1 /* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ */ 2 /* 3 * Copyright (c) 2014 The Chromium OS Authors. 4 */ 5 6 Native Execution of U-Boot 7 ========================== 8 9 The 'sandbox' architecture is designed to allow U-Boot to run under Linux on 10 almost any hardware. To achieve this it builds U-Boot (so far as possible) 11 as a normal C application with a main() and normal C libraries. 12 13 All of U-Boot's architecture-specific code therefore cannot be built as part 14 of the sandbox U-Boot. The purpose of running U-Boot under Linux is to test 15 all the generic code, not specific to any one architecture. The idea is to 16 create unit tests which we can run to test this upper level code. 17 18 CONFIG_SANDBOX is defined when building a native board. 19 20 The board name is 'sandbox' but the vendor name is unset, so there is a 21 single board in board/sandbox. 22 23 CONFIG_SANDBOX_BIG_ENDIAN should be defined when running on big-endian 24 machines. 25 26 There are two versions of the sandbox: One using 32-bit-wide integers, and one 27 using 64-bit-wide integers. The 32-bit version can be build and run on either 28 32 or 64-bit hosts by either selecting or deselecting CONFIG_SANDBOX_32BIT; by 29 default, the sandbox it built for a 32-bit host. The sandbox using 64-bit-wide 30 integers can only be built on 64-bit hosts. 31 32 Note that standalone/API support is not available at present. 33 34 35 Basic Operation 36 --------------- 37 38 To run sandbox U-Boot use something like: 39 40 make sandbox_defconfig all 41 ./u-boot 42 43 Note: 44 If you get errors about 'sdl-config: Command not found' you may need to 45 install libsdl1.2-dev or similar to get SDL support. Alternatively you can 46 build sandbox without SDL (i.e. no display/keyboard support) by removing 47 the CONFIG_SANDBOX_SDL line in include/configs/sandbox.h or using: 48 49 make sandbox_defconfig all NO_SDL=1 50 ./u-boot 51 52 U-Boot will start on your computer, showing a sandbox emulation of the serial 53 console: 54 55 56 U-Boot 2014.04 (Mar 20 2014 - 19:06:00) 57 58 DRAM: 128 MiB 59 Using default environment 60 61 In: serial 62 Out: lcd 63 Err: lcd 64 => 65 66 You can issue commands as your would normally. If the command you want is 67 not supported you can add it to include/configs/sandbox.h. 68 69 To exit, type 'reset' or press Ctrl-C. 70 71 72 Console / LCD support 73 --------------------- 74 75 Assuming that CONFIG_SANDBOX_SDL is defined when building, you can run the 76 sandbox with LCD and keyboard emulation, using something like: 77 78 ./u-boot -d u-boot.dtb -l 79 80 This will start U-Boot with a window showing the contents of the LCD. If 81 that window has the focus then you will be able to type commands as you 82 would on the console. You can adjust the display settings in the device 83 tree file - see arch/sandbox/dts/sandbox.dts. 84 85 86 Command-line Options 87 -------------------- 88 89 Various options are available, mostly for test purposes. Use -h to see 90 available options. Some of these are described below. 91 92 The terminal is normally in what is called 'raw-with-sigs' mode. This means 93 that you can use arrow keys for command editing and history, but if you 94 press Ctrl-C, U-Boot will exit instead of handling this as a keypress. 95 96 Other options are 'raw' (so Ctrl-C is handled within U-Boot) and 'cooked' 97 (where the terminal is in cooked mode and cursor keys will not work, Ctrl-C 98 will exit). 99 100 As mentioned above, -l causes the LCD emulation window to be shown. 101 102 A device tree binary file can be provided with -d. If you edit the source 103 (it is stored at arch/sandbox/dts/sandbox.dts) you must rebuild U-Boot to 104 recreate the binary file. 105 106 To execute commands directly, use the -c option. You can specify a single 107 command, or multiple commands separated by a semicolon, as is normal in 108 U-Boot. Be careful with quoting as the shell will normally process and 109 swallow quotes. When -c is used, U-Boot exits after the command is complete, 110 but you can force it to go to interactive mode instead with -i. 111 112 113 Memory Emulation 114 ---------------- 115 116 Memory emulation is supported, with the size set by CONFIG_SYS_SDRAM_SIZE. 117 The -m option can be used to read memory from a file on start-up and write 118 it when shutting down. This allows preserving of memory contents across 119 test runs. You can tell U-Boot to remove the memory file after it is read 120 (on start-up) with the --rm_memory option. 121 122 To access U-Boot's emulated memory within the code, use map_sysmem(). This 123 function is used throughout U-Boot to ensure that emulated memory is used 124 rather than the U-Boot application memory. This provides memory starting 125 at 0 and extending to the size of the emulation. 126 127 128 Storing State 129 ------------- 130 131 With sandbox you can write drivers which emulate the operation of drivers on 132 real devices. Some of these drivers may want to record state which is 133 preserved across U-Boot runs. This is particularly useful for testing. For 134 example, the contents of a SPI flash chip should not disappear just because 135 U-Boot exits. 136 137 State is stored in a device tree file in a simple format which is driver- 138 specific. You then use the -s option to specify the state file. Use -r to 139 make U-Boot read the state on start-up (otherwise it starts empty) and -w 140 to write it on exit (otherwise the stored state is left unchanged and any 141 changes U-Boot made will be lost). You can also use -n to tell U-Boot to 142 ignore any problems with missing state. This is useful when first running 143 since the state file will be empty. 144 145 The device tree file has one node for each driver - the driver can store 146 whatever properties it likes in there. See 'Writing Sandbox Drivers' below 147 for more details on how to get drivers to read and write their state. 148 149 150 Running and Booting 151 ------------------- 152 153 Since there is no machine architecture, sandbox U-Boot cannot actually boot 154 a kernel, but it does support the bootm command. Filesystems, memory 155 commands, hashing, FIT images, verified boot and many other features are 156 supported. 157 158 When 'bootm' runs a kernel, sandbox will exit, as U-Boot does on a real 159 machine. Of course in this case, no kernel is run. 160 161 It is also possible to tell U-Boot that it has jumped from a temporary 162 previous U-Boot binary, with the -j option. That binary is automatically 163 removed by the U-Boot that gets the -j option. This allows you to write 164 tests which emulate the action of chain-loading U-Boot, typically used in 165 a situation where a second 'updatable' U-Boot is stored on your board. It 166 is very risky to overwrite or upgrade the only U-Boot on a board, since a 167 power or other failure will brick the board and require return to the 168 manufacturer in the case of a consumer device. 169 170 171 Supported Drivers 172 ----------------- 173 174 U-Boot sandbox supports these emulations: 175 176 - Block devices 177 - Chrome OS EC 178 - GPIO 179 - Host filesystem (access files on the host from within U-Boot) 180 - I2C 181 - Keyboard (Chrome OS) 182 - LCD 183 - Network 184 - Serial (for console only) 185 - Sound (incomplete - see sandbox_sdl_sound_init() for details) 186 - SPI 187 - SPI flash 188 - TPM (Trusted Platform Module) 189 190 A wide range of commands are implemented. Filesystems which use a block 191 device are supported. 192 193 Also sandbox supports driver model (CONFIG_DM) and associated commands. 194 195 196 Linux RAW Networking Bridge 197 --------------------------- 198 199 The sandbox_eth_raw driver bridges traffic between the bottom of the network 200 stack and the RAW sockets API in Linux. This allows much of the U-Boot network 201 functionality to be tested in sandbox against real network traffic. 202 203 For Ethernet network adapters, the bridge utilizes the RAW AF_PACKET API. This 204 is needed to get access to the lowest level of the network stack in Linux. This 205 means that all of the Ethernet frame is included. This allows the U-Boot network 206 stack to be fully used. In other words, nothing about the Linux network stack is 207 involved in forming the packets that end up on the wire. To receive the 208 responses to packets sent from U-Boot the network interface has to be set to 209 promiscuous mode so that the network card won't filter out packets not destined 210 for its configured (on Linux) MAC address. 211 212 The RAW sockets Ethernet API requires elevated privileges in Linux. You can 213 either run as root, or you can add the capability needed like so: 214 215 sudo /sbin/setcap "CAP_NET_RAW+ep" /path/to/u-boot 216 217 The default device tree for sandbox includes an entry for eth0 on the sandbox 218 host machine whose alias is "eth1". The following are a few examples of network 219 operations being tested on the eth0 interface. 220 221 sudo /path/to/u-boot -D 222 223 DHCP 224 .... 225 226 set autoload no 227 set ethact eth1 228 dhcp 229 230 PING 231 .... 232 233 set autoload no 234 set ethact eth1 235 dhcp 236 ping $gatewayip 237 238 TFTP 239 .... 240 241 set autoload no 242 set ethact eth1 243 dhcp 244 set serverip WWW.XXX.YYY.ZZZ 245 tftpboot u-boot.bin 246 247 The bridge also supports (to a lesser extent) the localhost interface, 'lo'. 248 249 The 'lo' interface cannot use the RAW AF_PACKET API because the lo interface 250 doesn't support Ethernet-level traffic. It is a higher-level interface that is 251 expected only to be used at the AF_INET level of the API. As such, the most raw 252 we can get on that interface is the RAW AF_INET API on UDP. This allows us to 253 set the IP_HDRINCL option to include everything except the Ethernet header in 254 the packets we send and receive. 255 256 Because only UDP is supported, ICMP traffic will not work, so expect that ping 257 commands will time out. 258 259 The default device tree for sandbox includes an entry for lo on the sandbox 260 host machine whose alias is "eth5". The following is an example of a network 261 operation being tested on the lo interface. 262 263 TFTP 264 .... 265 266 set ethact eth5 267 tftpboot u-boot.bin 268 269 270 SPI Emulation 271 ------------- 272 273 Sandbox supports SPI and SPI flash emulation. 274 275 This is controlled by the spi_sf argument, the format of which is: 276 277 bus:cs:device:file 278 279 bus - SPI bus number 280 cs - SPI chip select number 281 device - SPI device emulation name 282 file - File on disk containing the data 283 284 For example: 285 286 dd if=/dev/zero of=spi.bin bs=1M count=4 287 ./u-boot --spi_sf 0:0:M25P16:spi.bin 288 289 With this setup you can issue SPI flash commands as normal: 290 291 =>sf probe 292 SF: Detected M25P16 with page size 64 KiB, total 2 MiB 293 =>sf read 0 0 10000 294 SF: 65536 bytes @ 0x0 Read: OK 295 => 296 297 Since this is a full SPI emulation (rather than just flash), you can 298 also use low-level SPI commands: 299 300 =>sspi 0:0 32 9f 301 FF202015 302 303 This is issuing a READ_ID command and getting back 20 (ST Micro) part 304 0x2015 (the M25P16). 305 306 Drivers are connected to a particular bus/cs using sandbox's state 307 structure (see the 'spi' member). A set of operations must be provided 308 for each driver. 309 310 311 Configuration settings for the curious are: 312 313 CONFIG_SANDBOX_SPI_MAX_BUS 314 The maximum number of SPI buses supported by the driver (default 1). 315 316 CONFIG_SANDBOX_SPI_MAX_CS 317 The maximum number of chip selects supported by the driver 318 (default 10). 319 320 CONFIG_SPI_IDLE_VAL 321 The idle value on the SPI bus 322 323 324 Block Device Emulation 325 ---------------------- 326 327 U-Boot can use raw disk images for block device emulation. To e.g. list 328 the contents of the root directory on the second partion of the image 329 "disk.raw", you can use the following commands: 330 331 =>host bind 0 ./disk.raw 332 =>ls host 0:2 333 334 A disk image can be created using the following commands: 335 336 $> truncate -s 1200M ./disk.raw 337 $> echo -e "label: gpt\n,64M,U\n,,L" | /usr/sbin/sgdisk ./disk.raw 338 $> lodev=`sudo losetup -P -f --show ./disk.raw` 339 $> sudo mkfs.vfat -n EFI -v ${lodev}p1 340 $> sudo mkfs.ext4 -L ROOT -v ${lodev}p2 341 342 or utilize the device described in test/py/make_test_disk.py: 343 344 #!/usr/bin/python 345 import make_test_disk 346 make_test_disk.makeDisk() 347 348 Writing Sandbox Drivers 349 ----------------------- 350 351 Generally you should put your driver in a file containing the word 'sandbox' 352 and put it in the same directory as other drivers of its type. You can then 353 implement the same hooks as the other drivers. 354 355 To access U-Boot's emulated memory, use map_sysmem() as mentioned above. 356 357 If your driver needs to store configuration or state (such as SPI flash 358 contents or emulated chip registers), you can use the device tree as 359 described above. Define handlers for this with the SANDBOX_STATE_IO macro. 360 See arch/sandbox/include/asm/state.h for documentation. In short you provide 361 a node name, compatible string and functions to read and write the state. 362 Since writing the state can expand the device tree, you may need to use 363 state_setprop() which does this automatically and avoids running out of 364 space. See existing code for examples. 365 366 367 Testing 368 ------- 369 370 U-Boot sandbox can be used to run various tests, mostly in the test/ 371 directory. These include: 372 373 command_ut 374 - Unit tests for command parsing and handling 375 compression 376 - Unit tests for U-Boot's compression algorithms, useful for 377 security checking. It supports gzip, bzip2, lzma and lzo. 378 driver model 379 - Run this pytest 380 ./test/py/test.py --bd sandbox --build -k ut_dm -v 381 image 382 - Unit tests for images: 383 test/image/test-imagetools.sh - multi-file images 384 test/image/test-fit.py - FIT images 385 tracing 386 - test/trace/test-trace.sh tests the tracing system (see README.trace) 387 verified boot 388 - See test/vboot/vboot_test.sh for this 389 390 If you change or enhance any of the above subsystems, you shold write or 391 expand a test and include it with your patch series submission. Test 392 coverage in U-Boot is limited, as we need to work to improve it. 393 394 Note that many of these tests are implemented as commands which you can 395 run natively on your board if desired (and enabled). 396 397 It would be useful to have a central script to run all of these. 398 399 -- 400 Simon Glass <sjg (at) chromium.org> 401 Updated 22-Mar-14 402