - ddb			drop into the kernel debugger
     87  1.4       phx - userconf		change configured devices
     88  1.4       phx 
     89  1.4       phx The following boot flags are recognized:
     90  1.4       phx - norm			boot normally
     91  1.4       phx - quiet			boot quietly
     92  1.4       phx - verb			boot verbosely
     93  1.4       phx - silent		boot silently
     94  1.4       phx - debug			boot with debug output
     95  1.4       phx 
     96  1.4       phx Additionally the special argument "altboot" is recognized, which replaces
     97  1.4       phx the actually running altboot program with the loaded binary file and
     98  1.4       phx restarts itself. Mainly useful for altboot testing.
     99  1.4       phx 
    100  1.4       phx Multiple arguments may be specified at once, although not all combinations
    101  1.4       phx make sense. The format of an altboot command line is:
    102  1.4       phx 
    103  1.4       phx   [[<bootargs> ...] <devicename>:[<bootfile>]]
    104  1.4       phx 
    105  1.4       phx The following device names are supported:
    106  1.4       phx - tftp			boot from TFTP (address retrieved by DHCP)
    107  1.4       phx - nfs			boot from NFS (address retrieved by DHCP)
    108  1.4       phx - wd[N[P]]		boot from disk N, partition P, defaults to wd0a
    109  1.4       phx - mem			boot from memory
    110  1.4       phx 
    111  1.4       phx For tftp and nfs the bootfile is determined by DHCP, when missing.
    112  1.4       phx For wd it defaults to "netbsd".
    113  1.4       phx For mem the bootfile is actually a hexadecimal address to load from and
    114  1.4       phx is mandatory.
    115  1.4       phx 
    116  1.1  nisimura                              ### ### ###
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