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Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +01001Command syntax extensions for the new uImage format
2===================================================
3
4Author: Bartlomiej Sieka <tur@semihalf.com>
5
6With the introduction of the new uImage format, bootm command (and other
7commands as well) have to understand new syntax of the arguments. This is
8necessary in order to specify objects contained in the new uImage, on which
9bootm has to operate. This note attempts to first summarize bootm usage
10scenarios, and then introduces new argument syntax.
11
12
13bootm usage scenarios
14---------------------
15
16Below is a summary of bootm usage scenarios, focused on booting a PowerPC
17Linux kernel. The purpose of the following list is to document a complete list
18of supported bootm usages.
19
20Note: U-Boot supports two methods of booting a PowerPC Linux kernel: old way,
21i.e., without passing the Flattened Device Tree (FDT), and new way, where the
22kernel is passed a pointer to the FDT. The boot method is indicated for each
23scenario.
24
25
Wolfgang Denk438a4c12008-03-26 11:48:46 +0100261. bootm boot image at the current address, equivalent to 2,3,8
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +010027
28Old uImage:
Wolfgang Denk438a4c12008-03-26 11:48:46 +0100292. bootm <addr1> /* single image at <addr1> */
303. bootm <addr1> /* multi-image at <addr1> */
314. bootm <addr1> - /* multi-image at <addr1> */
325. bootm <addr1> <addr2> /* single image at <addr1> */
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +0100336. bootm <addr1> <addr2> <addr3> /* single image at <addr1> */
Wolfgang Denk438a4c12008-03-26 11:48:46 +0100347. bootm <addr1> - <addr3> /* single image at <addr1> */
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +010035
36New uImage:
378. bootm <addr1>
389. bootm [<addr1>]:<subimg1>
Pantelis Antoniou6b54e502017-09-04 23:12:17 +03003910. bootm [<addr1>]#<conf>[#<extra-conf[#...]]
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +01004011. bootm [<addr1>]:<subimg1> [<addr2>]:<subimg2>
4112. bootm [<addr1>]:<subimg1> [<addr2>]:<subimg2> [<addr3>]:<subimg3>
4213. bootm [<addr1>]:<subimg1> [<addr2>]:<subimg2> <addr3>
Wolfgang Denk438a4c12008-03-26 11:48:46 +01004314. bootm [<addr1>]:<subimg1> - [<addr3>]:<subimg3>
4415. bootm [<addr1>]:<subimg1> - <addr3>
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +010045
46
47Ad. 1. This is equivalent to cases 2,3,8, depending on the type of image at
48the current image address.
49- boot method: see cases 2,3,8
50
51Ad. 2. Boot kernel image located at <addr1>.
52- boot method: non-FDT
53
54Ad. 3. First and second components of the image at <addr1> are assumed to be a
55kernel and a ramdisk, respectively. The kernel is booted with initrd loaded
56with the ramdisk from the image.
57- boot method: depends on the number of components at <addr1>, and on whether
58 U-Boot is compiled with OF support:
59
Wolfgang Denk438a4c12008-03-26 11:48:46 +010060 | 2 components | 3 components |
61 | (kernel, initrd) | (kernel, initrd, fdt) |
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +010062---------------------------------------------------------------------
Wolfgang Denk438a4c12008-03-26 11:48:46 +010063#ifdef CONFIG_OF_* | non-FDT | FDT |
64#ifndef CONFIG_OF_* | non-FDT | non-FDT |
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +010065
66Ad. 4. Similar to case 3, but the kernel is booted without initrd. Second
67component of the multi-image is irrelevant (it can be a dummy, 1-byte file).
68- boot method: see case 3
69
70Ad. 5. Boot kernel image located at <addr1> with initrd loaded with ramdisk
71from the image at <addr2>.
72- boot method: non-FDT
73
74Ad. 6. <addr1> is the address of a kernel image, <addr2> is the address of a
75ramdisk image, and <addr3> is the address of a FDT binary blob. Kernel is
76booted with initrd loaded with ramdisk from the image at <addr2>.
77- boot method: FDT
78
79Ad. 7. <addr1> is the address of a kernel image and <addr3> is the address of
80a FDT binary blob. Kernel is booted without initrd.
81- boot method: FDT
82
83Ad. 8. Image at <addr1> is assumed to contain a default configuration, which
84is booted.
85- boot method: FDT or non-FDT, depending on whether the default configuration
86 defines FDT
87
88Ad. 9. Similar to case 2: boot kernel stored in <subimg1> from the image at
89address <addr1>.
90- boot method: non-FDT
91
92Ad. 10. Boot configuration <conf> from the image at <addr1>.
93- boot method: FDT or non-FDT, depending on whether the configuration given
94 defines FDT
95
96Ad. 11. Equivalent to case 5: boot kernel stored in <subimg1> from the image
97at <addr1> with initrd loaded with ramdisk <subimg2> from the image at
98<addr2>.
99- boot method: non-FDT
100
101Ad. 12. Equivalent to case 6: boot kernel stored in <subimg1> from the image
102at <addr1> with initrd loaded with ramdisk <subimg2> from the image at
103<addr2>, and pass FDT blob <subimg3> from the image at <addr3>.
104- boot method: FDT
105
106Ad. 13. Similar to case 12, the difference being that <addr3> is the address
107of FDT binary blob that is to be passed to the kernel.
108- boot method: FDT
109
110Ad. 14. Equivalent to case 7: boot kernel stored in <subimg1> from the image
111at <addr1>, without initrd, and pass FDT blob <subimg3> from the image at
112<addr3>.
113- boot method: FDT
114
115Ad. 15. Similar to case 14, the difference being that <addr3> is the address
116of the FDT binary blob that is to be passed to the kernel.
117- boot method: FDT
118
119
120New uImage argument syntax
121--------------------------
122
123New uImage support introduces two new forms for bootm arguments, with the
124following syntax:
125
126- new uImage sub-image specification
127<addr>:<sub-image unit_name>
128
129- new uImage configuration specification
130<addr>#<configuration unit_name>
131
Pantelis Antoniou6b54e502017-09-04 23:12:17 +0300132- new uImage configuration specification with extra configuration components
133<addr>#<configuration unit_name>[#<extra configuration unit_name>[#..]]
134
135The extra configuration currently is supported only for additional device tree
136overlays to apply on the base device tree supplied by the first configuration
137unit.
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +0100138
139Examples:
140
141- boot kernel "kernel@1" stored in a new uImage located at 200000:
142bootm 200000:kernel@1
143
144- boot configuration "cfg@1" from a new uImage located at 200000:
145bootm 200000#cfg@1
146
Pantelis Antoniou6b54e502017-09-04 23:12:17 +0300147- boot configuration "cfg@1" with extra "cfg@2" from a new uImage located
148 at 200000:
149bootm 200000#cfg@1#cfg@2
150
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +0100151- boot "kernel@1" from a new uImage at 200000 with initrd "ramdisk@2" found in
152 some other new uImage stored at address 800000:
153bootm 200000:kernel@1 800000:ramdisk@2
154
155- boot "kernel@2" from a new uImage at 200000, with initrd "ramdisk@1" and FDT
156 "fdt@1", both stored in some other new uImage located at 800000:
157bootm 200000:kernel@1 800000:ramdisk@1 800000:fdt@1
158
159- boot kernel "kernel@2" with initrd "ramdisk@2", both stored in a new uImage
160 at address 200000, with a raw FDT blob stored at address 600000:
161bootm 200000:kernel@2 200000:ramdisk@2 600000
162
163- boot kernel "kernel@2" from new uImage at 200000 with FDT "fdt@1" from the
164 same new uImage:
165bootm 200000:kernel@2 - 200000:fdt@1
166
167
168Note on current image address
169-----------------------------
170
171When bootm is called without arguments, the image at current image address is
172booted. The current image address is the address set most recently by a load
Jean-Christophe PLAGNIOL-VILLARD6d0f6bc2008-10-16 15:01:15 +0200173command, etc, and is by default equal to CONFIG_SYS_LOAD_ADDR. For example, consider
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +0100174the following commands:
175
176tftp 200000 /tftpboot/kernel
177bootm
178Last command is equivalent to:
179bootm 200000
180
181In case of the new uImage argument syntax, the address portion of any argument
182can be omitted. If <addr3> is omitted, then it is assumed that image at
Masahiro Yamada61ffc172013-09-13 20:28:21 +0900183<addr2> should be used. Similarly, when <addr2> is omitted, it is assumed that
Marian Balakowicz3310c542008-03-12 12:13:13 +0100184image at <addr1> should be used. If <addr1> is omitted, it is assumed that the
185current image address is to be used. For example, consider the following
186commands:
187
188tftp 200000 /tftpboot/uImage
189bootm :kernel@1
190Last command is equivalent to:
191bootm 200000:kernel@1
192
193tftp 200000 /tftpboot/uImage
194bootm 400000:kernel@1 :ramdisk@1
195Last command is equivalent to:
196bootm 400000:kernel@1 400000:ramdisk@1
197
198tftp 200000 /tftpboot/uImage
199bootm :kernel@1 400000:ramdisk@1 :fdt@1
200Last command is equivalent to:
201bootm 200000:kernel@1 400000:ramdisk@1 400000:fdt@1