README.hardware 15 KB

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  1. Poky Hardware README
  2. ====================
  3. This file gives details about using Poky with different hardware reference
  4. boards and consumer devices. A full list of target machines can be found by
  5. looking in the meta/conf/machine/ directory. If in doubt about using Poky with
  6. your hardware, consult the documentation for your board/device.
  7. Support for additional devices is normally added by creating BSP layers - for
  8. more information please see the Yocto Board Support Package (BSP) Developer's
  9. Guide - documentation source is in documentation/bspguide or download the PDF
  10. from:
  11. http://yoctoproject.org/community/documentation
  12. Support for machines other than QEMU may be moved out to separate BSP layers in
  13. future versions.
  14. QEMU Emulation Targets
  15. ======================
  16. To simplify development Poky supports building images to work with the QEMU
  17. emulator in system emulation mode. Several architectures are currently
  18. supported:
  19. * ARM (qemuarm)
  20. * x86 (qemux86)
  21. * x86-64 (qemux86-64)
  22. * PowerPC (qemuppc)
  23. * MIPS (qemumips)
  24. Use of the QEMU images is covered in the Poky Reference Manual. The Poky
  25. MACHINE setting corresponding to the target is given in brackets.
  26. Hardware Reference Boards
  27. =========================
  28. The following boards are supported by Poky's core layer:
  29. * Texas Instruments Beagleboard (beagleboard)
  30. * Freescale MPC8315E-RDB (mpc8315e-rdb)
  31. * Ubiquiti Networks RouterStation Pro (routerstationpro)
  32. For more information see the board's section below. The Poky MACHINE setting
  33. corresponding to the board is given in brackets.
  34. Consumer Devices
  35. ================
  36. The following consumer devices are supported by Poky's core layer:
  37. * Intel Atom based PCs and devices (atom-pc)
  38. For more information see the device's section below. The Poky MACHINE setting
  39. corresponding to the device is given in brackets.
  40. Specific Hardware Documentation
  41. ===============================
  42. Intel Atom based PCs and devices (atom-pc)
  43. ==========================================
  44. The atom-pc MACHINE is tested on the following platforms:
  45. o Asus eee901
  46. o Acer Aspire One
  47. o Toshiba NB305
  48. o Intel Embedded Development Board 1-N450 (Black Sand)
  49. and is likely to work on many unlisted atom based devices. The MACHINE type
  50. supports ethernet, wifi, sound, and i915 graphics by default in addition to
  51. common PC input devices, busses, and so on.
  52. Depending on the device, it can boot from a traditional hard-disk, a USB device,
  53. or over the network. Writing poky generated images to physical media is
  54. straightforward with a caveat for USB devices. The following examples assume the
  55. target boot device is /dev/sdb, be sure to verify this and use the correct
  56. device as the following commands are run as root and are not reversable.
  57. Hard Disk:
  58. 1. Build a directdisk image format. This will generate proper partition tables
  59. that will in turn be written to the physical media. For example:
  60. $ bitbake core-image-minimal-directdisk
  61. 2. Use the "dd" utility to write the image to the raw block device. For example:
  62. # dd if=core-image-minimal-directdisk-atom-pc.hdddirect of=/dev/sdb
  63. USB Device:
  64. 1. Build an hddimg image format. This is a simple filesystem without partition
  65. tables and is suitable for USB keys. For example:
  66. $ bitbake core-image-minimal-live
  67. 2. Use the "dd" utility to write the image to the raw block device. For
  68. example:
  69. # dd if=core-image-minimal-live-atom-pc.hddimg of=/dev/sdb
  70. If the device fails to boot with "Boot error" displayed, it is likely the BIOS
  71. cannot understand the physical layout of the disk (or rather it expects a
  72. particular layout and cannot handle anything else). There are two possible
  73. solutions to this problem:
  74. 1. Change the BIOS USB Device setting to HDD mode. The label will vary by
  75. device, but the idea is to force BIOS to read the Cylinder/Head/Sector
  76. geometry from the device.
  77. 2. Without such an option, the BIOS generally boots the device in USB-ZIP
  78. mode.
  79. a. Configure the USB device for USB-ZIP mode:
  80. # mkdiskimage -4 /dev/sdb 0 63 62
  81. Where 63 and 62 are the head and sector count as reported by fdisk.
  82. Remove and reinsert the device to allow the kernel to detect the new
  83. partition layout.
  84. b. Copy the contents of the poky image to the USB-ZIP mode device:
  85. # mount -o loop core-image-minimal-live-atom-pc.hddimg /tmp/image
  86. # mount /dev/sdb4 /tmp/usbkey
  87. # cp -rf /tmp/image/* /tmp/usbkey
  88. c. Install the syslinux boot loader:
  89. # syslinux /dev/sdb4
  90. Install the boot device in the target board and configure the BIOS to boot
  91. from it.
  92. For more details on the USB-ZIP scenario, see the syslinux documentation:
  93. http://git.kernel.org/?p=boot/syslinux/syslinux.git;a=blob_plain;f=doc/usbkey.txt;hb=HEAD
  94. Texas Instruments Beagleboard (beagleboard)
  95. ===========================================
  96. The Beagleboard is an ARM Cortex-A8 development board with USB, DVI-D, S-Video,
  97. 2D/3D accelerated graphics, audio, serial, JTAG, and SD/MMC. The xM adds a
  98. faster CPU, more RAM, an ethernet port, more USB ports, microSD, and removes
  99. the NAND flash. The beagleboard MACHINE is tested on the following platforms:
  100. o Beagleboard xM
  101. TODO: need someone with a Beagleboard C4 to verify these instructions.
  102. Due to the lack of NAND on the xM, the install and boot process varies a bit
  103. between boards. The C4 can run the x-loader and u-boot binaries from NAND or
  104. the SD, while the xM can only run them from the SD. The following instructions
  105. apply to both the C4 and the xM, but the C4 can skip step 2 (as noted below),
  106. and may require modification of the NAND environment.
  107. 1. Partition and format an SD card:
  108. # fdisk -lu /dev/mmcblk0
  109. Disk /dev/mmcblk0: 3951 MB, 3951034368 bytes
  110. 255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 480 cylinders, total 7716864 sectors
  111. Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
  112. Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
  113. /dev/mmcblk0p1 * 63 144584 72261 c Win95 FAT32 (LBA)
  114. /dev/mmcblk0p2 144585 465884 160650 83 Linux
  115. # mkfs.vfat -F 16 -n "boot" /dev/mmcblk0p1
  116. # mke2fs -j -L "root" /dev/mmcblk0p2
  117. The following assumes the SD card partition 1 and 2 are mounted at
  118. /media/boot and /media/root respectively. The files referenced here
  119. are made available after the build in build/tmp/deploy/images.
  120. 2. Install the boot loaders
  121. This step can be omitted for the C4 as it can have the x-loader and
  122. u-boot installed in NAND.
  123. # cp MLO-beagleboard /media/boot/MLO
  124. # cp u-boot-beagleboard.bin /media/boot/u-boot.bin
  125. 3. Install the root filesystem
  126. # tar x -C /media/root -f core-image-$IMAGE_TYPE-beagleboard.tar.bz2
  127. # tar x -C /media/root -f modules-$KERNEL_VERSION-beagleboard.tgz
  128. 4. Install the kernel uImage
  129. # cp uImage-beagleboard.bin /media/boot/uImage
  130. 5. Prepare a u-boot script to simplify the boot process
  131. The Beagleboard can be made to boot at this point from the u-boot command
  132. shell. To automate this process, generate a user.scr script as follows.
  133. Install uboot-mkimage (from uboot-mkimage on Ubuntu or uboot-tools on Fedora).
  134. Prepare a script config:
  135. # (cat << EOF
  136. setenv bootcmd 'mmc init; fatload mmc 0:1 0x80300000 uImage; bootm 0x80300000'
  137. setenv bootargs 'console=tty0 console=ttyO2,115200n8 root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootwait rootfstype=ext3 ro'
  138. boot
  139. EOF
  140. ) > serial-boot.cmd
  141. # mkimage -A arm -O linux -T script -C none -a 0 -e 0 -n "Poky Minimal" -d ./serial-boot.cmd ./boot.scr
  142. # cp boot.scr /media/boot
  143. 6. Unmount the SD partitions and boot the Beagleboard
  144. Note: As of the 2.6.37 linux-yocto kernel recipe, the Beagleboard uses the
  145. OMAP_SERIAL device (ttyO2). If you are using an older kernel, such as the
  146. 2.6.35 linux-yocto-stable, be sure replace ttyO2 with ttyS2 above. You
  147. should also override the machine SERIAL_CONSOLE in your local.conf in
  148. order to setup the getty on the serial line:
  149. SERIAL_CONSOLE_beagleboard = "115200 ttyS2"
  150. Freescale MPC8315E-RDB (mpc8315e-rdb)
  151. =====================================
  152. The MPC8315 PowerPC reference platform (MPC8315E-RDB) is aimed at hardware and
  153. software development of network attached storage (NAS) and digital media server
  154. applications. The MPC8315E-RDB features the PowerQUICC II Pro processor, which
  155. includes a built-in security accelerator.
  156. Setup instructions
  157. ------------------
  158. You will need the following:
  159. * nfs root setup on your workstation
  160. * tftp server installed on your workstation
  161. Load the kernel and boot it as follows:
  162. 1. Get the kernel (uImage.mpc8315erdb) and dtb (mpc8315erdb.dtb) files from
  163. the Poky build tmp/deploy directory, and make them available on your tftp
  164. server.
  165. 2. Set up the environment in U-Boot:
  166. =>setenv ipaddr <board ip>
  167. =>setenv serverip <tftp server ip>
  168. =>setenv bootargs root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=<nfsroot ip>:<rootfs path> ip=<board ip>:<server ip>:<gateway ip>:255.255.255.0:mpc8315e:eth0:off console=ttyS0,115200
  169. 3. Download kernel and dtb to boot kernel.
  170. =>tftp 800000 uImage.mpc8315erdb
  171. =>tftp 780000 mpc8315erdb.dtb
  172. =>bootm 800000 - 780000
  173. Ubiquiti Networks RouterStation Pro (routerstationpro)
  174. ======================================================
  175. The RouterStation Pro is an Atheros AR7161 MIPS-based board. Geared towards
  176. networking applications, it has all of the usual features as well as three
  177. type IIIA mini-PCI slots and an on-board 3-port 10/100/1000 Ethernet switch,
  178. in addition to the 10/100/1000 Ethernet WAN port which supports
  179. Power-over-Ethernet.
  180. Setup instructions
  181. ------------------
  182. You will need the following:
  183. * A serial cable - female to female (or female to male + gender changer)
  184. NOTE: cable must be straight through, *not* a null modem cable.
  185. * USB flash drive or hard disk that is able to be powered from the
  186. board's USB port.
  187. * tftp server installed on your workstation
  188. NOTE: in the following instructions it is assumed that /dev/sdb corresponds
  189. to the USB disk when it is plugged into your workstation. If this is not the
  190. case in your setup then please be careful to substitute the correct device
  191. name in all commands where appropriate.
  192. --- Preparation ---
  193. 1) Build an image (e.g. core-image-minimal) using "routerstationpro" as the
  194. MACHINE
  195. 2) Partition the USB drive so that primary partition 1 is type Linux (83).
  196. Minimum size depends on your root image size - core-image-minimal probably
  197. only needs 8-16MB, other images will need more.
  198. # fdisk /dev/sdb
  199. Command (m for help): p
  200. Disk /dev/sdb: 4011 MB, 4011491328 bytes
  201. 124 heads, 62 sectors/track, 1019 cylinders, total 7834944 sectors
  202. Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
  203. Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
  204. I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
  205. Disk identifier: 0x0009e87d
  206. Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
  207. /dev/sdb1 62 1952751 976345 83 Linux
  208. 3) Format partition 1 on the USB as ext3
  209. # mke2fs -j /dev/sdb1
  210. 4) Mount partition 1 and then extract the contents of
  211. tmp/deploy/images/core-image-XXXX.tar.bz2 into it (preserving permissions).
  212. # mount /dev/sdb1 /media/sdb1
  213. # cd /media/sdb1
  214. # tar -xvjpf tmp/deploy/images/core-image-XXXX.tar.bz2
  215. 5) Unmount the USB drive and then plug it into the board's USB port
  216. 6) Connect the board's serial port to your workstation and then start up
  217. your favourite serial terminal so that you will be able to interact with
  218. the serial console. If you don't have a favourite, picocom is suggested:
  219. $ picocom /dev/ttyUSB0 -b 115200
  220. 7) Connect the network into eth0 (the one that is NOT the 3 port switch). If
  221. you are using power-over-ethernet then the board will power up at this point.
  222. 8) Start up the board, watch the serial console. Hit Ctrl+C to abort the
  223. autostart if the board is configured that way (it is by default). The
  224. bootloader's fconfig command can be used to disable autostart and configure
  225. the IP settings if you need to change them (default IP is 192.168.1.20).
  226. 9) Make the kernel (tmp/deploy/images/vmlinux-routerstationpro.bin) available
  227. on the tftp server.
  228. 10) If you are going to write the kernel to flash (optional - see "Booting a
  229. kernel directly" below for the alternative), remove the current kernel and
  230. rootfs flash partitions. You can list the partitions using the following
  231. bootloader command:
  232. RedBoot> fis list
  233. You can delete the existing kernel and rootfs with these commands:
  234. RedBoot> fis delete kernel
  235. RedBoot> fis delete rootfs
  236. --- Booting a kernel directly ---
  237. 1) Load the kernel using the following bootloader command:
  238. RedBoot> load -m tftp -h <ip of tftp server> vmlinux-routerstationpro.bin
  239. You should see a message on it being successfully loaded.
  240. 2) Execute the kernel:
  241. RedBoot> exec -c "console=ttyS0,115200 root=/dev/sda1 rw rootdelay=2 board=UBNT-RSPRO"
  242. Note that specifying the command line with -c is important as linux-yocto does
  243. not provide a default command line.
  244. --- Writing a kernel to flash ---
  245. 1) Go to your tftp server and gzip the kernel you want in flash. It should
  246. halve the size.
  247. 2) Load the kernel using the following bootloader command:
  248. RedBoot> load -r -b 0x80600000 -m tftp -h <ip of tftp server> vmlinux-routerstationpro.bin.gz
  249. This should output something similar to the following:
  250. Raw file loaded 0x80600000-0x8087c537, assumed entry at 0x80600000
  251. Calculate the length by subtracting the first number from the second number
  252. and then rounding the result up to the nearest 0x1000.
  253. 3) Using the length calculated above, create a flash partition for the kernel:
  254. RedBoot> fis create -b 0x80600000 -l 0x240000 kernel
  255. (change 0x240000 to your rounded length -- change "kernel" to whatever
  256. you want to name your kernel)
  257. --- Booting a kernel from flash ---
  258. To boot the flashed kernel perform the following steps.
  259. 1) At the bootloader prompt, load the kernel:
  260. RedBoot> fis load -d -e kernel
  261. (Change the name "kernel" above if you chose something different earlier)
  262. (-e means 'elf', -d 'decompress')
  263. 2) Execute the kernel using the exec command as above.
  264. --- Automating the boot process ---
  265. After writing the kernel to flash and testing the load and exec commands
  266. manually, you can automate the boot process with a boot script.
  267. 1) RedBoot> fconfig
  268. (Answer the questions not specified here as they pertain to your environment)
  269. 2) Run script at boot: true
  270. Boot script:
  271. .. fis load -d -e kernel
  272. .. exec
  273. Enter script, terminate with empty line
  274. >> fis load -d -e kernel
  275. >> exec -c "console=ttyS0,115200 root=/dev/sda1 rw rootdelay=2 board=UBNT-RSPRO"
  276. >>
  277. 3) Answer the remaining questions and write the changes to flash:
  278. Update RedBoot non-volatile configuration - continue (y/n)? y
  279. ... Erase from 0xbfff0000-0xc0000000: .
  280. ... Program from 0x87ff0000-0x88000000 at 0xbfff0000: .
  281. 4) Power cycle the board.