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Date:      Fri, 25 Mar 2016 22:35:47 +0100
From:      Sylvain Garrigues <sylgar@gmail.com>
To:        Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com>
Cc:        ticso@cicely.de, freebsd-arm <freebsd-arm@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Booting kernel.bin directly on Raspberry Pi / external DTB support 
Message-ID:  <E186BCDD-2269-49B0-8AB9-F591C8E132EE@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <CANCZdfpxhjoY2fd2oh54k6=2Z1pgA8UGXaBQr1gKat6dTpv6FQ@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <1CCA59DC-5539-4CFB-81BA-0112E2120B3B@gmail.com> <20160325052509.GE48704@cicely7.cicely.de> <CANCZdfrhm5NSCXehkDc%2BDa4cxYhbU_NnEopR__e_a0CgajEL3A@mail.gmail.com> <97BB142C-D335-469B-9514-D1210E869C5D@gmail.com> <CANCZdfpB3EX7YS-4qi_mgRx23y62Gpki8EVP0Mjp=Z9u5O911w@mail.gmail.com> <2A98ACB7-2815-4169-951A-0123C71D9987@gmail.com> <CANCZdfpxhjoY2fd2oh54k6=2Z1pgA8UGXaBQr1gKat6dTpv6FQ@mail.gmail.com>

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> Le 25 mars 2016 =C3=A0 19:18, Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com> a =C3=A9crit =
:
>=20
> Have you looked at NetBSD to see what they do? It sounds like the SD =
driver in the boot roms is much faster than the one in u-boot.bin. =
Perhaps there's some init code we could import? Also, what are the =
kernel sizes? Maybe their kernel is smaller than ours for some reason =
and we should look at why...

NetBSD=E2=80=99s kernel size for RPI2 is around 5.5MB which is similar =
to our kernel.

It is booted directly by the firmware and no specific config.txt is =
required. So it looks exactly like a linux kernel, it even has a =
cmdline.txt file which allows the passing of boot parameters (root=3Dld0a =
console=3Dfb)

You mentioned the ARM side of the RPI needs to be set up before being =
able to run the FreeBSD kernel: for my understanding, any idea about =
what the FreeBSD kernel requires exactly (apart from the metadata and =
all the module loading stuff)? I mean what does it need in terms of =
board set up - i.e. in other words what does u-boot does that is =
required by the FreeBSD kernel? I was under the understanding that the =
firmware sets up everything and even patches the DTB with board specific =
values (memory size, etc). Given that the firmware passes the patched =
DTB to the binary it loads, I expected the kernel.bin to boot directly, =
but I am obviously wrong and lack some embedded knowledge.=20

I am sorry to ask here, I guess my questions aren=E2=80=99t of interest =
to many people, but I want to learn more and can=E2=80=99t find =
documentation on this matter. =20

Cheers,
Sylvain.=20


> On Fri, Mar 25, 2016 at 12:14 PM, Sylvain Garrigues <sylgar@gmail.com =
<mailto:sylgar@gmail.com>> wrote:
> u-boot> fatload mmc 0 0x100000 kernel.bin
>=20
> takes around the same time than ubldr (actually slightly less, let=E2=80=
=99s say 4s - but that=E2=80=99s still so slow...)
>=20
> Happy to help or test anything to get FreeBSD=E2=80=99s kernel first =
line appear on the screen near =C2=AB instantaneously =C2=BB (~ 1s) like =
our NetBSD or Linux friends.
>=20
> Sylvain
>=20
>=20
>> Le 25 mars 2016 =C3=A0 19:01, Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com =
<mailto:imp@bsdimp.com>> a =C3=A9crit :
>>=20
>>=20
>>=20
>> On Fri, Mar 25, 2016 at 11:55 AM, Sylvain Garrigues <sylgar@gmail.com =
<mailto:sylgar@gmail.com>> wrote:
>> Thank you.=20
>>=20
>> I wanted to boot the kernel directly so as to:
>> 1/ remove the dependency on a 3rd party loader
>> 2/ reduce boot time and make it comparable with NetBSD and Linux =
(which don=E2=80=99t use u-boot)
>>=20
>> NetBSD and Linux on the Pi boot so much faster than our FreeBSD =
image: less than 1 second after power-up, the first kernel copyright =
line appears on my LCD. For the FreeBSD images, the longest part is =
ubldr loading the kernel. It takes around 4/5 seconds (with the same SD =
card).
>>=20
>> I used recent u-boot versions (the current u-boot-rpi2 port is =
getting old and is not in sync with the u-boot-rpi port recently =
updated), tried with dcache enabled, but the boot process still takes =
several seconds, most of the time being spent in ubldr loading the =
kernel.
>>=20
>> I have no idea how we could improve the booting time? I wanted to =
experiment with booting the kernel directly as the first ARM program on =
my Pi, but as you explained I need some init code. I managed to compile =
Andrew=E2=80=99s one =
(https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/commit/074d37d46c3f9b282cd2d849d997b1b=
39acd710c =
<https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/commit/074d37d46c3f9b282cd2d849d997b1b=
39acd710c>) but I don=E2=80=99t know how to use it. Andrew, if you read =
this ;-)
>>=20
>> I wonder if the loader could be more efficient at loading off the SD =
card. The SD cards can do 10-20MB/s easily, and the ARM kernel is around =
5MB last time I checked. 5 seconds is 1MB/s, which is much slower than =
we know the hardware can do. I don't know if that's because the callback =
mechanism in u-boot.bin is so slow (that's what ubldr uses to load the =
kernel), or there's something inherently slow about our loader. Some =
analysis here might be quite useful. I'm guessing that we're not getting =
all the benefits from streaming read mode because we're doing I/Os that =
are tiny for some reason. But I haven't looked to make sure.
>>=20
>> What's the speed when booting directly from u-boot.bin?
>>=20
>> Warner
>>=20
>>=20
>>=20
>> =20
>>> Le 25 mars 2016 =C3=A0 06:48, Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com =
<mailto:imp@bsdimp.com>> a =C3=A9crit :
>>>=20
>>>=20
>>>=20
>>> On Thu, Mar 24, 2016 at 11:25 PM, Bernd Walter =
<ticso@cicely7.cicely.de <mailto:ticso@cicely7.cicely.de>> wrote:
>>> On Thu, Mar 24, 2016 at 04:29:26PM +0100, Sylvain Garrigues wrote:
>>> > Hello,
>>> >
>>> > I have written a small (ugly) patch to be able to boot a kernel =
directly without the ubldr loader while still using an external DTB =
(Linux-style booting may pass the DTB location pointer in the r2 =
register).
>>> > The patch is here: =
https://reviews.freebsd.org/differential/diff/14577/ =
<https://reviews.freebsd.org/differential/diff/14577/>;
>>> >
>>> > I tested my patch successfully with the QEMU emulator with the =
-dtb option available in recent versions, using a VERSATILEPB kernel =
without FDT_STATIC.
>>> > # qemu-system-arm -M versatilepb -m 128M -kernel versatile.flash =
-cpu arm1176 -dtb versatilepb.dtb
>>> > FYI, once the kernel is built, here is the script to build the =
versatile.flash (adapted from gonzo, no longer need to clear the r0-r3 =
registers): https://reviews.freebsd.org/P92 =
<https://reviews.freebsd.org/P92>; <https://reviews.freebsd.org/P92 =
<https://reviews.freebsd.org/P92>>;
>>> >
>>> > I also tested successfully my patch on my Raspberry Pi 2 using =
U-BOOT and the RPI2 kernel with my patch applied (and the LINUX_BOOT_ABI =
option):
>>> > u-boot> fatload mmc 0 0x200000 kernel.bin
>>> > u-boot> go 0x200000
>>> >
>>> > That works.
>>> >
>>> > So now I thought I could even bypass u-boot and launch kernel.bin =
directly from the Pi firmware??? But it doesn???t work, I don???t =
understand why, and that is why I am writing here.
>>> > Here is the config.txt which I thought would work:
>>> >
>>> > kernel=3Dkernel.bin (instead of u-boot.bin)
>>> > kernel_address=3D0x200000 (line added because a FreeBSD kernel =
needs to be loaded on a 1MB or 2MB boundary)
>>> > device_tree=3Drpi2.dtb
>>> > device_tree_address=3D0x100
>>> > disable_commandline_tags=3D1
>>> >
>>> > What am I missing? Is it even possible to boot kernel.bin directly =
on the Pi (with my patch)? I found this static minimalist loader from =
Andrew here: =
https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/commit/074d37d46c3f9b282cd2d849d997b1b3=
9acd710c =
<https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/commit/074d37d46c3f9b282cd2d849d997b1b=
39acd710c><https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/commit/074d37d46c3f9b282cd2d=
849d997b1b39acd710c =
<https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/commit/074d37d46c3f9b282cd2d849d997b1b=
39acd710c>> - does it mean such a loader is necessary before the kernel?
>>> >
>>> > Thanks,
>>> > Sylvain
>>> >
>>> > PS: I know the =C2=AB official and supported =C2=BB way of booting =
FreeBSD on the Pi is the u-boot + ubldr combination. I just would like =
to finish this experiment and understand why kernel.bin cannot be booted =
directly.
>>>=20
>>> I don't know if it is part of ubldr, or if there is any additional =
code,
>>> which runs before ubldr, but the Pis won't boot with the ARM CPU.
>>> Somewhere in the boot path is GPU bootcode, which then enables the =
ARM
>>> CPU.
>>> You also need low level HW init, such as setting up the clocks and =
RAM,
>>> which is not done in the Kernel.
>>>=20
>>> What you are missing it the hardware init code that's in u-boot.bin. =
This code sets up
>>> the board after the on-board GPU loads it into the ARM's address =
space. That code
>>> sets up the ARM side of the world and hands off the code to ubldr =
which finds the dtb
>>> and does the normal /boot/loader things as well (loading modules, =
setting tunables
>>> and the like) then hands off to the kernel. You can eliminate ubldr =
without a huge
>>> amount of effort, as you've found. However, eliminating u-boot.bin =
is going to be
>>> a lot more work/
>>>=20
>>> tl;dr: The interface between u-boot.bin and ubldr/kernel.bin is =
quite a bit different
>>> than between the initial bootstrap and u-boot.bin. So you can't just =
drop in kernel.bin
>>> and have it work without replicating that interface.
>>>=20
>>> Warner
>=20
>=20




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