95966a563b
The new configs/imx28_xea_sb_defconfig is introduced to facilitate building the single binary u-boot.sb fox XEA board. The biggest distinction from "normal" XEA imx28_xea_sb_defconfig is support for USB mass storage devices (pen drives). To achieve that, the CONFIG_DM_USB is enabled and supported. Signed-off-by: Lukasz Majewski <lukma@denx.de> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
Kconfig | ||
MAINTAINERS | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
spl_xea.c | ||
xea.c |
Building SPL/U-Boot for xea board ================================= Setup environment, configure and build, e.g. by: $ make imx28_xea_defconfig $ make -j4 u-boot.sb u-boot.img Now you should see u-boot.sb and u-boot.img files in the build directory. Booting ======= The boot ROM loads SPL from SPI NOR flash into SRAM. SPL configures DRAM and loads either a Linux kernel (falcon mode) or, if the rescue pin is asserted, the main U-Boot. Both kernel and U-Boot reside in eMMC boot partition 0. For redundancy, a copy of U-Boot is also stored in SPI flash. If a valid kernel image is not found, U-Boot is loaded from eMMC or, if this fails, SPI flash. Boot area layout ---------------- SPI NOR Offset Function File ------------------------------------------ 0x00000000 SPL u-boot.sb 0x00010000 U-Boot u-boot.img 0x00080000 Environment eMMC Offset Function File ------------------------------------------ 0x00000000 U-Boot u-boot.img 0x00080000 Devicetree imx28-bttc.dtb 0x00100000 Kernel uImage Falcon mode =========== In falcon mode, the default, SPL loads the kernel and devicetree directly. For this to work, the stored devicetree must include correct "memory" and "chosen" nodes as these are not updated by SPL before booting the kernel. Updating from U-Boot ==================== The default U-Boot environment includes command sequences to update SPL, U-Boot, and kernel over TFTP. These are as follows: - update_spl: writes u-boot.sb to SPI NOR - update_uboot: writes u-boot.img to eMMC and SPI NOR - update_kernel: writes kernel and devicetree to eMMC They can be invoked at the U-Boot prompt using the "run" command, e.g. "run update_spl" to update the SPL. These update commands download the above-named files from the ${hostname} directory on the server provided by DHCP.