| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ |
| .. Copyright (C) 2018, Bin Meng <bmeng.cn@gmail.com> |
| |
| QEMU RISC-V |
| =========== |
| |
| QEMU for RISC-V supports a special 'virt' machine designed for emulation and |
| virtualization purposes. This document describes how to run U-Boot under it. |
| Both 32-bit and 64-bit targets are supported, running in either machine or |
| supervisor mode. |
| |
| The QEMU virt machine models a generic RISC-V virtual machine with support for |
| the VirtIO standard networking and block storage devices. It has CLINT, PLIC, |
| 16550A UART devices in addition to VirtIO and it also uses device-tree to pass |
| configuration information to guest software. It implements RISC-V privileged |
| architecture spec v1.10. |
| |
| Building U-Boot |
| --------------- |
| Set the CROSS_COMPILE environment variable as usual, and run: |
| |
| - For 32-bit RISC-V:: |
| |
| make qemu-riscv32_defconfig |
| make |
| |
| - For 64-bit RISC-V:: |
| |
| make qemu-riscv64_defconfig |
| make |
| |
| This will compile U-Boot for machine mode. To build supervisor mode binaries, |
| use the configurations qemu-riscv32_smode_defconfig and |
| qemu-riscv64_smode_defconfig instead. Note that U-Boot running in supervisor |
| mode requires a supervisor binary interface (SBI), such as RISC-V OpenSBI. |
| |
| Running U-Boot |
| -------------- |
| The minimal QEMU command line to get U-Boot up and running is: |
| |
| - For 32-bit RISC-V:: |
| |
| qemu-system-riscv32 -nographic -machine virt -bios u-boot |
| |
| - For 64-bit RISC-V:: |
| |
| qemu-system-riscv64 -nographic -machine virt -bios u-boot |
| |
| The commands above create targets with 128MiB memory by default. |
| A freely configurable amount of RAM can be created via the '-m' |
| parameter. For example, '-m 2G' creates 2GiB memory for the target, |
| and the memory node in the embedded DTB created by QEMU reflects |
| the new setting. |
| |
| For instructions on how to run U-Boot in supervisor mode on QEMU |
| with OpenSBI, see the documentation available with OpenSBI: |
| https://github.com/riscv/opensbi/blob/master/docs/platform/qemu_virt.md |
| |
| These have been tested in QEMU 5.0.0. |
| |
| Running U-Boot SPL |
| ------------------ |
| In the default SPL configuration, U-Boot SPL starts in machine mode. U-Boot |
| proper and OpenSBI (FW_DYNAMIC firmware) are bundled as FIT image and made |
| available to U-Boot SPL. Both are then loaded by U-Boot SPL and the location |
| of U-Boot proper is passed to OpenSBI. After initialization, U-Boot proper is |
| started in supervisor mode by OpenSBI. |
| |
| OpenSBI must be compiled before compiling U-Boot. Version 0.4 and higher is |
| supported by U-Boot. Clone the OpenSBI repository and run the following command. |
| |
| .. code-block:: console |
| |
| git clone https://github.com/riscv/opensbi.git |
| cd opensbi |
| make PLATFORM=generic |
| |
| See the OpenSBI documentation for full details: |
| https://github.com/riscv/opensbi/blob/master/docs/platform/qemu_virt.md |
| |
| To make the FW_DYNAMIC binary (build/platform/qemu/virt/firmware/fw_dynamic.bin) |
| available to U-Boot, either copy it into the U-Boot root directory or specify |
| its location with the OPENSBI environment variable. Afterwards, compile U-Boot |
| with the following commands. |
| |
| - For 32-bit RISC-V:: |
| |
| make qemu-riscv32_spl_defconfig |
| make |
| |
| - For 64-bit RISC-V:: |
| |
| make qemu-riscv64_spl_defconfig |
| make |
| |
| The minimal QEMU commands to run U-Boot SPL in both 32-bit and 64-bit |
| configurations are: |
| |
| - For 32-bit RISC-V:: |
| |
| qemu-system-riscv32 -nographic -machine virt -bios spl/u-boot-spl \ |
| -device loader,file=u-boot.itb,addr=0x80200000 |
| |
| - For 64-bit RISC-V:: |
| |
| qemu-system-riscv64 -nographic -machine virt -bios spl/u-boot-spl \ |
| -device loader,file=u-boot.itb,addr=0x80200000 |
| |
| An attached disk can be emulated by adding:: |
| |
| -device ich9-ahci,id=ahci \ |
| -drive if=none,file=riscv64.img,format=raw,id=mydisk \ |
| -device ide-hd,drive=mydisk,bus=ahci.0 |
| |
| You will have to run 'scsi scan' to use it. |