u-boot/doc/README.android-fastboot
Steve Rae d1b5ed0753 usb/gadget: fastboot: add support for flash command
- implement 'fastboot flash' for eMMC devices

Signed-off-by: Steve Rae <srae@broadcom.com>
Acked-by: Lukasz Majewski <l.majewski@samsung.com>
Reviewed-by: Marek Vasut <marex@denx.de>
2014-09-24 18:30:27 -04:00

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Android Fastboot
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Overview
========
The protocol that is used over USB is described in
README.android-fastboot-protocol in same directory.
The current implementation does not yet support the erase command or the
"oem format" command, and there is minimal support for the flash command;
it only supports eMMC devices.
Client installation
===================
The counterpart to this gadget is the fastboot client which can
be found in Android's platform/system/core repository in the fastboot
folder. It runs on Windows, Linux and even OSX. Linux user are lucky since
they only need libusb.
Windows users need to bring some time until they have Android SDK (currently
http://dl.google.com/android/installer_r12-windows.exe) installed. You
need to install ADB package which contains the required glue libraries for
accessing USB. Also you need "Google USB driver package" and "SDK platform
tools". Once installed the usb driver is placed in your SDK folder under
extras\google\usb_driver. The android_winusb.inf needs a line like
%SingleBootLoaderInterface% = USB_Install, USB\VID_0451&PID_D022
either in the [Google.NTx86] section for 32bit Windows or [Google.NTamd64]
for 64bit Windows. VID and PID should match whatever the fastboot is
advertising.
Board specific
==============
The fastboot gadget relies on the USB download gadget, so the following
options must be configured:
CONFIG_USBDOWNLOAD_GADGET
CONFIG_G_DNL_VENDOR_NUM
CONFIG_G_DNL_PRODUCT_NUM
CONFIG_G_DNL_MANUFACTURER
NOTE: The CONFIG_G_DNL_VENDOR_NUM must be one of the numbers supported by
the fastboot client. The list of vendor IDs supported can be found in the
fastboot client source code (fastboot.c) mentioned above.
The fastboot function is enabled by defining CONFIG_CMD_FASTBOOT and
CONFIG_ANDROID_BOOT_IMAGE.
The fastboot protocol requires a large memory buffer for downloads. This
buffer should be as large as possible for a platform. The location of the
buffer and size are set with CONFIG_USB_FASTBOOT_BUF_ADDR and
CONFIG_USB_FASTBOOT_BUF_SIZE.
In Action
=========
Enter into fastboot by executing the fastboot command in u-boot and you
should see:
|GADGET DRIVER: usb_dnl_fastboot
On the client side you can fetch the bootloader version for instance:
|>fastboot getvar bootloader-version
|bootloader-version: U-Boot 2014.04-00005-gd24cabc
|finished. total time: 0.000s
or initiate a reboot:
|>fastboot reboot
and once the client comes back, the board should reset.
You can also specify a kernel image to boot. You have to either specify
the an image in Android format _or_ pass a binary kernel and let the
fastboot client wrap the Android suite around it. On OMAP for instance you
take zImage kernel and pass it to the fastboot client:
|>fastboot -b 0x80000000 -c "console=ttyO2 earlyprintk root=/dev/ram0
| mem=128M" boot zImage
|creating boot image...
|creating boot image - 1847296 bytes
|downloading 'boot.img'...
|OKAY [ 2.766s]
|booting...
|OKAY [ -0.000s]
|finished. total time: 2.766s
and on the gadget side you should see:
|Starting download of 1847296 bytes
|........................................................
|downloading of 1847296 bytes finished
|Booting kernel..
|## Booting Android Image at 0x81000000 ...
|Kernel load addr 0x80008000 size 1801 KiB
|Kernel command line: console=ttyO2 earlyprintk root=/dev/ram0 mem=128M
| Loading Kernel Image ... OK
|OK
|
|Starting kernel ...