On Tue 2024-03-05 @ 10:17:10 AM, Jonas Karlman wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> On 2024-03-05 06:40, Eugen Hristev wrote:
> > On 3/5/24 04:10, Trevor Woerner wrote:
> >> Following the pattern of other Rockchip devices, enable the U-Boot
> >> environment to be stored in MMC. This patch specifically assumes the
> >> environment will be stored on the SDcard.
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Trevor Woerner <twoer...@gmail.com>
> >> ---
> >>  configs/rock5a-rk3588s_defconfig | 3 +++
> >>  1 file changed, 3 insertions(+)
> >>
> >> diff --git a/configs/rock5a-rk3588s_defconfig 
> >> b/configs/rock5a-rk3588s_defconfig
> >> index a6471a519514..ac6411667d9a 100644
> >> --- a/configs/rock5a-rk3588s_defconfig
> >> +++ b/configs/rock5a-rk3588s_defconfig
> >> @@ -8,6 +8,7 @@ CONFIG_SPL_LIBGENERIC_SUPPORT=y
> >>  CONFIG_NR_DRAM_BANKS=2
> >>  CONFIG_HAS_CUSTOM_SYS_INIT_SP_ADDR=y
> >>  CONFIG_CUSTOM_SYS_INIT_SP_ADDR=0xc00000
> >> +CONFIG_ENV_SIZE=0x8000
> >>  CONFIG_DEFAULT_DEVICE_TREE="rk3588s-rock-5a"
> >>  CONFIG_ROCKCHIP_RK3588=y
> >>  CONFIG_SPL_ROCKCHIP_COMMON_BOARD=y
> >> @@ -48,6 +49,8 @@ CONFIG_CMD_REGULATOR=y
> >>  CONFIG_SPL_OF_CONTROL=y
> >>  CONFIG_OF_LIVE=y
> >>  CONFIG_OF_SPL_REMOVE_PROPS="clock-names interrupt-parent assigned-clocks 
> >> assigned-clock-rates assigned-clock-parents"
> >> +CONFIG_ENV_IS_IN_MMC=y
> >> +CONFIG_SYS_MMC_ENV_DEV=1
> >>  CONFIG_SPL_DM_SEQ_ALIAS=y
> >>  CONFIG_SPL_REGMAP=y
> >>  CONFIG_SPL_SYSCON=y
> > 
> > 
> > Hi Trevor,
> > 
> > What will happen if there is no Sd-Card, and we boot from eMMC or SPI flash 
> > ?
> 
> Agree, we should not blindly enable env and expect that it can be stored
> on sd-card. If anything, it should preferably be saved/loaded from the
> device where TPL/SPL was booted from.
> 
> Personally I always run my devices with ENV_IS_NOWHERE, with standard
> boot and extlinux or efi as the preferred way to boot, I do not see why
> normal end-users with a single OS really have a need for a saved env,
> please educate me :-)

I am the maintainer of the meta-rockchip Yocto layer[1]. Yocto uses a
nifty tool called 'wic' to layout images (dos/gpt partitioning, optionally
formatting partitions, optionally installing things into those partitions)[2].
The partitioning layout that we follow is the one that is recommended by
Rockchip itself[3] with 2 exceptions:
- we don't hide any of the partitions from the partition table
- we've combined /boot into the root partition (for reasons I'll explain
  later)

Under the Rockchip partitioning, the U-Boot environment is stored in partition
5, at offset 0x0003.f800, and has a size of 0x0000.8000.

I don't own every Rockchip board, but I have a bunch of them (thanks to some
generous donations!). I've created a spreadsheet that lists the ones supported
by meta-rockchip and their environment variable U-Boot configurations
(locations, offsets, sizes). Most of them follow the Rockchip recommended
partitioning layout with regards to storing the environment. This set of
patches closes that gap, at least for the ones supported by meta-rockchip.

One of the things that I want to do next with meta-rockchip is to provide
an easy way for users to enable some sort of A/B OTA update strategy.
Currently, enabling an A/B update mechanism for any board (Rockchip or not)
is a non-trivial exercise. Every A/B update mechanism that I've looked at
requires (among other things) the bootloader to be able to store/retrieve
its environment from U-Boot itself (obviously) and also from Linux userspace
since it is the bootloader that ultimately boots from either the A or the B
partition. I'm specifically focused on rauc, but all the A/B update mechanisms
I've looked at have this same requirement.

Users who don't care for A/B updates can simply use meta-rockchip as-is, those
who want an A/B strategy would simply enable a setting or two in their Yocto
config and meta-rockchip would take care of the details, regardless of which
Rockchip board they're using.

I've combined /boot into the root partition since it makes A/B updates easier.
Otherwise in order to work it would actually be an Aboot+Aroot/Bboot+Broot
mechanism, which is clumsy. Also since U-Boot is stored in partition by
itself, the only thing in the /boot partition is the U-Boot boot mechanism
(boot script, extlinux, etc), the Linux kernel, and the DTB (or fitImage). In
general it's better to keep the kernel and the root filesystem in sync, so
having a separate /boot partition is clumsy for no gain.

The other nice thing about wic is that it allows us to store random data
(or filesystems) in the image as we're creating it for the first time. In
other words, I have a mechanism that allows me to create the initial/default
U-Boot environment during the build, I can add or remove variables from it
dynamically as part of my build process, generate the proper binary blob of
that environment (i.e. with checksum), and lay it out into partition 5 of the
generated image so that on first boot the environment is already setup with
whatever U-Boot needs plus any custom tweaks the user adds.

> 
> > 
> > The rockchip pattern is usually to have a standard config for all boards 
> > and it is
> > not stored anywhere.
> 
> Unfortunately lots of rockchip boards have blindly enabled ENV_IN_MMC
> and force it to use sd-card. However, before enabling same forced
> behavior on new boards I would recommend ensuring adding support for
> allowing env to follow same load order as FIT (spl-boot-order).

I was pretty certain the "forcing it to SDcard" was going to cause push back,
which is why I highlighted it in my commit message since I didn't want it to
sneak in accidentally. The feedback is exactly what I was hoping. I wasn't
aware there might be a way to dynamically store the environment based on the
wishes of the user, that would be great!

But ultimately I want to keep the environment on the boot device and make
sure they're not separated. I could have 2 SDcards on my desk: one could be a
regular non-A/B layout, and the other would have an A/B layout. Technically I
wouldn't really need an environment on the non-A/B card, but if it did have
one, it would need to be different from the environment of the SDcard that had
the A/B update layout.

On many Rockchip-based boards the eMMC board is every bit as optional as the
SDcard, so keeping the environment on the same medium as the boot is
necessary.

For the user-case of a single OS I agree that an environment is not required
to be stored. But more and more we're seeing users want an OTA strategy
(especially in commercial/production environments), and if the one they want
is A/B-based, then storing the environment is something that needs to work.
Even in a non-production environment, having an A/B update mechanism could be
useful in a board-farm testing environment: take last night's build, update
the board's "other" partition, reboot, and see if it works. If it doesn't,
fall back to the working one and try again.

Currently meta-rockchip assumes SDcard usage. I know that's a limitation and
is on my TODO list to address someday so users could easily choose between
one or the other.

In order to get A/B working out of the box for meta-rockchip, I could carry
all these patches locally and still make everything work the way I would like.
But most Rockchip-based boards seem to already support storing an environment
in CONFIG_ENV_IS_IN_MMC, it's just the default device CONFIG_SYS_MMC_ENV_DEV
that we're disagreeing on.

> Regards,
> Jonas
> 
> > 
> > Kever, Jonas, please correct me if I am wrong.
> > 
> > Eugen
> 

[1] 
https://layers.openembedded.org/layerindex/branch/master/layer/meta-rockchip/
[2] https://git.yoctoproject.org/meta-rockchip/tree/wic/rockchip.wks
[3] https://opensource.rock-chips.com/wiki_Partitions

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