From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Tom Guilliams Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2003 11:24:44 -0700 Subject: [U-Boot-Users] Re: mkimage multi file use? In-Reply-To: <20030818181931.13475C59E4@atlas.denx.de> References: <20030818181931.13475C59E4@atlas.denx.de> Message-ID: <3F4119EC.4030401@san.rr.com> List-Id: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit To: u-boot@lists.denx.de Wolfgang Denk wrote: >Sorry, I have no idea. If really needed, I can arrange to >(temporarily) put a copy of the U-Boot archive on our FTP server (the >bzip2ed tarball for U-Boot-Users is 22 MB, and 40 MB for PPCBoot). > OK, well I may take you up on that but I'll get back to you. I hate having to ask questions I know have been answered already. >So try: > > bash$ mkimage -T multi -C gzip -a 0 -e 0 -n 'test multifile' \ > -d /path/to/kernel_image:/path/to/ramdisk_image uMulti > Hmmm... include/image.h talks about having byte counts in there as well. Maybe I'm just confused. I'll recheck it. >See the README (section "More About U-Boot Image Types") for the file >format. This explains that with a mutlifile image with a kernel and a >ramdisk you will have to skip a total of 76 bytes of header >information (64 for U-Boot header + 4 for kernel size + 4 for ramdisk >size + 4 for terminating null). > Thank you. Very helpful. Can't believe I missed the README reference! Ugh! > >So I recommend a three step approach: > > bash$ mkimage -l uMulti > Image Name: Linux-2.4.4-2003-04-05 Multiboot > Created: Sun Apr 6 12:44:18 2003 > Image Type: PowerPC Linux Multi-File Image (gzip compressed) > Data Size: 2610664 Bytes = 2549.48 kB = 2.49 MB > Load Address: 0x00000000 > Entry Point: 0x00000000 > Contents: > Image 0: 715859 Bytes = 699 kB = 0 MB > Image 1: 1894792 Bytes = 1850 kB = 1 MB > > bash$ dd if=uMulti bs=76 skip=1 of=foo > 34350+1 records in > 34350+1 records out > bash$ dd if=foo of=kernel.gz bs=715859 count=1 > 1+0 records in > 1+0 records out > bash$ gzip -vt kernel.gz > kernel.gz: OK > >The "bs=715859" uses the kernel data size as printed by the "mkimage >-l" command. > > Very much appreciated. Thanks again! Tom