* Adding or1k support to mkroot. @ 2023-12-12 10:16 Rob Landley 2023-12-14 19:50 ` Stafford Horne 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Rob Landley @ 2023-12-12 10:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-openrisc; +Cc: Jonas Bonn, Stefan Kristiansson, Stafford Horne Toybox has a tiny system builder in it, a ~300 line bash script that builds Linux for a dozen targets (using musl-cross-make toolchains) and boots the result to a shell prompt under QEMU: https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/mkroot.sh https://landley.net/bin/mkroot/latest/ And since musl and qemu both support openrisc (and I need an or1k toolchain anyway for my orange pi 3b's power controller firmware, at least according to u-boot's board/sunxi/README.sunxi64), I thought I'd try to make that target work. I built an or1k musl+gcc toolchain with my wrapper script around Rich Felker's musl-cross-make project by adding "or1k::" to the TARGETS list in https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/scripts/mcm-buildall.sh#L34 and that seems to have worked-ish. (Well, the kernel headers didn't install because I have to add or1k->openrisc to musl-cross-make's TARGET_ARCH_MANGLED in litecross/Makefile, but eh, close enough for the moment.) With the resulting toolchain, I can build an or1ksim_defconfig kernel (using v6.6 source) that "qemu-system-or1k -nographic -kernel vmlinux" gives boot messages for! Woo! (And then panics because no init, but that's standard for board bringup.) Some immediately obvious problems are: 1) qemu's -append is ignored, the "Kernel command line: earlycon" is hardwired into the device tree. 2) Nothing I do seems to get qemu to exit instead of hanging, CONFIG_PANIC_TIMEOUT=1 makes it _try_ to reboot but adding the CONFIG_POWER symbols from arch/openrisc/configs/virt_defconfig doesn't seem to affect qemu, and none of the other targets mention power. (If I can't exit the emulator at the end then https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/testroot.sh can't report success for the architecture.) 3) If I feed qemu-system-or1k an -initrd the same kernel does NOT give me boot messages, it just hangs. Well, SORT OF. If I feed -initrd 2 megabytes copied from /dev/null by dd, I get boot messages. If I go "true | gz > blah.gz" to create the smallest (20 byte) gz file and feed it that, no boot messages. Feed it System.map: boot messages. Feed it vmlinux: no boot messages. Any idea what's going on here? That last one's kind of a blocker... Thanks, Rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: Adding or1k support to mkroot. 2023-12-12 10:16 Adding or1k support to mkroot Rob Landley @ 2023-12-14 19:50 ` Stafford Horne 2023-12-15 13:33 ` Rob Landley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Stafford Horne @ 2023-12-14 19:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rob Landley; +Cc: linux-openrisc, Jonas Bonn, Stefan Kristiansson Hi Rob, It's been a while :) On Tue, Dec 12, 2023 at 04:16:15AM -0600, Rob Landley wrote: > Toybox has a tiny system builder in it, a ~300 line bash script that builds > Linux for a dozen targets (using musl-cross-make toolchains) and boots the > result to a shell prompt under QEMU: > > https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/mkroot.sh > https://landley.net/bin/mkroot/latest/ > > And since musl and qemu both support openrisc (and I need an or1k toolchain > anyway for my orange pi 3b's power controller firmware, at least according to > u-boot's board/sunxi/README.sunxi64), I thought I'd try to make that target work. Great. > I built an or1k musl+gcc toolchain with my wrapper script around Rich Felker's > musl-cross-make project by adding "or1k::" to the TARGETS list in > https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/scripts/mcm-buildall.sh#L34 and > that seems to have worked-ish. (Well, the kernel headers didn't install because > I have to add or1k->openrisc to musl-cross-make's TARGET_ARCH_MANGLED in > litecross/Makefile, but eh, close enough for the moment.) > > With the resulting toolchain, I can build an or1ksim_defconfig kernel (using > v6.6 source) that "qemu-system-or1k -nographic -kernel vmlinux" gives boot > messages for! Woo! (And then panics because no init, but that's standard for > board bringup.) > > Some immediately obvious problems are: > > 1) qemu's -append is ignored, the "Kernel command line: earlycon" is hardwired > into the device tree. > > 2) Nothing I do seems to get qemu to exit instead of hanging, > CONFIG_PANIC_TIMEOUT=1 makes it _try_ to reboot but adding the CONFIG_POWER > symbols from arch/openrisc/configs/virt_defconfig doesn't seem to affect qemu, > and none of the other targets mention power. (If I can't exit the emulator at > the end then https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/testroot.sh > can't report success for the architecture.) I use the virt_defconfig for my testing. > 3) If I feed qemu-system-or1k an -initrd the same kernel does NOT give me boot > messages, it just hangs. Maybe earlycon is not working? This are my qemu arguments: qemu-system-or1k -cpu or1200 -machine virt \ -no-reboot -kernel /home/shorne/work/linux/vmlinux \ -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=user \ -netdev user,id=user,net=10.9.0.1/24,host=10.9.0.100,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \ -serial mon:stdio -nographic -device virtio-blk-device,drive=d0 \ -drive file=/home/shorne/work/openrisc/or1k-utils/buildroot/output/qemu-fs-or1k.qcow2,id=d0,if=none,format=qcow2 \ -gdb tcp::10001 \ -accel tcg,thread=multi \ -smp cpus=4 -m 768 \ -append rootwait \ -append boot=/dev/vda2 With this and the virt kernel and qemu virt machine I am able to shut down the machine is setup with poweroff and reboot hardware (syscon-poweroff) from SiFive MMIO. If I remove the `-drive` argument I do get boot messages. > Well, SORT OF. If I feed -initrd 2 megabytes copied from /dev/null by dd, I get > boot messages. If I go "true | gz > blah.gz" to create the smallest (20 byte) gz > file and feed it that, no boot messages. Feed it System.map: boot messages. Feed > it vmlinux: no boot messages. I use a root image I created with buildroot. But you should be able to get boot messages before initrd is picked up. I am not sure why your invalid initrd's are able to create boot messages or not. Do you have a valid initrd that maybe I can try out? I recently use qcow2 images to build, but I did used to use initrd images and it did work fine. > Any idea what's going on here? That last one's kind of a blocker... Have you tried to debug where it's getting hung up? Gdb remote debug should be working for or1k. -Stafford ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: Adding or1k support to mkroot. 2023-12-14 19:50 ` Stafford Horne @ 2023-12-15 13:33 ` Rob Landley 2023-12-16 9:44 ` Stafford Horne 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Rob Landley @ 2023-12-15 13:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stafford Horne; +Cc: linux-openrisc, Jonas Bonn, Stefan Kristiansson On 12/14/23 13:50, Stafford Horne wrote: > Hi Rob, > > It's been a while :) Indeed. I didn't have questions for you in Tokyo, but do now. :) > On Tue, Dec 12, 2023 at 04:16:15AM -0600, Rob Landley wrote: >> Toybox has a tiny system builder in it, a ~300 line bash script that builds >> Linux for a dozen targets (using musl-cross-make toolchains) and boots the >> result to a shell prompt under QEMU: >> >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/mkroot.sh >> https://landley.net/bin/mkroot/latest/ >> >> And since musl and qemu both support openrisc (and I need an or1k toolchain >> anyway for my orange pi 3b's power controller firmware, at least according to >> u-boot's board/sunxi/README.sunxi64), I thought I'd try to make that target work. > > Great. I've more or less gotten it to work. The trick was statically linking in the initramfs image: https://github.com/landley/toybox/commit/5647741f6687 I haven't added any of the OPENRISC_HAVE_INST_* symbols because it booted without them, and presumably the toolchain will automatically do the right thing for userspace: https://landley.net/notes-2023.html#10-12-2023 (I just specify an i486, i586, or i686 toolchain, or tell x86-64 "CFLAGS=-mtune=nocona", and so on. I don't need to micromanage stuff in menuconfig to build for minor variations of a given target, I have no idea why openrisc would work differently.) Nor did I add JUMP_UPON_UNHANDLED_EXCEPTION because I honestly don't know what that modifies or why you would ever NOT do it if it was at all useful? I err on the side of fewer symbols when the benefit's not clear... >> I built an or1k musl+gcc toolchain with my wrapper script around Rich Felker's >> musl-cross-make project by adding "or1k::" to the TARGETS list in >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/scripts/mcm-buildall.sh#L34 and >> that seems to have worked-ish. (Well, the kernel headers didn't install because >> I have to add or1k->openrisc to musl-cross-make's TARGET_ARCH_MANGLED in >> litecross/Makefile, but eh, close enough for the moment.) I fixed that too, by the way: https://github.com/landley/toybox/commit/ab046139f9d8 >> 1) qemu's -append is ignored, the "Kernel command line: earlycon" is hardwired >> into the device tree. >> >> 2) Nothing I do seems to get qemu to exit instead of hanging, >> CONFIG_PANIC_TIMEOUT=1 makes it _try_ to reboot but adding the CONFIG_POWER >> symbols from arch/openrisc/configs/virt_defconfig doesn't seem to affect qemu, >> and none of the other targets mention power. (If I can't exit the emulator at >> the end then https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/testroot.sh >> can't report success for the architecture.) > > I use the virt_defconfig for my testing. Ok. >> 3) If I feed qemu-system-or1k an -initrd the same kernel does NOT give me boot >> messages, it just hangs. > > Maybe earlycon is not working? Dunno. It's enabled in the resulting full config? # # Serial drivers # CONFIG_SERIAL_EARLYCON=y CONFIG_SERIAL_8250=y # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DEPRECATED_OPTIONS is not set # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_16550A_VARIANTS is not set # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_FINTEK is not set CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_CONSOLE=y CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_NR_UARTS=4 CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_RUNTIME_UARTS=4 # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_EXTENDED is not set # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DW is not set # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_RT288X is not set CONFIG_SERIAL_OF_PLATFORM=y The way mkroot works is there's a platform-specific part for each target, and a part shared by all platforms. In the case of or1k, once I had the toolchain adding the new platform meant: elif [ "$CROSS" == or1k ]; then KARCH=openrisc QEMU="or1k -M or1k-sim" KARGS=FIXME VMLINUX=vmlinux BUILTIN=1 KCONF=OPENRISC_BUILTIN_DTB=\"or1ksim\",ETHOC,SERIO,SERIAL_8250,SERIAL_8250_CONSOLE,SERIAL_OF_PLATFORM The KCONF= is CSV list of config symbols, the CONFIG_ prefix is added and the ones without an = in them get =y appended, and then the symbols for all boards get added: https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/mkroot.sh#L275 Which includes EARLY_PRINTK. That expands it into a miniconfig, which is handled in the usual way: https://lwn.net/Articles/161086/ The resulting micro, mini, and full configs then wind up in the "docs" directory of the resulting build. (root/or1k/docs/linux-fullconfig) > This are my qemu arguments: > > qemu-system-or1k -cpu or1200 -machine virt \ > -no-reboot -kernel /home/shorne/work/linux/vmlinux \ > -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=user \ > -netdev user,id=user,net=10.9.0.1/24,host=10.9.0.100,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \ > -serial mon:stdio -nographic If you're putting the monitor on stdio, where does the console go? (Is this going to pop up a graphics window or something? Or do you talk to it entirely through the virtual network?) > -device virtio-blk-device,drive=d0 \ > -drive file=/home/shorne/work/openrisc/or1k-utils/buildroot/output/qemu-fs-or1k.qcow2,id=d0,if=none,format=qcow2 \ > -gdb tcp::10001 \ > -accel tcg,thread=multi \ > -smp cpus=4 -m 768 \ Do I need to micromanage -accel? > -append rootwait \ > -append boot=/dev/vda2 Did they ever fix qemu's problem that "append" didn't and you could only have one -append and it in fact completely replaced the existing command line on most architectures? https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2017-05/msg03214.html Hmmm, I've got: qemu-system-or1k -M or1k-sim -m 256 "$@" -nographic -no-reboot -kernel "$DIR"/linux-kernel -append "HOST=or1k console=FIXME $KARGS" And it looks like the answer to "how do you enable a halt/reboot switch that can exit qemu" is "don't use the or1k-sim board, use the virt board". > With this and the virt kernel and qemu virt machine I am able to shut down the > machine is setup with poweroff and reboot hardware (syscon-poweroff) from > SiFive MMIO. > > If I remove the `-drive` argument I do get boot messages. > >> Well, SORT OF. If I feed -initrd 2 megabytes copied from /dev/null by dd, I get >> boot messages. If I go "true | gz > blah.gz" to create the smallest (20 byte) gz >> file and feed it that, no boot messages. Feed it System.map: boot messages. Feed >> it vmlinux: no boot messages. > > I use a root image I created with buildroot. But you should be able to get boot > messages before initrd is picked up. I am not sure why your invalid initrd's > are able to create boot messages or not. It provides boot messages without any initrd at all. It eventually panics because there's no init, but early in board bringup I'm just looking for proof of life. > Do you have a valid initrd that maybe I can try out? I recently use qcow2 > images to build, but I did used to use initrd images and it did work fine. Sure, just remove the BUILTIN=1 from the if or1k stanza, and... it's 582k, I'll send it _not_ cc-ing the mailing list. :) >> Any idea what's going on here? That last one's kind of a blocker... > > Have you tried to debug where it's getting hung up? Gdb remote debug should > be working for or1k. I have not yet tried to rustle up a gdb build that understands or1k machine code, no. I'm more likely to try to either get EARLY_PRINTK less broken or dredge up the 2 line spin-to-write-register version of 8250 output and cut and paste it in various places if I need to debug this myself. But I was hoping it was a known limitation or at least easily recognized... > -Stafford Rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: Adding or1k support to mkroot. 2023-12-15 13:33 ` Rob Landley @ 2023-12-16 9:44 ` Stafford Horne 2023-12-16 13:00 ` Rob Landley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Stafford Horne @ 2023-12-16 9:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rob Landley; +Cc: linux-openrisc, Jonas Bonn, Stefan Kristiansson On Fri, Dec 15, 2023 at 07:33:42AM -0600, Rob Landley wrote: > On 12/14/23 13:50, Stafford Horne wrote: > > Hi Rob, > > > > It's been a while :) > > Indeed. I didn't have questions for you in Tokyo, but do now. :) > > > On Tue, Dec 12, 2023 at 04:16:15AM -0600, Rob Landley wrote: > >> Toybox has a tiny system builder in it, a ~300 line bash script that builds > >> Linux for a dozen targets (using musl-cross-make toolchains) and boots the > >> result to a shell prompt under QEMU: > >> > >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/mkroot.sh > >> https://landley.net/bin/mkroot/latest/ > >> > >> And since musl and qemu both support openrisc (and I need an or1k toolchain > >> anyway for my orange pi 3b's power controller firmware, at least according to > >> u-boot's board/sunxi/README.sunxi64), I thought I'd try to make that target work. > > > > Great. > > I've more or less gotten it to work. The trick was statically linking in the > initramfs image: > > https://github.com/landley/toybox/commit/5647741f6687 > > I haven't added any of the OPENRISC_HAVE_INST_* symbols because it booted > without them, and presumably the toolchain will automatically do the right thing > for userspace: > > https://landley.net/notes-2023.html#10-12-2023 > > (I just specify an i486, i586, or i686 toolchain, or tell x86-64 > "CFLAGS=-mtune=nocona", and so on. I don't need to micromanage stuff in > menuconfig to build for minor variations of a given target, I have no idea why > openrisc would work differently.) > > Nor did I add JUMP_UPON_UNHANDLED_EXCEPTION because I honestly don't know what > that modifies or why you would ever NOT do it if it was at all useful? I err on > the side of fewer symbols when the benefit's not clear... I just use the defaults. Those instruction specific switches will only be helpful if you really want tune things. Which may be fun for some people. The OpenRISC kernel is not yet sophisticated enough to detect and replace, emulate the missing instructions. So we have these switches. Some soft CPUs may have these instructions enabled/or disabled and these switches help if you know what you are doing. Luckily QEMU has all the instruction enabled. In terms of JUMP_UPON_UNHANDLED_EXCEPTION, this was added before my time. We probably could get rid of it and do a more graceful power based halt. > >> I built an or1k musl+gcc toolchain with my wrapper script around Rich Felker's > >> musl-cross-make project by adding "or1k::" to the TARGETS list in > >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/scripts/mcm-buildall.sh#L34 and > >> that seems to have worked-ish. (Well, the kernel headers didn't install because > >> I have to add or1k->openrisc to musl-cross-make's TARGET_ARCH_MANGLED in > >> litecross/Makefile, but eh, close enough for the moment.) > > I fixed that too, by the way: > > https://github.com/landley/toybox/commit/ab046139f9d8 OK. > >> 1) qemu's -append is ignored, the "Kernel command line: earlycon" is hardwired > >> into the device tree. > >> > >> 2) Nothing I do seems to get qemu to exit instead of hanging, > >> CONFIG_PANIC_TIMEOUT=1 makes it _try_ to reboot but adding the CONFIG_POWER > >> symbols from arch/openrisc/configs/virt_defconfig doesn't seem to affect qemu, > >> and none of the other targets mention power. (If I can't exit the emulator at > >> the end then https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/testroot.sh > >> can't report success for the architecture.) > > > > I use the virt_defconfig for my testing. > > Ok. > > >> 3) If I feed qemu-system-or1k an -initrd the same kernel does NOT give me boot > >> messages, it just hangs. > > > > Maybe earlycon is not working? > > Dunno. It's enabled in the resulting full config? > > # > # Serial drivers > # > CONFIG_SERIAL_EARLYCON=y > CONFIG_SERIAL_8250=y > # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DEPRECATED_OPTIONS is not set > # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_16550A_VARIANTS is not set > # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_FINTEK is not set > CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_CONSOLE=y > CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_NR_UARTS=4 > CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_RUNTIME_UARTS=4 > # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_EXTENDED is not set > # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_DW is not set > # CONFIG_SERIAL_8250_RT288X is not set > CONFIG_SERIAL_OF_PLATFORM=y > > The way mkroot works is there's a platform-specific part for each target, and a > part shared by all platforms. In the case of or1k, once I had the toolchain > adding the new platform meant: > > elif [ "$CROSS" == or1k ]; then > KARCH=openrisc QEMU="or1k -M or1k-sim" KARGS=FIXME VMLINUX=vmlinux BUILTIN=1 > > KCONF=OPENRISC_BUILTIN_DTB=\"or1ksim\",ETHOC,SERIO,SERIAL_8250,SERIAL_8250_CONSOLE,SERIAL_OF_PLATFORM > > The KCONF= is CSV list of config symbols, the CONFIG_ prefix is added and the > ones without an = in them get =y appended, and then the symbols for all boards > get added: > > https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/mkroot.sh#L275 > > Which includes EARLY_PRINTK. That expands it into a miniconfig, which is handled > in the usual way: > > https://lwn.net/Articles/161086/ > > The resulting micro, mini, and full configs then wind up in the "docs" directory > of the resulting build. (root/or1k/docs/linux-fullconfig) OK. > > This are my qemu arguments: > > > > qemu-system-or1k -cpu or1200 -machine virt \ > > -no-reboot -kernel /home/shorne/work/linux/vmlinux \ > > -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=user \ > > -netdev user,id=user,net=10.9.0.1/24,host=10.9.0.100,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \ > > -serial mon:stdio -nographic > > If you're putting the monitor on stdio, where does the console go? (Is this > going to pop up a graphics window or something? Or do you talk to it entirely > through the virtual network?) Console goes to stdio, I use ctrl-a C to drop into monitor which is also in stdio. > > -device virtio-blk-device,drive=d0 \ > > -drive file=/home/shorne/work/openrisc/or1k-utils/buildroot/output/qemu-fs-or1k.qcow2,id=d0,if=none,format=qcow2 \ > > -gdb tcp::10001 \ > > -accel tcg,thread=multi \ > > -smp cpus=4 -m 768 \ > > Do I need to micromanage -accel? Probably not for your use cases. I can not recall the defaults but I think it was not multi threaded. But I cannot be sure unless I go look. You probably can run with a single core and no SMP. > > -append rootwait \ > > -append boot=/dev/vda2 > > Did they ever fix qemu's problem that "append" didn't and you could only have > one -append and it in fact completely replaced the existing command line on most > architectures? > > https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2017-05/msg03214.html After I sent this message I noticed this looked strange. It doesn't work, so my command line ends up being: 'boot=/dev/vda2'. Which was enough to get it to work. > Hmmm, I've got: > > qemu-system-or1k -M or1k-sim -m 256 "$@" -nographic -no-reboot -kernel > "$DIR"/linux-kernel -append "HOST=or1k console=FIXME $KARGS" > > And it looks like the answer to "how do you enable a halt/reboot switch that can > exit qemu" is "don't use the or1k-sim board, use the virt board". Yeah, virt board is the only one that supports halt/reboot. The 'or1ksim' platform that we used as the model of qemu 'or1k-sim' supported reboot and halt via special 'nop' instructions. The QEMU maintainers did not feel these special nop instructions should be supported in QEMU. You could see this in the kernel with: arch/openrisc/kernel/process: /* * This is used if pm_power_off has not been set by a power management * driver, in this case we can assume we are on a simulator. On * OpenRISC simulators l.nop 1 will trigger the simulator exit. */ static void default_power_off(void) { __asm__("l.nop 1"); } > > With this and the virt kernel and qemu virt machine I am able to shut down the > > machine is setup with poweroff and reboot hardware (syscon-poweroff) from > > SiFive MMIO. > > > > If I remove the `-drive` argument I do get boot messages. > > > >> Well, SORT OF. If I feed -initrd 2 megabytes copied from /dev/null by dd, I get > >> boot messages. If I go "true | gz > blah.gz" to create the smallest (20 byte) gz > >> file and feed it that, no boot messages. Feed it System.map: boot messages. Feed > >> it vmlinux: no boot messages. > > > > I use a root image I created with buildroot. But you should be able to get boot > > messages before initrd is picked up. I am not sure why your invalid initrd's > > are able to create boot messages or not. > > It provides boot messages without any initrd at all. It eventually panics > because there's no init, but early in board bringup I'm just looking for proof > of life. > > > Do you have a valid initrd that maybe I can try out? I recently use qcow2 > > images to build, but I did used to use initrd images and it did work fine. > > Sure, just remove the BUILTIN=1 from the if or1k stanza, and... it's 582k, I'll > send it _not_ cc-ing the mailing list. :) OK, I will try this out. But sorry busy this weekend I will probably not get time. > >> Any idea what's going on here? That last one's kind of a blocker... > > > > Have you tried to debug where it's getting hung up? Gdb remote debug should > > be working for or1k. > > I have not yet tried to rustle up a gdb build that understands or1k machine > code, no. I'm more likely to try to either get EARLY_PRINTK less broken or > dredge up the 2 line spin-to-write-register version of 8250 output and cut and > paste it in various places if I need to debug this myself. That's OK, I usually use the console too to help debug too. > But I was hoping it was a known limitation or at least easily recognized... OK, are things working for you now? Or is the problem that the initrd still does not work? -Stafford ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: Adding or1k support to mkroot. 2023-12-16 9:44 ` Stafford Horne @ 2023-12-16 13:00 ` Rob Landley 2023-12-17 9:05 ` Stafford Horne 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Rob Landley @ 2023-12-16 13:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stafford Horne; +Cc: linux-openrisc, Jonas Bonn, Stefan Kristiansson On 12/16/23 03:44, Stafford Horne wrote: > On Fri, Dec 15, 2023 at 07:33:42AM -0600, Rob Landley wrote: >> I've more or less gotten it to work. The trick was statically linking in the >> initramfs image: >> >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/commit/5647741f6687 >> >> I haven't added any of the OPENRISC_HAVE_INST_* symbols because it booted >> without them, and presumably the toolchain will automatically do the right thing >> for userspace: >> >> https://landley.net/notes-2023.html#10-12-2023 >> >> (I just specify an i486, i586, or i686 toolchain, or tell x86-64 >> "CFLAGS=-mtune=nocona", and so on. I don't need to micromanage stuff in >> menuconfig to build for minor variations of a given target, I have no idea why >> openrisc would work differently.) >> >> Nor did I add JUMP_UPON_UNHANDLED_EXCEPTION because I honestly don't know what >> that modifies or why you would ever NOT do it if it was at all useful? I err on >> the side of fewer symbols when the benefit's not clear... > > I just use the defaults. Because of the way I'm doing it, the "default" for any symbol I don't select is switched off. My config lists all the symbols I need that aren't in allnoconfig. (Although "need" means a dependency won't switch it on when the other symbol gets switched on.) Conceptually it's the same as running "make allnoconfig" and then going through the list of symbols and switching them on by hand in menuconfig. "This is what's enabled in this kernel." > Those instruction specific switches will only be > helpful if you really want tune things. Which may be fun for some people. > > The OpenRISC kernel is not yet sophisticated enough to detect and replace, > emulate the missing instructions. So we have these switches. Some soft CPUs > may have these instructions enabled/or disabled and these switches help if you > know what you are doing. Luckily QEMU has all the instruction enabled. Isn't that a toolchain issue, though? Your userspace gets built with the same toolchain, "we have a multiply instruction" is kind of something it needs to know. Which means: $ :| or1k-linux-musl-cc -E -dM - #define __DBL_MIN_EXP__ (-1021) #define __UINT_LEAST16_MAX__ 0xffff #define __ATOMIC_ACQUIRE 2 ... #define __UINT_FAST8_TYPE__ unsigned char #define __ATOMIC_ACQ_REL 4 #define __ATOMIC_RELEASE 3 Can't you have #defines in your toolchain saying what architecture variant it supports? And thus the code can #ifdef those without kconfig having to care? > In terms of JUMP_UPON_UNHANDLED_EXCEPTION, this was added before my time. We > probably could get rid of it and do a more graceful power based halt. I'm still not 100% clear on what it does, even after reading the help text. :) >> >> I built an or1k musl+gcc toolchain with my wrapper script around Rich Felker's >> >> musl-cross-make project by adding "or1k::" to the TARGETS list in >> >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/scripts/mcm-buildall.sh#L34 and >> >> that seems to have worked-ish. (Well, the kernel headers didn't install because >> >> I have to add or1k->openrisc to musl-cross-make's TARGET_ARCH_MANGLED in >> >> litecross/Makefile, but eh, close enough for the moment.) >> >> I fixed that too, by the way: >> >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/commit/ab046139f9d8 > > OK. Some glorious day Rich might apply the backlog of patches I've sent him to musl-cross-make (which last updated April 2022). Or I might scrape up the spoons to write a new linux-from-scratch style toolchain builder script so my mcm-buildall.sh isn't a wrapper around an external project. It's a toss-up which happens first... (Mostly when I have spare toolchain brain I wrestle with llvm stuff instead...) >> > This are my qemu arguments: >> > >> > qemu-system-or1k -cpu or1200 -machine virt \ >> > -no-reboot -kernel /home/shorne/work/linux/vmlinux \ >> > -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=user \ >> > -netdev user,id=user,net=10.9.0.1/24,host=10.9.0.100,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \ >> > -serial mon:stdio -nographic >> >> If you're putting the monitor on stdio, where does the console go? (Is this >> going to pop up a graphics window or something? Or do you talk to it entirely >> through the virtual network?) > > Console goes to stdio, I use ctrl-a C to drop into monitor which is also in > stdio. Huh, I didn't know that was an option. >> > -device virtio-blk-device,drive=d0 \ >> > -drive file=/home/shorne/work/openrisc/or1k-utils/buildroot/output/qemu-fs-or1k.qcow2,id=d0,if=none,format=qcow2 \ >> > -gdb tcp::10001 \ >> > -accel tcg,thread=multi \ >> > -smp cpus=4 -m 768 \ >> >> Do I need to micromanage -accel? > > Probably not for your use cases. I can not recall the defaults but I think it > was not multi threaded. But I cannot be sure unless I go look. You probably > can run with a single core and no SMP. What I did years ago was set up distcc so qemu called out to the cross compiler running on loopback through the 10.0.2.2 emulated interface, thus moving the heavy lifting of compilation outside the emulator to where CPU was cheap without reintroducing all the problems of cross compiling (two compilers to keep straight, two sets of headers and two sets of libraries leaking into each other, can't run the binaries you generate, configure keeps asking questions about the host and applying the results to the target...) It still maxed out around -j 3 because of the preprocessing, linking, network transfer, and make figuring out what to do next, but was way better than purely native single CPU builds. No clue what the sweet spot is at today... >> > -append rootwait \ >> > -append boot=/dev/vda2 >> >> Did they ever fix qemu's problem that "append" didn't and you could only have >> one -append and it in fact completely replaced the existing command line on most >> architectures? >> >> https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2017-05/msg03214.html > > After I sent this message I noticed this looked strange. It doesn't work, so my > command line ends up being: 'boot=/dev/vda2'. Which was enough to get it to > work. It's a misleading name. >> Hmmm, I've got: >> >> qemu-system-or1k -M or1k-sim -m 256 "$@" -nographic -no-reboot -kernel >> "$DIR"/linux-kernel -append "HOST=or1k console=FIXME $KARGS" >> >> And it looks like the answer to "how do you enable a halt/reboot switch that can >> exit qemu" is "don't use the or1k-sim board, use the virt board". > > Yeah, virt board is the only one that supports halt/reboot. The 'or1ksim' > platform that we used as the model of qemu 'or1k-sim' supported reboot and halt > via special 'nop' instructions. The QEMU maintainers did not feel these special > nop instructions should be supported in QEMU. Sigh. Ok, I'll start the process over digesting the other config and trying to get that one to work instead... >> It provides boot messages without any initrd at all. It eventually panics >> because there's no init, but early in board bringup I'm just looking for proof >> of life. >> >> > Do you have a valid initrd that maybe I can try out? I recently use qcow2 >> > images to build, but I did used to use initrd images and it did work fine. >> >> Sure, just remove the BUILTIN=1 from the if or1k stanza, and... it's 582k, I'll >> send it _not_ cc-ing the mailing list. :) > > OK, I will try this out. But sorry busy this weekend I will probably not get > time. No rush, I think you've answered my question above. It would be nice to get the bug fixed, but unless I can -device,poweroff or similar on the qemu command line to insert whatever it's poking to halt (and then tell the kernel about it), the sim board isn't useful to me for automation. >> >> Any idea what's going on here? That last one's kind of a blocker... >> > >> > Have you tried to debug where it's getting hung up? Gdb remote debug should >> > be working for or1k. >> >> I have not yet tried to rustle up a gdb build that understands or1k machine >> code, no. I'm more likely to try to either get EARLY_PRINTK less broken or >> dredge up the 2 line spin-to-write-register version of 8250 output and cut and >> paste it in various places if I need to debug this myself. > > That's OK, I usually use the console too to help debug too. If I can reproduce it and stick a printf in it, I can generally debug it. >> But I was hoping it was a known limitation or at least easily recognized... > > OK, are things working for you now? Or is the problem that the initrd still > does not work? I can use initrd built-in to the kernel. I cannot supply it externally via qemu's -initrd. Which means I need to rebuild the kernel (7 minute clean rebuild) to tweak the filesystem (30 second clean rebuild). That said, if I can supply an external -initrd to the virt board, then it works like the other targets. (It's a matter of workflow, I'm trying to regression test stuff against as many architectures as I can, which means I want them to work the same.) One script I have doing this is my smoketest script at https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/testroot.sh which runs all the targets under qemu and makes sure they can get their clocks set (via ntp if necessary) and access a block device and do basic networking. Eventually I want to get that running the toybox test suite inside qemu on each architecture, but that's still a ways off. (The shell isn't capable enough yet, working on it...) I also want to get an automated Linux From Scratch build to compile and run on each target. I did that before with aboriginal linux years ago, but that was making busybox into a development environment. (Other projects like Alpine Linux and Adelie Linux took over from there when I stopped.) Now I'm trying to do it again with toybox, with the extra difficulty that I can't use any existing GPL code for anything because toybox is under a public domain equivalent license (Zero Clause BSD). (Yes, this would mean building Linux From Scratch on or1k, under qemu. That's why I need I need a board with a working block device and at least 256 megs of ram, although I can use a network block device and a swap file in a pinch on systems with an MMU. I would someday LIKE to do a from-source debootstrap and populate a musl-backed package repository via automated cluster build, but there's still a certain amount of undocumented black magic in getting that to work. The old "people who know have known so long they've forgotten how to explain it" problem...) > -Stafford Rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: Adding or1k support to mkroot. 2023-12-16 13:00 ` Rob Landley @ 2023-12-17 9:05 ` Stafford Horne 2023-12-19 11:19 ` Rob Landley 2023-12-21 8:22 ` Rob Landley 0 siblings, 2 replies; 8+ messages in thread From: Stafford Horne @ 2023-12-17 9:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rob Landley; +Cc: linux-openrisc, Jonas Bonn, Stefan Kristiansson On Sat, Dec 16, 2023 at 07:00:23AM -0600, Rob Landley wrote: > On 12/16/23 03:44, Stafford Horne wrote: > > On Fri, Dec 15, 2023 at 07:33:42AM -0600, Rob Landley wrote: > >> I've more or less gotten it to work. The trick was statically linking in the > >> initramfs image: > >> > >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/commit/5647741f6687 > >> > >> I haven't added any of the OPENRISC_HAVE_INST_* symbols because it booted > >> without them, and presumably the toolchain will automatically do the right thing > >> for userspace: > >> > >> https://landley.net/notes-2023.html#10-12-2023 > >> > >> (I just specify an i486, i586, or i686 toolchain, or tell x86-64 > >> "CFLAGS=-mtune=nocona", and so on. I don't need to micromanage stuff in > >> menuconfig to build for minor variations of a given target, I have no idea why > >> openrisc would work differently.) > >> > >> Nor did I add JUMP_UPON_UNHANDLED_EXCEPTION because I honestly don't know what > >> that modifies or why you would ever NOT do it if it was at all useful? I err on > >> the side of fewer symbols when the benefit's not clear... > > > > I just use the defaults. > > Because of the way I'm doing it, the "default" for any symbol I don't select is > switched off. My config lists all the symbols I need that aren't in allnoconfig. > (Although "need" means a dependency won't switch it on when the other symbol > gets switched on.) > > Conceptually it's the same as running "make allnoconfig" and then going through > the list of symbols and switching them on by hand in menuconfig. "This is what's > enabled in this kernel." OK. > > Those instruction specific switches will only be > > helpful if you really want tune things. Which may be fun for some people. > > > > The OpenRISC kernel is not yet sophisticated enough to detect and replace, > > emulate the missing instructions. So we have these switches. Some soft CPUs > > may have these instructions enabled/or disabled and these switches help if you > > know what you are doing. Luckily QEMU has all the instruction enabled. > > Isn't that a toolchain issue, though? Your userspace gets built with the same > toolchain, "we have a multiply instruction" is kind of something it needs to > know. Which means: > > $ :| or1k-linux-musl-cc -E -dM - > #define __DBL_MIN_EXP__ (-1021) > #define __UINT_LEAST16_MAX__ 0xffff > #define __ATOMIC_ACQUIRE 2 > ... > #define __UINT_FAST8_TYPE__ unsigned char > #define __ATOMIC_ACQ_REL 4 > #define __ATOMIC_RELEASE 3 > > Can't you have #defines in your toolchain saying what architecture variant it > supports? And thus the code can #ifdef those without kconfig having to care? Yes, the toolchain supports these, the kernel switches enable the toolchain flags when building the kernel (mostly). For example: $ or1k-elf-gcc --target-help The following options are target specific: ... -mcmov Enable generation of conditional move (l.cmov) instructions. By default the equivalent will be generated using set and branch. .. -mhard-div Enable generation of hardware divide (l.div, l.divu) instructions. This is the default; use -msoft-div to override. -mhard-mul Enable generation of hardware multiply instructions (l.mul, l.muli) instructions. This is the default; use -msoft-mul to override. .. The exception is where we use these flags to enable bitops. In: arch/openrisc/include/asm/bitops/ffs.h arch/openrisc/include/asm/bitops/fls.h Like other architectures the or1k toolchain doesn't expose which architecture is being built. While architectures such as m68k define tunes and export i.e. __mcfisaa__ to infer which instructions are enabled. OpenRISC has no such architectures as within a softcpu architecture instructions can be enabled or disabled as required. I know, its a bit crazy. However, you should be safe disabling everything. > > In terms of JUMP_UPON_UNHANDLED_EXCEPTION, this was added before my time. We > > probably could get rid of it and do a more graceful power based halt. > > I'm still not 100% clear on what it does, even after reading the help text. :) This set's up an infinite loop on panic, rather than performing the default kernel operation. > >> >> I built an or1k musl+gcc toolchain with my wrapper script around Rich Felker's > >> >> musl-cross-make project by adding "or1k::" to the TARGETS list in > >> >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/scripts/mcm-buildall.sh#L34 and > >> >> that seems to have worked-ish. (Well, the kernel headers didn't install because > >> >> I have to add or1k->openrisc to musl-cross-make's TARGET_ARCH_MANGLED in > >> >> litecross/Makefile, but eh, close enough for the moment.) > >> > >> I fixed that too, by the way: > >> > >> https://github.com/landley/toybox/commit/ab046139f9d8 > > > > OK. > > Some glorious day Rich might apply the backlog of patches I've sent him to > musl-cross-make (which last updated April 2022). Or I might scrape up the spoons > to write a new linux-from-scratch style toolchain builder script so my > mcm-buildall.sh isn't a wrapper around an external project. It's a toss-up which > happens first... > > (Mostly when I have spare toolchain brain I wrestle with llvm stuff instead...) > > >> > This are my qemu arguments: > >> > > >> > qemu-system-or1k -cpu or1200 -machine virt \ > >> > -no-reboot -kernel /home/shorne/work/linux/vmlinux \ > >> > -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=user \ > >> > -netdev user,id=user,net=10.9.0.1/24,host=10.9.0.100,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \ > >> > -serial mon:stdio -nographic > >> > >> If you're putting the monitor on stdio, where does the console go? (Is this > >> going to pop up a graphics window or something? Or do you talk to it entirely > >> through the virtual network?) > > > > Console goes to stdio, I use ctrl-a C to drop into monitor which is also in > > stdio. > > Huh, I didn't know that was an option. There are soo many options in QEMU. > >> > -device virtio-blk-device,drive=d0 \ > >> > -drive file=/home/shorne/work/openrisc/or1k-utils/buildroot/output/qemu-fs-or1k.qcow2,id=d0,if=none,format=qcow2 \ > >> > -gdb tcp::10001 \ > >> > -accel tcg,thread=multi \ > >> > -smp cpus=4 -m 768 \ > >> > >> Do I need to micromanage -accel? > > > > Probably not for your use cases. I can not recall the defaults but I think it > > was not multi threaded. But I cannot be sure unless I go look. You probably > > can run with a single core and no SMP. > > What I did years ago was set up distcc so qemu called out to the cross compiler > running on loopback through the 10.0.2.2 emulated interface, thus moving the > heavy lifting of compilation outside the emulator to where CPU was cheap without > reintroducing all the problems of cross compiling (two compilers to keep > straight, two sets of headers and two sets of libraries leaking into each other, > can't run the binaries you generate, configure keeps asking questions about the > host and applying the results to the target...) > > It still maxed out around -j 3 because of the preprocessing, linking, network > transfer, and make figuring out what to do next, but was way better than purely > native single CPU builds. > > No clue what the sweet spot is at today... > > >> > -append rootwait \ > >> > -append boot=/dev/vda2 > >> > >> Did they ever fix qemu's problem that "append" didn't and you could only have > >> one -append and it in fact completely replaced the existing command line on most > >> architectures? > >> > >> https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2017-05/msg03214.html > > > > After I sent this message I noticed this looked strange. It doesn't work, so my > > command line ends up being: 'boot=/dev/vda2'. Which was enough to get it to > > work. > > It's a misleading name. > > >> Hmmm, I've got: > >> > >> qemu-system-or1k -M or1k-sim -m 256 "$@" -nographic -no-reboot -kernel > >> "$DIR"/linux-kernel -append "HOST=or1k console=FIXME $KARGS" > >> > >> And it looks like the answer to "how do you enable a halt/reboot switch that can > >> exit qemu" is "don't use the or1k-sim board, use the virt board". > > > > Yeah, virt board is the only one that supports halt/reboot. The 'or1ksim' > > platform that we used as the model of qemu 'or1k-sim' supported reboot and halt > > via special 'nop' instructions. The QEMU maintainers did not feel these special > > nop instructions should be supported in QEMU. > > Sigh. Ok, I'll start the process over digesting the other config and trying to > get that one to work instead... > > >> It provides boot messages without any initrd at all. It eventually panics > >> because there's no init, but early in board bringup I'm just looking for proof > >> of life. > >> > >> > Do you have a valid initrd that maybe I can try out? I recently use qcow2 > >> > images to build, but I did used to use initrd images and it did work fine. > >> > >> Sure, just remove the BUILTIN=1 from the if or1k stanza, and... it's 582k, I'll > >> send it _not_ cc-ing the mailing list. :) > > > > OK, I will try this out. But sorry busy this weekend I will probably not get > > time. > > No rush, I think you've answered my question above. It would be nice to get the > bug fixed, but unless I can -device,poweroff or similar on the qemu command line > to insert whatever it's poking to halt (and then tell the kernel about it), the > sim board isn't useful to me for automation. I tried to boot your initramfs with my virt_defconfig kernel, I just exchanged driver for -initrd. It seems to work, but panics with the following: [ 0.260000] 90000000.serial: ttyS0 at MMIO 0x90000000 (irq = 2, base_baud = 1250000) is a 16550A [ 0.270000] printk: console [ttyS0] enabled .. [ 0.420000] usbhid: USB HID core driver [ 0.420000] NET: Registered PF_PACKET protocol family [ 0.490000] clk: Disabling unused clocks [ 0.490000] ALSA device list: [ 0.490000] No soundcards found. [ 0.520000] Freeing unused kernel image (initmem) memory: 232K [ 0.520000] This architecture does not have kernel memory protection. [ 0.520000] Run /init as init process Type exit when done. oneit: /dev/ttyS0ttyS0: No such file or directory [ 0.780000] Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempted to kill init! exitcode=0x00000100 [ 0.780000] ---[ end Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempted to kill init! exitcode=0x00000100 ]--- I am not sure about /dev/ttyS0ttyS0. -Stafford > >> >> Any idea what's going on here? That last one's kind of a blocker... > >> > > >> > Have you tried to debug where it's getting hung up? Gdb remote debug should > >> > be working for or1k. > >> > >> I have not yet tried to rustle up a gdb build that understands or1k machine > >> code, no. I'm more likely to try to either get EARLY_PRINTK less broken or > >> dredge up the 2 line spin-to-write-register version of 8250 output and cut and > >> paste it in various places if I need to debug this myself. > > > > That's OK, I usually use the console too to help debug too. > > If I can reproduce it and stick a printf in it, I can generally debug it. > > >> But I was hoping it was a known limitation or at least easily recognized... > > > > OK, are things working for you now? Or is the problem that the initrd still > > does not work? > > I can use initrd built-in to the kernel. I cannot supply it externally via > qemu's -initrd. Which means I need to rebuild the kernel (7 minute clean > rebuild) to tweak the filesystem (30 second clean rebuild). > > That said, if I can supply an external -initrd to the virt board, then it works > like the other targets. (It's a matter of workflow, I'm trying to regression > test stuff against as many architectures as I can, which means I want them to > work the same.) > > One script I have doing this is my smoketest script at > https://github.com/landley/toybox/blob/master/mkroot/testroot.sh which runs all > the targets under qemu and makes sure they can get their clocks set (via ntp if > necessary) and access a block device and do basic networking. > > Eventually I want to get that running the toybox test suite inside qemu on each > architecture, but that's still a ways off. (The shell isn't capable enough yet, > working on it...) > > I also want to get an automated Linux From Scratch build to compile and run on > each target. I did that before with aboriginal linux years ago, but that was > making busybox into a development environment. (Other projects like Alpine Linux > and Adelie Linux took over from there when I stopped.) Now I'm trying to do it > again with toybox, with the extra difficulty that I can't use any existing GPL > code for anything because toybox is under a public domain equivalent license > (Zero Clause BSD). > > (Yes, this would mean building Linux From Scratch on or1k, under qemu. That's > why I need I need a board with a working block device and at least 256 megs of > ram, although I can use a network block device and a swap file in a pinch on > systems with an MMU. I would someday LIKE to do a from-source debootstrap and > populate a musl-backed package repository via automated cluster build, but > there's still a certain amount of undocumented black magic in getting that to > work. The old "people who know have known so long they've forgotten how to > explain it" problem...) > > > -Stafford > > Rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: Adding or1k support to mkroot. 2023-12-17 9:05 ` Stafford Horne @ 2023-12-19 11:19 ` Rob Landley 2023-12-21 8:22 ` Rob Landley 1 sibling, 0 replies; 8+ messages in thread From: Rob Landley @ 2023-12-19 11:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stafford Horne; +Cc: linux-openrisc, Jonas Bonn, Stefan Kristiansson On 12/17/23 03:05, Stafford Horne wrote: >> Can't you have #defines in your toolchain saying what architecture variant it >> supports? And thus the code can #ifdef those without kconfig having to care? > > Yes, the toolchain supports these, the kernel switches enable the toolchain > flags when building the kernel (mostly). For example: > > $ or1k-elf-gcc --target-help > The following options are target specific: > ... > -mcmov Enable generation of conditional move (l.cmov) > instructions. By default the equivalent will > be generated using set and branch. > .. > -mhard-div Enable generation of hardware divide (l.div, > l.divu) instructions. This is the default; use > -msoft-div to override. > -mhard-mul Enable generation of hardware multiply > instructions (l.mul, l.muli) instructions. This > is the default; use -msoft-mul to override. > .. And presumably have compile-time defaults settable in gcc's ./configure command line. (Other architectures generally do.) > The exception is where we use these flags to enable bitops. In: > > arch/openrisc/include/asm/bitops/ffs.h > arch/openrisc/include/asm/bitops/fls.h > > Like other architectures the or1k toolchain doesn't expose which architecture is > being built. While architectures such as m68k define tunes and export i.e. > __mcfisaa__ to infer which instructions are enabled. > > OpenRISC has no such architectures as within a softcpu architecture instructions > can be enabled or disabled as required. I know, its a bit crazy. I like the "single point of truth" style where you specify something once and it gets picked up from that one place by everything that uses it. On other architectures, I setup mytoolchain to produce the right kind of binaries for the target, and then the various programs take their cue from the toolchain. The extra-confusing part here is if I run make menuconfig specifying ARCH= but NOT specifying CROSS_COMPILE, that changes the config enough that when I build vmlinux specifying CROSS_COMPILE again I get prompted to set symbols by "make config". Specifically: Enable register zeroing on function exit (ZERO_CALL_USED_REGS) [N/y/?] (NEW) So this architecture IS querying the toolchain for some stuff (and then having dangling dependencies when you change it out from under a build that it wants manually fixed up), but other toolchain micromanagement has to be set manually via menuconfig. >> >> Hmmm, I've got: >> >> >> >> qemu-system-or1k -M or1k-sim -m 256 "$@" -nographic -no-reboot -kernel >> >> "$DIR"/linux-kernel -append "HOST=or1k console=FIXME $KARGS" >> >> >> >> And it looks like the answer to "how do you enable a halt/reboot switch that can >> >> exit qemu" is "don't use the or1k-sim board, use the virt board". >> > >> > Yeah, virt board is the only one that supports halt/reboot. The 'or1ksim' >> > platform that we used as the model of qemu 'or1k-sim' supported reboot and halt >> > via special 'nop' instructions. The QEMU maintainers did not feel these special >> > nop instructions should be supported in QEMU. >> >> Sigh. Ok, I'll start the process over digesting the other config and trying to >> get that one to work instead... Still need to do this. (Holidays...) >> >> It provides boot messages without any initrd at all. It eventually panics >> >> because there's no init, but early in board bringup I'm just looking for proof >> >> of life. >> >> >> >> > Do you have a valid initrd that maybe I can try out? I recently use qcow2 >> >> > images to build, but I did used to use initrd images and it did work fine. >> >> >> >> Sure, just remove the BUILTIN=1 from the if or1k stanza, and... it's 582k, I'll >> >> send it _not_ cc-ing the mailing list. :) >> > >> > OK, I will try this out. But sorry busy this weekend I will probably not get >> > time. >> >> No rush, I think you've answered my question above. It would be nice to get the >> bug fixed, but unless I can -device,poweroff or similar on the qemu command line >> to insert whatever it's poking to halt (and then tell the kernel about it), the >> sim board isn't useful to me for automation. > > I tried to boot your initramfs with my virt_defconfig kernel, I just exchanged > driver for -initrd. It seems to work, but panics with the following: Testing it in virt_defconfig doesn't reproduce the bug in or1k_sim, but I guess the answer is "don't use or1k_sim". > [ 0.260000] 90000000.serial: ttyS0 at MMIO 0x90000000 (irq = 2, base_baud = 1250000) is a 16550A > [ 0.270000] printk: console [ttyS0] enabled > .. > [ 0.420000] usbhid: USB HID core driver > [ 0.420000] NET: Registered PF_PACKET protocol family > [ 0.490000] clk: Disabling unused clocks > [ 0.490000] ALSA device list: > [ 0.490000] No soundcards found. > [ 0.520000] Freeing unused kernel image (initmem) memory: 232K > [ 0.520000] This architecture does not have kernel memory protection. > [ 0.520000] Run /init as init process > Type exit when done. > oneit: /dev/ttyS0ttyS0: No such file or directory > [ 0.780000] Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempted to kill init! exitcode=0x00000100 > [ 0.780000] ---[ end Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempted to kill init! exitcode=0x00000100 ]--- > > I am not sure about /dev/ttyS0ttyS0. Hmmm, looks like /sys/class/tty/console/active had something I hadn't encountered before in it, so oneit bugged out trying to redirect the console. (It can have multiple lines and present or missing /dev/ prefix on each line, and I didn't have test cases for all the combinations...) And the problem is, of course: memmove(toybuf+5, TT.c, strlen(TT.c)); Needs a +1 on the strlen to also move the null terminator. :P Oneit runs a child process (with the console redirected to the ACTUAL console device so it can do job control) and then waits for it to exit, reaping zombies until then, and calling reboot() when its child process was the one exiting (or halt, or restarting the child; there's command line flags). This lets you boot to a shell prompt with working job control (ctrl-C and friends) and a clean shutdown instead of a panic when it exits. Thanks, Rob P.S. And of course I don't want to check the obvious-seeming oneit fix in until I can _test_ it, meaning booting the virt board, meaning converting the kernel config... Working on it. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: Adding or1k support to mkroot. 2023-12-17 9:05 ` Stafford Horne 2023-12-19 11:19 ` Rob Landley @ 2023-12-21 8:22 ` Rob Landley 1 sibling, 0 replies; 8+ messages in thread From: Rob Landley @ 2023-12-21 8:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stafford Horne; +Cc: linux-openrisc, Jonas Bonn, Stefan Kristiansson On 12/17/23 03:05, Stafford Horne wrote: >> >> > -device virtio-blk-device,drive=d0 \ >> >> > -drive file=/home/shorne/work/openrisc/or1k-utils/buildroot/output/qemu-fs-or1k.qcow2,id=d0,if=none,format=qcow2 \ >> >> > -gdb tcp::10001 \ >> >> > -accel tcg,thread=multi \ >> >> > -smp cpus=4 -m 768 \ My qemu-system-or1k (built from commit cf6f26d6f9b2 last april) says virt is an unknown machine type, and to build a newer one I have to upgrade devuan to a version with python 3.8. (The build refuses to use 3.7.3 since commit ca056f4499c2.) Rob ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2023-12-21 8:16 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 8+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2023-12-12 10:16 Adding or1k support to mkroot Rob Landley 2023-12-14 19:50 ` Stafford Horne 2023-12-15 13:33 ` Rob Landley 2023-12-16 9:44 ` Stafford Horne 2023-12-16 13:00 ` Rob Landley 2023-12-17 9:05 ` Stafford Horne 2023-12-19 11:19 ` Rob Landley 2023-12-21 8:22 ` Rob Landley
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