On 8/3/06, Milton Miller <miltonm at bga.com> wrote: > On Tue Aug 1 2006 11:17:41 PM CDT, Grant Likely wrote: > > On 7/25/06, Clint Thomas <cthomas at soneticom.com> wrote: > > > > > > Basically, the system I want linux running on does not require the > > > initialization of hardware that U-boot provides, or at least it does not > > > need it to boot the linux kernel. I want to load an uncompressed linux > > > kernel into memory and start the execution of the kernel, without using > > > any > > > kind of bootloader. Is this possible? Or does linux need some kind of > > > firmware or other software to tell it to start executing? Thanks for any > > > info you might have. > > > > Loading a kernel into memory and starting execution *is* a boot loader. :) > > If it's running on the cpu, then I agreee. But he didn't say how he was > loading > the image into memory, and if it is via an external agent then I would not > necessarly call that a boot loader, altough it is performing those tasks. > Actually, that may be too broad. Is kexec a boot loader?
I would say it is. :) IMHO, even the basic tasks of correctly setting up the initial conditions can be considered a bootloader. > > You could use the bootwrapper that is in the kernel source tree > > (zImage). If a zImage's entry point is at the execution entry point, > > then it will start the Linux kernel correctly. However, it is still a > > compressed image. > > > > The boot wrapper is a reference implementation, not a required piece of the > boot sequence. As I stated in my previous post, the kernel entry conditions > are documted and loading the vmlinux raw is reasonable, asssuming that > the other conditions can be met (registers and device treee, and maybe > initrd). I agree. However, the original post sounded to me like he was looking for a canned solution. I know zImage isn't exactly what he asked for because it is a compressed image, but it does achieve the *effect* he asked for. I am curious as to the source of his requirements. ie. what is loading the kernel into ram? Where is it coming from? I've got a similar situation on my Virtex-4 platform. The FPGA takes care of all device initialization. However, the kernel is loaded of a CF card via a *slow* JTAG interface. Loading an uncompressed image is more time consuming than loading a compressed image and uncompressing it in software. > > > If you *really* need an uncompressed image, I would start with the > > bootwrapper and hack it to work with an non-gzipped kernel image. > > However, why do you want to do it this way? You probably won't gain > > much in boot time and it will be more difficult to maintain. > > Actually, the code is aready there to just copy anything inthe kernel > section that is without the gzip header. Perfect! cheers, g. -- Grant Likely, B.Sc. P.Eng. Secret Lab Technologies Ltd. grant.likely at secretlab.ca (403) 399-0195
