270 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
270 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: "UEFI Boot for Mochabin"
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date: 2023-08-08
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layout: Post
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hero: https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1506619216599-9d16d0903dfd
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hero credit: https://unsplash.com/photos/XtUd5SiX464
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hero credit text: "Jakub Dziubak"
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classes:
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header: header-black-gradient
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---
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MOCHAbin is a pretty capable ARM board - it has a quad core ARMv8 Cortex-A72 @
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1400MHz, 8GB of RAM, 16GB of onboard eMMC, not to mention a _bunch_ of Ethernet
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connectivity (1x 10Gb SFP+ cage, 1x 1Gb SFP cage, a WAN RJ45 port with PoE in,
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and 4x LAN ports connected to an onboard switch chip).
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The main downside for me, however, was the boot firmware. Out of the box, it
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ships with a [pretty
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ancient](https://github.com/globalscaletechnologies/u-boot-marvell/tree/u-boot-2020.10-gti)
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build of U-Boot, which fails to properly support UEFI.
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---
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There are other options: there are references to people using what I can only
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assume to be some variant of Marvell's fork of EDK II to provide UEFI support.
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However, I went down the route of trying to get a more modern version of U-Boot
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working.
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To cut a long story short, I got [Tow-Boot](https://tow-boot.org), a user-friendly
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distribution of U-Boot with a pretty decent build system, to boot properly including
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proper UEFI support.
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## What works
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- Environment storage in SPI flash
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- Reading (and booting) from:
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- eMMC
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- USB
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- EFI boot
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## What's not tested
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- The SFP+/SFP cages
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- The WAN NIC
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- SATA
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- PCIe
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## What doesn't work
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- Any of the 4 "LAN" ports -- I think they require bringup of the switch chip,
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and I haven't tried configuring that properly yet
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- Using the actual `hw_info` SPI block that's supposed to hold the Ethernet MAC
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addresses and PCB serial number.
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## Building an image
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If you want to build an image yourself, you'll need a Linux system with a
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working install of [Nix](https://nixos.org). This doesn't need to be NixOS, Nix
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on Debian should do just fine. You can even (probably) use Nix inside a Docker
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container if you'd like.
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Got that together? Alright:
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1. Grab https://github.com/lukegb/Tow-Boot. The `lukegb/globalscale-mochabin`
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branch should be the default, and it's what you'll need.
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1. Run `nix-build -A globalscale-mochabin-8gb` (if you have the 8GB RAM
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variant), or `nix-build -A globalscale-mochabin-4gb` (if you have the 4GB
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variant).
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1. Wait.
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1. You should now have a `result` symlink that points to a directory with some
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files in it. The one you probably want is
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`result/binaries/Tow-Boot.spi.bin`, which is the build of Tow-Boot that uses
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the SPI flash for storing the U-Boot environment.
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At this point, you can use the instructions in "Recovering" below to use
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`mvebu64boot` to just boot this once, to see what it's like, or continue below
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to flash it as your main bootloader.
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## Flashing
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Apologies in advance: many of these steps _should_ be automated, but _aren't_.
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There are various steps where you should take notes or backups of things so you
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can restore your device to a working state later. Please do that, and copy them
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somewhere safe!
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You will need:
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- a USB stick that you can wipe
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- a micro-USB cable to use to connect to the MOCHAbin via USB-serial
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### Getting set up
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1. Wipe your memory stick. Put a ext2<sup>\*</sup> filesystem on it, and copy
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`result/binaries/Tow-Boot.spi.bin` to it.
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1. Turn off the MOCHAbin.
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1. Unplug any other USB devices from the MOCHAbin, and connect your memory
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stick.
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1. Start your terminal emulator. The MOCHAbin runs at 115200 bps.
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1. Turn on the MOCHAbin. When prompted to interrupt boot, press a key.
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1. You should now have a `Marvell>>` prompt.
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### Making sure everything is in place
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1. Run `usb start`. You should get some output ending in `scanning usb for storage devices... 1 Storage Device(s) found`.
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1. Run `usb part`. You should see your single, ext2 filesystem.
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1. Run `ext2ls usb 0:1`. You should see the content of your filesystem,
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including `Tow-Boot.spi.bin`.
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### Backing up the SPI flash
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1. Run `sf probe`. This should report `SF: Detected w25q32bv with page size 256 Bytes, erase size 4 KiB, total 4 MiB`. This is the information about
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your SPI flash. *If your SPI flash is not 4MiB, stop!*
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1. Run `sf read $kernel_addr_r 0 0x400000`. This should report `device 0 whole chip` and then hang for 10s or so.
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1. Run `ext4write usb 0:1 $kernel_addr_r /backupspi.img 0x400000`. This
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should report `File System is consistent`, and then complete after between
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6 and 15s.
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### Backing up the environment block
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1. Run `env export -t $kernel_addr_r`. This will appear to do nothing.
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1. Run `ext4write usb 0:1 $kernel_addr_r /backupenv.txt $filesize`. This
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should again report `File System is consistent`, then complete after a few
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seconds.
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### Noting down key environment variables
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1. Run `env print ethaddr eth1addr eth2addr pcb_sn`.
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1. Copy and save the output somewhere. **You'll need this later.**
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### Flashing the new image
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1. Erase your SPI flash: run `sf erase 0 0x400000`. This ensures you don't
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have any of the existing U-Boot environment lingering around. This will
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appear to hang for a few tens of seconds, then report `SF: 4194304 bytes @ 0x0 Erased: OK`.
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1. Flash the new image: run `bubt Tow-Boot.spi.bin spi usb`.
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### Rebooting and setting the environment again
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1. Turn the power off, then on again
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1. When prompted to interrupt boot, hit Escape or press Ctrl-C.
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1. You'll now be presented with the Tow-Boot menu. Scroll down to `Firmware Console` using the arrow keys and hit enter.
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1. Now instead of `Marvell>> `, you should get a `=> ` prompt.
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1. For each of `ethaddr`, `eth1addr`, `eth2addr` and `pcb_sn`, run `env set $VARIABLE_NAME $THE_VARIABLE_VALUE_YOU_NOTED_DOWN_EARLIER`
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1. Run `env save`. This should eventually print `OK`.
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1. Turn the power off, then on again.
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### Congratulations!
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You now have Tow-Boot. If you have a UEFI-compatible boot medium (either on the
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eMMC or over USB, for instance), it will Just Work(TM).
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1. Take the memory stick and back up `backupspi.img` and `backupenv.txt`
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somewhere safe.
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<sup>\*</sup> Technically this could be ext4. I suggest ext2 because modern
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Linux distros will enable some ext4 extensions that won't work by default, and
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this is very temporary.
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## Using an up-to-date DTB
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U-Boot will automatically discover new DTBs from the boot partition. I have the
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following setup (my EFI System Partition is mounted at `/boot`; adjust
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appropriately if yours is `/boot/efi`):
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```
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/boot
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/boot/dtb
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/boot/dtb/marvell
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/boot/dtb/marvell/armada-7040-mochabin.dtb
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```
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I copy this file from the DTBs shipped with my Linux kernel build on update; if
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you don't do this then you will (I think?) inherit the DTB used by U-Boot.
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## Recovering
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Oops! Something went wrong and you need to recover. No sweat. The Marvell
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BootROM supports sending it an image via X-Modem, and you can do that over the
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USB-Serial interface.
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The tool I've been using for doing this is
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[`mvebu64boot`](https://github.com/pali/mvebu64boot), which is super simple. If
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you have Nix, then this is available in recent `nixpkgs-unstable`, but this is
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super trivial to build without Nix: just clone that somewhere and use `make`.
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Make sure you don't have any terminal emulators open on the port, and run:
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```txt
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$ mvebu64boot -t -b path/to/flash-image.img /dev/ttyUSB0
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# for instance:
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$ mvebu64boot -t -b backupspi.img /dev/ttyUSB0
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# or:
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$ mvebu64boot -t -b result/binaries/Tow-Boot.spi.bin /dev/ttyUSB0
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# or, using the bootloader images available from Globalscale's FTP (ftp://76.80.10.5/Downloads/Mochabin/bootloader_for_mochabin_hw-rev-1-5-0_20220905/):
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$ mvebu64boot -t -b mochabin-bootloader-ddr4-8g-mvddr-41927ee-atf-277d4b6b-uboot-b794de0054-20220905-rel.bin /dev/ttyUSB0
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```
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(where ttyUSB0 is replaced with whatever device name you have for the flash
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image you're booting)
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Once this prints `Sending boot pattern...`, powercycle the MOCHAbin. You should
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then get `BootROM is ready for image file transfer`, followed by a
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rapidly-increasing percentage. This will take a few minutes - first the image
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prolog needs to be sent, then there's a `Waiting for BootROM...` stage, then
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the image itself. You'll then be presented with a serial terminal. Use `Ctrl-\ c` to exit.
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This works for booting the Tow-Boot images you built, or the SPI flash backup
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image I repeatedly reminded you to make.
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To return to the previous image, boot to the U-Boot console (either the
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built-in Marvell one or a Tow-Boot one), insert a memory stick containing the
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image to flash from (I suggest ext2 again, for the same reasons as above) and
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run `bubt backupspi.img spi usb`.
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## Getting things working
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NOTE: if you're just interested in building your own image, you can ignore
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everything from this point on.
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Getting things working was all relatively simple: upstream U-Boot 2022.07 and
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2023.07 have pretty much all the hardware support that's required to boot this
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board. The main thing missing is a device tree.
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### Device trees
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Device trees are effectively a description of what hardware is where: this
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avoids some of the automatic configuration, and simplifies a bunch of
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customization required to get things booting. The Linux kernel has a bunch of
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these - and we're in luck, because Globalscale have been paying Sartura to
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upstream a bunch of the hardware enablement required to get the MOCHAbin to
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boot well
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(https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/arm64/boot/dts/marvell/armada-7040-mochabin.dts).
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There's one problem here, however: this DTS doesn't work inside the U-Boot
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tree. U-Boot tries to be compatible with whatever Linux is doing so that device
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trees are as portable as possible from the Linux source to the U-Boot tree, but
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the specific naming of the `compatible` arguments is important for drivers, and
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some of the includes are in different places.
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Instead, I opted to take the device tree [from their version of
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U-Boot](https://github.com/globalscaletechnologies/u-boot-marvell/blob/u-boot-2020.10-gti/arch/arm/dts/armada-7040-mochabin.dts),
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and hack it together until it worked on a more recent version.
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### Porting their device tree forwards
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To give Globalscale credit, this mostly worked without a hitch. There are a few
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differences (`phy-mode = "sfi";` needed to become `phy-mode = "10gbase-r";`),
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but for the most part this... just worked.
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I haven't tested a bunch of the functionality that I didn't need: in particular,
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I don't plan on PXE booting or using any network functionality at startup. I also
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don't have any drives connected over the internal M.2 SATA interface, so I couldn't
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test that either.
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### Future work
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I'm hoping to, eventually:
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- Try to get the Linux DTS working on U-Boot and upstream it.
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- Get the 4 RJ45 LAN ports working.
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- Check that the SATA M.2 port actually works.
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- Get writable EFI variables working?
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- Upstream my build to Tow-Boot proper.
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- Getting the flashing steps automated in the Tow-Boot installer.
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So stay tuned. Maybe.
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