1 ================= 2 Booting ARM Linux 3 ================= 4 5 Author: Russell King 6 7 Date : 18 May 2002 8 9 The following documentation is relevant to 2.4 10 11 In order to boot ARM Linux, you require a boot 12 program that runs before the main kernel. The 13 to initialise various devices, and eventually 14 passing information to the kernel. 15 16 Essentially, the boot loader should provide (a 17 following: 18 19 1. Setup and initialise the RAM. 20 2. Initialise one serial port. 21 3. Detect the machine type. 22 4. Setup the kernel tagged list. 23 5. Load initramfs. 24 6. Call the kernel image. 25 26 27 1. Setup and initialise RAM 28 --------------------------- 29 30 Existing boot loaders: 31 MANDATORY 32 New boot loaders: 33 MANDATORY 34 35 The boot loader is expected to find and initia 36 kernel will use for volatile data storage in t 37 this in a machine dependent manner. (It may u 38 to automatically locate and size all RAM, or i 39 the RAM in the machine, or any other method th 40 sees fit.) 41 42 43 2. Initialise one serial port 44 ----------------------------- 45 46 Existing boot loaders: 47 OPTIONAL, RECOMMENDED 48 New boot loaders: 49 OPTIONAL, RECOMMENDED 50 51 The boot loader should initialise and enable o 52 target. This allows the kernel serial driver 53 which serial port it should use for the kernel 54 used for debugging purposes, or communication 55 56 As an alternative, the boot loader can pass th 57 option to the kernel via the tagged lists spec 58 serial format options as described in 59 60 Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parame 61 62 63 3. Detect the machine type 64 -------------------------- 65 66 Existing boot loaders: 67 OPTIONAL 68 New boot loaders: 69 MANDATORY except for DT-only platforms 70 71 The boot loader should detect the machine type 72 method. Whether this is a hard coded value or 73 looks at the connected hardware is beyond the 74 The boot loader must ultimately be able to pro 75 value to the kernel. (see linux/arch/arm/tools 76 should be passed to the kernel in register r1. 77 78 For DT-only platforms, the machine type will b 79 tree. set the machine type to all ones (~0). 80 necessary, but assures that it will not match 81 82 4. Setup boot data 83 ------------------ 84 85 Existing boot loaders: 86 OPTIONAL, HIGHLY RECOMMENDED 87 New boot loaders: 88 MANDATORY 89 90 The boot loader must provide either a tagged l 91 passing configuration data to the kernel. The 92 boot data is passed to the kernel in register 93 94 4a. Setup the kernel tagged list 95 -------------------------------- 96 97 The boot loader must create and initialise the 98 A valid tagged list starts with ATAG_CORE and 99 The ATAG_CORE tag may or may not be empty. An 100 has the size field set to '2' (0x00000002). T 101 the size field to zero. 102 103 Any number of tags can be placed in the list. 104 whether a repeated tag appends to the informat 105 previous tag, or whether it replaces the infor 106 entirety; some tags behave as the former, othe 107 108 The boot loader must pass at a minimum the siz 109 the system memory, and root filesystem locatio 110 minimum tagged list should look:: 111 112 +-----------+ 113 base -> | ATAG_CORE | | 114 +-----------+ | 115 | ATAG_MEM | | increasing ad 116 +-----------+ | 117 | ATAG_NONE | | 118 +-----------+ v 119 120 The tagged list should be stored in system RAM 121 122 The tagged list must be placed in a region of 123 the kernel decompressor nor initrd 'bootp' pro 124 it. The recommended placement is in the first 125 126 4b. Setup the device tree 127 ------------------------- 128 129 The boot loader must load a device tree image 130 at a 64bit aligned address and initialize it w 131 dtb format is documented at https://www.device 132 The kernel will look for the dtb magic value o 133 physical address to determine if a dtb has bee 134 tagged list. 135 136 The boot loader must pass at a minimum the siz 137 system memory, and the root filesystem locatio 138 placed in a region of memory where the kernel 139 overwrite it, while remaining within the regio 140 by the kernel's low-memory mapping. 141 142 A safe location is just above the 128MiB bound 143 144 5. Load initramfs. 145 ------------------ 146 147 Existing boot loaders: 148 OPTIONAL 149 New boot loaders: 150 OPTIONAL 151 152 If an initramfs is in use then, as with the dt 153 a region of memory where the kernel decompress 154 while also with the region which will be cover 155 low-memory mapping. 156 157 A safe location is just above the device tree 158 be loaded just above the 128MiB boundary from 159 recommended above. 160 161 6. Calling the kernel image 162 --------------------------- 163 164 Existing boot loaders: 165 MANDATORY 166 New boot loaders: 167 MANDATORY 168 169 There are two options for calling the kernel z 170 is stored in flash, and is linked correctly to 171 then it is legal for the boot loader to call t 172 directly. 173 174 The zImage may also be placed in system RAM an 175 kernel should be placed in the first 128MiB of 176 that it is loaded above 32MiB in order to avoi 177 prior to decompression, which will make the bo 178 faster. 179 180 When booting a raw (non-zImage) kernel the con 181 In this case the kernel must be loaded at an o 182 to TEXT_OFFSET - PAGE_OFFSET. 183 184 In any case, the following conditions must be 185 186 - Quiesce all DMA capable devices so that memo 187 corrupted by bogus network packets or disk d 188 you many hours of debug. 189 190 - CPU register settings 191 192 - r0 = 0, 193 - r1 = machine type number discovered in (3) 194 - r2 = physical address of tagged list in sy 195 physical address of device tree block (dtb 196 197 - CPU mode 198 199 All forms of interrupts must be disabled (IR 200 201 For CPUs which do not include the ARM virtua 202 CPU must be in SVC mode. (A special excepti 203 204 CPUs which include support for the virtualiz 205 entered in HYP mode in order to enable the k 206 these extensions. This is the recommended b 207 unless the virtualisations are already in us 208 hypervisor. 209 210 If the kernel is not entered in HYP mode for 211 entered in SVC mode. 212 213 - Caches, MMUs 214 215 The MMU must be off. 216 217 Instruction cache may be on or off. 218 219 Data cache must be off. 220 221 If the kernel is entered in HYP mode, the ab 222 the HYP mode configuration in addition to th 223 kernel modes) configuration. In addition, a 224 hypervisor must be disabled, and PL1 access 225 peripherals and CPU resources for which this 226 possible. Except for entering in HYP mode, 227 should be such that a kernel which does not 228 virtualization extensions can boot correctly 229 230 - The boot loader is expected to call the kern 231 directly to the first instruction of the ker 232 233 On CPUs supporting the ARM instruction set, 234 made in ARM state, even for a Thumb-2 kernel 235 236 On CPUs supporting only the Thumb instructio 237 Cortex-M class CPUs, the entry must be made
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