[U-Boot-Users] intended behavior of bootm
Matthias Fuchs
matthias.fuchs at esd-electronics.com
Mon Apr 21 17:43:18 CEST 2008
Hi Jerry,
On Monday 21 April 2008 17:16, Jerry Van Baren wrote:
> Matthias Fuchs wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > after going through the boom code I found out, that
> > setting the 'autostart' variable to 'no' brings me a little closer
> > to what I want. But finally I end up
> > in the enable_interrupts() at the very end of do_bootm(). This freezes
> > my system. The reason for this is the Linux kernel image that is loaded to address 0
> > and that overwrites the vector table. So reenabling the interrupts in U-Boot with
> > Linux interrupt table is a bad idea.
>
> No, having your (u-boot) interrupt go off while booting linux is a bad idea.
U-Boot calls disable_interrupt() in do_bootm(). That's fact.
>
> Which interrupt is going off? Why is it going off (why isn't the
> hardware put into a quiescent state)?
>
> > So what's the best idea to fix this? I could copy the vector table onto the stack
> > in do_bootm() and copy it back just before reenabling the interrupts.
>
> NO NO NO.
At least this works :-)
>
> > Any better idea?
> >
> > Matthias
>
> That a u-boot initialized interrupt is occurring is wrong and needs to
> be fixed.
> * Traditionally, u-boot does not use interrupts for anything, thus this
> isn't a problem.
>
> * Proper hardware and device driver convention is that the hardware must
> be quiescent when linux is started and the linux device driver must
> (re)configure that hardware the way it wants/needs. Obviously, this is
> probably a 95% rule (console I/O, memory initialization, some others may
> violate this rule for practical reasons).
>
> * If your u-boot enables interrupt(s), you MUST disable the interrupt
> source before starting linux. There is NO graceful way of getting linux
> to handle an interrupt that was a result of u-boot's running. Starting
> linux with interrupts disabled is not a good solution - you may get
> lucky but leaving an active interrupt source is a dangerous game. At
> best, it is a race condition that you may happen to win today.
So this means that U-Boot calling disable_interrupts before booting Linux (see do_bootm)
is correct. Later my the kernel images is loaded at address 0. This overwrites all U-Boot vectors
in the first 16k of RAM. So when after the kernel is loaded to address 0 and the ramdisk
CRC checking failed to control is to be passed back to U-Boot it sees a mixed up vector table.
I think the only ways to fix this is to save the table (as I did for testing) or check the ramdisk
images before uncompressing the kernel at address 0.
Except from that I just noticed that 'autostart=no' does not help me, because it completely disables booting
the kernel from bootm.
So how can I achive this:
bootm $(kernel_addr_in_flash) $(randisk_addr_in_flash); run load_images_from_usb_to_ram; bootm $(kernel_addr_in_ram) $(ramdisk_addr_in_ram)
So the the initial bootm fails because of invalid images, U-Boot should load images from a USB media and start them.
Matthias
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