Building LinuxBIOS: Difference between revisions
JordanCrouse (talk | contribs) (Add LinuxBIOS instructions) |
JordanCrouse (talk | contribs) |
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You'll want to review everything at the excellent [http://www.linuxbios.org/index.php/Main_Page LinuxBIOS wiki] before continuing. I'm only going to address the OLPC specific points here. |
You'll want to review everything at the excellent [http://www.linuxbios.org/index.php/Main_Page LinuxBIOS wiki] before continuing. I'm only going to address the OLPC specific points here. |
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===Building LinuxBIOS=== |
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First, download a recent copy of the LinuxBIOS code (read this: http://www.linuxbios.org/index.php/Download_LinuxBIOS). |
First, download a recent copy of the LinuxBIOS code (read this: http://www.linuxbios.org/index.php/Download_LinuxBIOS). |
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$ make |
$ make |
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This will create a file called ''linuxbios.rom'' in your local directory. |
This will create a file called ''linuxbios.rom'' in your local directory. Note that this is the LinuxBIOs portion plus the payload built in the previous section. |
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===Getting the VSA=== |
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The other part of the ROM you'll need is the binary VSA: http://dev.laptop.org/~jcrouse/olpc_vsa.64k.bin |
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===Putting it all together=== |
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To build the final ROM image, you'll need to combine the VSA and the linuxbios.rom: |
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$ cat olpc_vsa.64k.bin linuxbios.rom > olpc.rom |
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You should now have a file called olpc.rom that is exactly 1048576 (0x100000) bytes large. This is your 1MB ROM. |
Revision as of 23:11, 26 July 2006
Warnings and Disclaimers
These instructions are new and subject to change. No assurance is made that this won't permanently harm your hardware. If you don't understand any of these steps, please stop and ask for clarification on the mailing lists or in IRC. You have now been officially warned.
Buildrom
During boot, LinuxBIOS loads a small payload that consists of a minimal kernel and an initramfs image. We refer to this payload as the "ROM image". The ROM image is responsible for bringing up the system enough to try to load a full kernel from the NAND flash, a USB mass storage device, or the network. Buildrom is a small set of build scripts that facilitiates building the ROM image, including the kernel and all the different utilities and scripts that make up the initramfs image. If you understand buildroot (from the uclibc team), then buildrom will look familiar - it is based on the same concept.
Buildrom is a GNU Make based build system. Using a series of configuration files, the makefile will determine what packages need to be built. Each package is obtained from an upstream repository with wget and built locally on your machine. When all the packages have been built, the script pulls together all the binaries for the ROM image, and combines them into a .ELF file which can be loaded as a payload into LinuxBIOS.
Getting buildrom
Buildrom is available from the OLPC GIT repository on http://dev.laptop.org. Follow these instructions, using this as the tree location:
git://dev.laptop.org/users/jcrouse/buildrom buildrom
From time to time, you will want to make sure you are synced with the upstream tree:
$ cd buildrom; git pull
Building the image
Buildrom requires the following tools on your development system to run:
- make
- gcc
- wget
- quilt
- perl
To build the default image, just type
$ make
You will notice that the system will start downloading packages from the web with wget, and compiling them. If you are behind a proxy, don't forget to set http_proxy before starting.
$ export http_proxy=<proxyurl>:<proxyport>
Buildrom already sets all the important flags and other settings to build the tools and libraries so they can be included into the ROM. There are several configuration options you can play with once you are more familar with the system. Check Config.mk and read the comments.
Using the Image
When the system is done building, you will have three files in the deploy/ directory:
- bzImage - The minimal kernel that was built
- initrd - the gziped initramfs image
- olpc-payload.elf - ELF file that includes both the bzImage and the initrd. This is the payload that LinuxBIOS uses.
LinuxBIOS
You'll want to review everything at the excellent LinuxBIOS wiki before continuing. I'm only going to address the OLPC specific points here.
Building LinuxBIOS
First, download a recent copy of the LinuxBIOS code (read this: http://www.linuxbios.org/index.php/Download_LinuxBIOS).
Next, you'll need to tell LinuxBIOS where to find your payload. You can either do this in one of two ways:
- Edit targets/olpc/rev_a/Config.1M.lb and change the line that says payload /tmp/olpcpayload.elf to <your buildrom directory>/deploy/olpc-payload.elf
- Copy olpc-payload.elf from your buildrom directory to /tmp/olpcpayload.elf.
Now, configure a build for the 1MB ROM on the OLPC board:
$ cd targets/ $ ./buildtarget olpc/rev_a/Config.1M.lb
This will create a directory called targets/olpc/rev_a/rev_a_1M.
Make sure you have the latest payload built (see above). Then build your ROM:
$ cd targets/olpc/rev_a/rev_a_1M/ $ make
This will create a file called linuxbios.rom in your local directory. Note that this is the LinuxBIOs portion plus the payload built in the previous section.
Getting the VSA
The other part of the ROM you'll need is the binary VSA: http://dev.laptop.org/~jcrouse/olpc_vsa.64k.bin
Putting it all together
To build the final ROM image, you'll need to combine the VSA and the linuxbios.rom:
$ cat olpc_vsa.64k.bin linuxbios.rom > olpc.rom
You should now have a file called olpc.rom that is exactly 1048576 (0x100000) bytes large. This is your 1MB ROM.