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This is FILO, a bootloader which loads boot images from local filesystem, without help from legacy BIOS services. Expected usage is to flash it into the BIOS ROM together with coreboot. Find the latest version and more information on FILO at http://www.coreboot.org/FILO FEATURES - Supported boot devices: IDE hard disk and CD-ROM, and system memory (ROM) S-ATA and USB memory devices - Supported filesystems: ext2, fat, jfs, minix, reiserfs, xfs, and iso9660 - Supported image formats: ELF and [b]zImage (a.k.a. /vmlinuz) - Supports boot disk image of El Torito bootable CD-ROM - Supports loading image from raw device with user-specified offset - Console on VGA + keyboard, serial port, or both - Line editing with ^H, ^W and ^U keys to type arbitrary filename to boot - GRUB like user interface - Full support for the ELF Boot Proposal (where is it btw, Eric?) - Auxiliary tool to compute checksum of ELF boot images - Full 32-bit code, no BIOS calls REQUIREMENTS Only i386 PC architecture is currently supported. x86-64 (AMD 64) machines in 32-bit mode do also work. (coreboot uses 32-bit mode and the Linux kernel does the transition to 64-bit mode) I'm using an AMD64 based mainboard with IDE hard disk and a DVD drive for testing, and QEmu, Bochs or VMware for development. Recent version of GNU toolchain is required to build. I have tested with the toolchains from SUSE 10.0 and SUSE 10.1, but slightly older versions might also work. INSTALL First, you need to compile libpayload (included in coreboot): $ cd ../coreboot/payloads/libpayload $ make defconfig $ make $ make DESTDIR=../../../filo/build install $ cd ../../../filo Configure FILO using the Kconfig interface: $ make menuconfig Then run make again will build filo.elf, the ELF boot image of FILO. $ make If you are compiling on an AMD64 platform, do $ make CC="gcc -m32" LD="ld -b elf32-i386" HOSTCC="gcc" AS="as --32" Alternatively, you can build libpayload and FILO in one go using the build.sh script: $ ./build.sh Use build/filo.elf as your payload of coreboot, or a boot image for Etherboot. NOTES If you are using the GRUB like frontend: - make sure you adapt your menu.lst path - if you want to use FILO over a serial connection, make sure you have something like this in your menu.lst file: serial --unit=0 --speed=115200 terminal serial console USING When FILO starts, it displays "boot:" prompt or the GRUB menu interface. At "boot:" prompt, type the name of your boot image, and optionally the kernel parameter, in the form: DEVICE:FILENAME[ PARAM] for example: boot: hda1:/vmlinuz root=/dev/hda1 Notation of DEVICE for IDE disk and CD-ROM is same as in Linux (eg. hda1 means the first partition of master device on primary IDE channel). Support for El Torito bootable CD-ROM, "hdc1" means the boot disk image of the CD-ROM at hdc. FILENAME can be standard bzImage/zImage (vmlinuz) Linux kernels, Linux-compatible images such as memtest.bin of Memtest86, and any bootable ELF images, which include Linux kernel converted by mkelfImage, Etherboot .elf and .zelf, Memtest86, FILO itself, etc. If USE_GRUB is disabled: If AUTOBOOT_FILE is set in Config, FILO tries to boot this file first, and falls back to boot: prompt if it fails. If AUTOBOOT_DELAY is also set, FILO waits for specified time in seconds before booting AUTOBOOT_FILE. If <Esc> key is pressed during this time period, automatic boot is canceled. Pressing <Enter> key also cancels the delay, but in this case AUTOBOOT_FILE is booted immediately. Even if AUTOBOOT_DELAY is not set, automatic boot can be disabled by pressing <Esc> key beforehand. FILO can also load separate initrd images along with vmlinuz kernels. (For ELF kernel, initrd images are embedded into the ELF file and cannot be altered). To do so, add "initrd=NAME" parameter to the kernel command line. NAME uses the same notation as kernel image name. (eg. boot: hda1:/vmlinuz initrd=hda1:/root.gz root=/dev/ram) To boot an image in the BIOS flash (or whatever is mapped in the system memory space), use the notation "mem@OFFSET[,LENGTH]", like: boot: mem@0xfffe0000 In this example, it loads the boot image from the last 128KB of BIOS flash. The same notation can be used with IDE devices, eg: boot: hda@512,697344 initrd=hda@1M,4M In this case the 697344 bytes starting from second sector of IDE drive is loaded as kernel, and 4M bytes of offset 1M bytes of the same disk is loaded as initrd. Note that when you load vmlinuz kernel or initrd this way, you must specify the LENGTH parameter. You can omit it for ELF images since they have segment length internally. OFFSET and LENGTH parameters must be multiple of 512. USB USB support is originally taken from Steven James's baremetal in coreboot-v1 util. Yinghai Lu seperated common functions from uhci.c to usb.c and created ohci.c to support ohci. ohci.c is heavily inspired by Linux Kernel 2.4.22 drivers/usb/host/usb-ohci.c. Stefan Reinauer integrated USB back into the main filo version. USB support includes several parts 1. UHCI+OHCI--->USB: provides usb init, usb_control_msg and usb_bulk_msg interface 2. USB_SCSI: bulk only device 3. USB_X interface to FILO todo: - EHCI support BUG REPORTING If you have problem with FILO, set DEBUG_ALL in Config and send its console output to the coreboot mailinglist at <[email protected]>. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Filesystem and menu code taken from GNU GRUB and patches for it. IDE driver is originally taken from Etherboot. Steve Gehlbach wrote the original bzImage loader for FILO. Besides, I have taken pieces of code and/or learned concepts from various standalone programs, including GNU GRUB, Etherboot, polled IDE patch by Adam Agnew, Memtest86, LinuxBIOS, and Linux. I must say thanks to all the developers of these wonderful software, especially to Eric Biederman for his great development work in this area. Stefan Reinauer is now maintaining FILO officially and added new features such as the grub menu interface and merged S-ATA and USB support from etherboot. LICENSE Copyright (C) 2003 by SONE Takeshi <[email protected]> and others. Copyright (C) 2005-2009 by coresystems GmbH <[email protected]>. This program is licensed under the terms of GNU General Public License. See the COPYING file for details.
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