freebsd-src/stand/kboot
Warner Losh 1d7bdae9ca kboot: Move console, acpi and smbios init
Move the console probing to as early as possible. There's no real
support for anything but hostcons, and setting it up early will show
other error messages.

ACPI and SMBIOS probing can be done just after we have the console, so
move it there. This allows other parts of the early code to use info
from that, as well as overriding and env vars set by these things on the
command line (smbios data may be wrong during initial development phases
as the automated way to populate per-board data may not be established,
etc).

Sponsored by:		Netflix
2024-05-19 22:05:40 -06:00
..
include kboot: Create function for error checking. 2024-03-11 15:21:51 -06:00
kboot kboot: Move console, acpi and smbios init 2024-05-19 22:05:40 -06:00
libkboot kboot: update copyright on these files. 2024-01-28 13:04:32 -07:00
Makefile kboot: Move _start out of kboot and into libkboot 2024-01-28 13:04:31 -07:00
Makefile.inc kboot: Move system calls to libkboot 2024-01-28 13:04:31 -07:00
README kboot: Add readme 2022-12-03 12:48:45 -07:00

So to make a Linux initrd:

(1) mkdir .../initrd
(2) mkdir -p .../initrd/boot/defaults
(3) cd src/stand; make install DESTDIR=.../initrd
(4) Copy kernel to .../initrd/boot/kernel
(5) cd .../initrd
(6) cp boot/loader.kboot init
(7) find . | sort | cpio -o -H newc | gzip > /tmp/initrd.cpio
(8) download or build your linux kernel
(9) qemu-system-x86_64 -kernel ~/vmlinuz-5.19.0-051900-generic \
	-initrd /tmp/initrd.cpio \
	-m 256m -nographic \
	-monitor telnet::4444,server,nowait -serial stdio \
	-append "console=ttyS0"
    (though you may need more than 256M of ram to actually boot FreeBSD and do
     anything interesting with it and the serial console to stdio bit hasn't
     been the most stable recipe lately).

Notes:
For #6 you might need to strip loader.kboot if you copy it directly and don't
	use make install.
For #7 the sort is important, and you may need LC_ALL=C for its invocation
For #7 gzip is but one of many methods, but it's the simplest to do.
For #9, this means we can automate it using methods from
	src/tools/boot/rootgen.sh when the time comes.
#9 also likely generalizes to other architectures
For #8, see https://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-ppa/mainline/ to download
	a kernel suitable for testing... For arm, I've been using the
	non 64k page kernels and 5.19 seems to not suck.

aarch64:
qemu-system-aarch64 -m 1024 -cpu cortex-a57 -M virt \
	-kernel ~/linuxboot/arm64/kernel/boot/vmlinuz-5.19.0-051900-generic \
	-initrd ~/linuxboot/arm64/initrd.img -m 256m -nographic \
	-monitor telnet::4444,server,nowait -serial stdio \
	-append "console=ttyAMA0"

General

Add -g -G to have gdb stop and wait for the debugger. This is useful for
debugging the trampoline (hbreak will set a hardware break that's durable across
code changes).  If you set the breakpoint for the trampoline and it never hits,
then there's likely no RAM there and you got the PA to load to wrong. When
debugging the trampiline and up to that, use gdb /boot/loader. When debugging
the kernel, use kernel.full to get all the debugging. hbreak panic() is useful
on the latter since you'll see the original panic, not the panic you get from
there not being an early console.