1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 .. _bootconfig: 4 5 ================== 6 Boot Configuration 7 ================== 8 9 :Author: Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org> 10 11 Overview 12 ======== 13 14 The boot configuration expands the current kernel command line to support 15 additional key-value data when booting the kernel in an efficient way. 16 This allows administrators to pass a structured-Key config file. 17 18 Config File Syntax 19 ================== 20 21 The boot config syntax is a simple structured key-value. Each key consists 22 of dot-connected-words, and key and value are connected by ``=``. The value 23 has to be terminated by semi-colon (``;``) or newline (``\n``). 24 For array value, array entries are separated by comma (``,``). :: 25 26 KEY[.WORD[...]] = VALUE[, VALUE2[...]][;] 27 28 Unlike the kernel command line syntax, spaces are OK around the comma and ``=``. 29 30 Each key word must contain only alphabets, numbers, dash (``-``) or underscore 31 (``_``). And each value only contains printable characters or spaces except 32 for delimiters such as semi-colon (``;``), new-line (``\n``), comma (``,``), 33 hash (``#``) and closing brace (``}``). 34 35 If you want to use those delimiters in a value, you can use either double- 36 quotes (``"VALUE"``) or single-quotes (``'VALUE'``) to quote it. Note that 37 you can not escape these quotes. 38 39 There can be a key which doesn't have value or has an empty value. Those keys 40 are used for checking if the key exists or not (like a boolean). 41 42 Key-Value Syntax 43 ---------------- 44 45 The boot config file syntax allows user to merge partially same word keys 46 by brace. For example:: 47 48 foo.bar.baz = value1 49 foo.bar.qux.quux = value2 50 51 These can be written also in:: 52 53 foo.bar { 54 baz = value1 55 qux.quux = value2 56 } 57 58 Or more shorter, written as following:: 59 60 foo.bar { baz = value1; qux.quux = value2 } 61 62 In both styles, same key words are automatically merged when parsing it 63 at boot time. So you can append similar trees or key-values. 64 65 Same-key Values 66 --------------- 67 68 It is prohibited that two or more values or arrays share a same-key. 69 For example,:: 70 71 foo = bar, baz 72 foo = qux # !ERROR! we can not re-define same key 73 74 If you want to update the value, you must use the override operator 75 ``:=`` explicitly. For example:: 76 77 foo = bar, baz 78 foo := qux 79 80 then, the ``qux`` is assigned to ``foo`` key. This is useful for 81 overriding the default value by adding (partial) custom bootconfigs 82 without parsing the default bootconfig. 83 84 If you want to append the value to existing key as an array member, 85 you can use ``+=`` operator. For example:: 86 87 foo = bar, baz 88 foo += qux 89 90 In this case, the key ``foo`` has ``bar``, ``baz`` and ``qux``. 91 92 Moreover, sub-keys and a value can coexist under a parent key. 93 For example, following config is allowed.:: 94 95 foo = value1 96 foo.bar = value2 97 foo := value3 # This will update foo's value. 98 99 Note, since there is no syntax to put a raw value directly under a 100 structured key, you have to define it outside of the brace. For example:: 101 102 foo { 103 bar = value1 104 bar { 105 baz = value2 106 qux = value3 107 } 108 } 109 110 Also, the order of the value node under a key is fixed. If there 111 are a value and subkeys, the value is always the first child node 112 of the key. Thus if user specifies subkeys first, e.g.:: 113 114 foo.bar = value1 115 foo = value2 116 117 In the program (and /proc/bootconfig), it will be shown as below:: 118 119 foo = value2 120 foo.bar = value1 121 122 Comments 123 -------- 124 125 The config syntax accepts shell-script style comments. The comments starting 126 with hash ("#") until newline ("\n") will be ignored. 127 128 :: 129 130 # comment line 131 foo = value # value is set to foo. 132 bar = 1, # 1st element 133 2, # 2nd element 134 3 # 3rd element 135 136 This is parsed as below:: 137 138 foo = value 139 bar = 1, 2, 3 140 141 Note that you can not put a comment between value and delimiter(``,`` or 142 ``;``). This means following config has a syntax error :: 143 144 key = 1 # comment 145 ,2 146 147 148 /proc/bootconfig 149 ================ 150 151 /proc/bootconfig is a user-space interface of the boot config. 152 Unlike /proc/cmdline, this file shows the key-value style list. 153 Each key-value pair is shown in each line with following style:: 154 155 KEY[.WORDS...] = "[VALUE]"[,"VALUE2"...] 156 157 158 Boot Kernel With a Boot Config 159 ============================== 160 161 There are two options to boot the kernel with bootconfig: attaching the 162 bootconfig to the initrd image or embedding it in the kernel itself. 163 164 Attaching a Boot Config to Initrd 165 --------------------------------- 166 167 Since the boot configuration file is loaded with initrd by default, 168 it will be added to the end of the initrd (initramfs) image file with 169 padding, size, checksum and 12-byte magic word as below. 170 171 [initrd][bootconfig][padding][size(le32)][checksum(le32)][#BOOTCONFIG\n] 172 173 The size and checksum fields are unsigned 32bit little endian value. 174 175 When the boot configuration is added to the initrd image, the total 176 file size is aligned to 4 bytes. To fill the gap, null characters 177 (``\0``) will be added. Thus the ``size`` is the length of the bootconfig 178 file + padding bytes. 179 180 The Linux kernel decodes the last part of the initrd image in memory to 181 get the boot configuration data. 182 Because of this "piggyback" method, there is no need to change or 183 update the boot loader and the kernel image itself as long as the boot 184 loader passes the correct initrd file size. If by any chance, the boot 185 loader passes a longer size, the kernel fails to find the bootconfig data. 186 187 To do this operation, Linux kernel provides ``bootconfig`` command under 188 tools/bootconfig, which allows admin to apply or delete the config file 189 to/from initrd image. You can build it by the following command:: 190 191 # make -C tools/bootconfig 192 193 To add your boot config file to initrd image, run bootconfig as below 194 (Old data is removed automatically if exists):: 195 196 # tools/bootconfig/bootconfig -a your-config /boot/initrd.img-X.Y.Z 197 198 To remove the config from the image, you can use -d option as below:: 199 200 # tools/bootconfig/bootconfig -d /boot/initrd.img-X.Y.Z 201 202 Then add "bootconfig" on the normal kernel command line to tell the 203 kernel to look for the bootconfig at the end of the initrd file. 204 Alternatively, build your kernel with the ``CONFIG_BOOT_CONFIG_FORCE`` 205 Kconfig option selected. 206 207 Embedding a Boot Config into Kernel 208 ----------------------------------- 209 210 If you can not use initrd, you can also embed the bootconfig file in the 211 kernel by Kconfig options. In this case, you need to recompile the kernel 212 with the following configs:: 213 214 CONFIG_BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED=y 215 CONFIG_BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED_FILE="/PATH/TO/BOOTCONFIG/FILE" 216 217 ``CONFIG_BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED_FILE`` requires an absolute path or a relative 218 path to the bootconfig file from source tree or object tree. 219 The kernel will embed it as the default bootconfig. 220 221 Just as when attaching the bootconfig to the initrd, you need ``bootconfig`` 222 option on the kernel command line to enable the embedded bootconfig, or, 223 alternatively, build your kernel with the ``CONFIG_BOOT_CONFIG_FORCE`` 224 Kconfig option selected. 225 226 Note that even if you set this option, you can override the embedded 227 bootconfig by another bootconfig which attached to the initrd. 228 229 Kernel parameters via Boot Config 230 ================================= 231 232 In addition to the kernel command line, the boot config can be used for 233 passing the kernel parameters. All the key-value pairs under ``kernel`` 234 key will be passed to kernel cmdline directly. Moreover, the key-value 235 pairs under ``init`` will be passed to init process via the cmdline. 236 The parameters are concatenated with user-given kernel cmdline string 237 as the following order, so that the command line parameter can override 238 bootconfig parameters (this depends on how the subsystem handles parameters 239 but in general, earlier parameter will be overwritten by later one.):: 240 241 [bootconfig params][cmdline params] -- [bootconfig init params][cmdline init params] 242 243 Here is an example of the bootconfig file for kernel/init parameters.:: 244 245 kernel { 246 root = 01234567-89ab-cdef-0123-456789abcd 247 } 248 init { 249 splash 250 } 251 252 This will be copied into the kernel cmdline string as the following:: 253 254 root="01234567-89ab-cdef-0123-456789abcd" -- splash 255 256 If user gives some other command line like,:: 257 258 ro bootconfig -- quiet 259 260 The final kernel cmdline will be the following:: 261 262 root="01234567-89ab-cdef-0123-456789abcd" ro bootconfig -- splash quiet 263 264 265 Config File Limitation 266 ====================== 267 268 Currently the maximum config size size is 32KB and the total key-words (not 269 key-value entries) must be under 1024 nodes. 270 Note: this is not the number of entries but nodes, an entry must consume 271 more than 2 nodes (a key-word and a value). So theoretically, it will be 272 up to 512 key-value pairs. If keys contains 3 words in average, it can 273 contain 256 key-value pairs. In most cases, the number of config items 274 will be under 100 entries and smaller than 8KB, so it would be enough. 275 If the node number exceeds 1024, parser returns an error even if the file 276 size is smaller than 32KB. (Note that this maximum size is not including 277 the padding null characters.) 278 Anyway, since bootconfig command verifies it when appending a boot config 279 to initrd image, user can notice it before boot. 280 281 282 Bootconfig APIs 283 =============== 284 285 User can query or loop on key-value pairs, also it is possible to find 286 a root (prefix) key node and find key-values under that node. 287 288 If you have a key string, you can query the value directly with the key 289 using xbc_find_value(). If you want to know what keys exist in the boot 290 config, you can use xbc_for_each_key_value() to iterate key-value pairs. 291 Note that you need to use xbc_array_for_each_value() for accessing 292 each array's value, e.g.:: 293 294 vnode = NULL; 295 xbc_find_value("key.word", &vnode); 296 if (vnode && xbc_node_is_array(vnode)) 297 xbc_array_for_each_value(vnode, value) { 298 printk("%s ", value); 299 } 300 301 If you want to focus on keys which have a prefix string, you can use 302 xbc_find_node() to find a node by the prefix string, and iterate 303 keys under the prefix node with xbc_node_for_each_key_value(). 304 305 But the most typical usage is to get the named value under prefix 306 or get the named array under prefix as below:: 307 308 root = xbc_find_node("key.prefix"); 309 value = xbc_node_find_value(root, "option", &vnode); 310 ... 311 xbc_node_for_each_array_value(root, "array-option", value, anode) { 312 ... 313 } 314 315 This accesses a value of "key.prefix.option" and an array of 316 "key.prefix.array-option". 317 318 Locking is not needed, since after initialization, the config becomes 319 read-only. All data and keys must be copied if you need to modify it. 320 321 322 Functions and structures 323 ======================== 324 325 .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/bootconfig.h 326 .. kernel-doc:: lib/bootconfig.c 327
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