Forgot to CC Jupiter and the most important thing:

PACKAGE_INSTALL += "initramfs-module-debug"   (To my understanding this
enables the rescue shell)

On 12.07.19 08:22, Moritz Porst wrote:
Hey,

The only thing I can add to what I already said is my
"core-image-minimal-initramfs.bbappend":
PACKAGE_INSTALL += "\
                        busybox \
                        base-files \
                        base-passwd \
                        bash \
                        util-linux-lsblk \
                        vim \
                        "
Jupiter, are you able to produce your zImage-initramfs now ? If not
further do the following:

bitbake <your-image> -e > tempfile
[wait until done, then search]
grep <appropriate search word> tempfile

where <appropriate search word> may be e.g.: zImage, zImage-initramfs,
INITRAMFS_IMAGE, INITRAMFS_IMAGE_BUNDLE
Especially check that all variables you set are not overwritten
somewhere else

Best regards
Moritz

On 12.07.19 06:36, Zoran Stojsavljevic wrote:
Moritz,

Thank you very much for this reply. It makes it very clear... What is
the current State of Affairs for the topic.

Let us see if there will be the improvement to this topic. I'll
document this on one of my private GitHubs. And archive this email.

Zoran
_______

On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 12:39 PM Moritz Porst <moritz.po...@gmx.de>
wrote:
Hello Zoran, Jupiter and list

The configuration you sent seems to be correct.

As I already said initramfs seems overly complicated in yocto. the most
important thing to note is that 2 kernel images are created, one is
called bzImage (in my case) an the other bzImage-initramfs. However
only
the bzImage is written into the rootfs so you have to exchange them
manually. (in /boot/bzImage). I did not find a way of including the
bundled kernel right away.

What you can do is to build core-image-minimal-initramfs and delete the
symbolic link "bzImage", then recreate it and let it point to
bzImage-initramfs. However this is rather a hack than a solution.

An other mistake I made was to use IMAGE_INSTALL_append which is
ignored. Use PACKAGE_INSTALL_append.

Also I found that "break" does not work as a kernel parameter. Use
"shell" oder "debug-shell" instead. If you want to try to boot into
initramfs you can remove all parameters to the booting line so you
either end up in a kernel panic (initramfs doesn't work) or in the
rescue shell (initramfs works).

In the end I actually managed to get a working shell, but I often ended
up in initramfs telling me "dropping to shell..." but then freezing.

I don't have access to my files right now but I can tell you more on my
setup tomorrow. In case the solution is not included above.

Best regards
Moritz

On 11/07/2019 09:24, Zoran Stojsavljevic wrote:
Hello Moritz,

I need here some help from you. I'll try to reconstruct the parts of
the local.conf you are using, so I (and Jupiter) can understand what
should we do to also bundle kernel image with initramfs, to end up in
Dracut/rescue shell.

Here is what I anticipate after reading several YOCTO @ threads:

IMAGE_FSTYPES_append = " cpio.gz"
INITRAMFS_IMAGE = "core-image-minimal-initramfs"
INITRAMFS_IMAGE_BUNDLE = "1"
# debug: adds debug boot parameters like 'shell' and 'debug', see
# meta/recipes-core/initrdscripts/initramfs-framework/debug for
details
# Could be removed in more minimal product image
PACKAGE_INSTALL += "initramfs-module-debug"

Could you, please, review these lines and fix, if something is not
correct?

I what I understood, this does the magic, but you could not stop in
initramfs shell? Still, this problem is not solved?

I was following this site: https://wiki.debian.org/InitramfsDebug
Rescue shell (also known as initramfs shell)
Read man initramfs-tools to learn about the break=something kernel
parameter (where valid arguments for something are: top, modules,
premount, mount, mountroot, bottom, init), which starts a debug
shell.
You can try, for example, break=premount. You can edit
/boot/grub/grub.cfg
to add this to the end of the kernel line, or you can do it
interactively
from the grub boot menu: "e" to edit, and "b" to boot once you've
edited
the kernel line.
Now, as my understanding is, you solved this problem actually adding
to grub.cfg in command kernel line break=premount, and was able to
stop in rescue shell?! Am I correct here?

Thank you,
Zoran
_______


On Mon, Jul 1, 2019 at 4:33 PM Moritz Porst <moritz.po...@gmx.de>
wrote:
Hello,
I think I found the issue. ( see below )

On 01.07.19 15:57, Zoran Stojsavljevic wrote:

Hello Moritz,

Too hot here, in Belgrade... Where I am resting for the Time being
(actually, this message given to my invisible spying security
"angels"
on this list)...  :-) Projected +38C degrees today. Too hot for this
too old Siberian untouchable bobcat!

Luckily it's a rather cold day in germany, thanks that you still
take the time to answer !

I started from the core-image-minimal to have a small image and
extended it with the features I need, which is e.g. a graphical
system.
The console=[...] part in the kernel command line is probably a
remnant but my image boots into the GUI. Is this a problem ?

Nope, it is not. If you need to do it correctly, you should use
bitbake -k core-image-sato build command (my best educated guess).
Then, I do not feel comfortable seeing in your kernel command line
serial interface, do you agree?

Yes that is true.

YOCTO maintainers, any additional
advices?

My bootloader is currently grub, the EFI is AM.

Nope. Eeeeeeeeek. Wrong. Currently, your boot-loader is UEFI AMI.
Your
OS (Linux probably, U name it) boot-loader is GRUB2. Let us keep it
contained, sane and sober.

Sorry but I can't find this info in the EFI.

Could you, please try the following command being root: dmesg | grep
MCU. or grep mcu, or grep CPUID or grep cpuid?? Please, post results
to this list (to me).

No luck unfortunately (used grep -i)

Could you, also, send to YOCTO list/me attached file:
/boot/microcode.cpio so I can somehow (?) inspect it? ;-)

I send it to you directly, so I don't spam the list with a large
attachment.

2GB, single channel.

All Cool. E3825 by HW/silicon design could/does NOT support multiple
memory channels. ONLY single... But even YOCTO primes (INTEL ones
from
this list) are not gonna tell this to you. Not 'cause they are nasty.
They are NOT aware/they are ignorant (with the purpose)! ;-))

No, the boot does not stop. Even if I do issue "break=premount" I
end up in my graphical interface with the rootfs mounted. This is the
last message in the log: EXT4-fs (sdb2): re-mounted. Opts: (null)
The rootfs partition is always 2, so either /dev/sda2 or /dev/sdb2
(when booting from stick)

Yes, from https://pastebin.com/ya7iCtq7, so it is remounted rw, not
read only. So, it seems that you have passed dracut phase. and
mounted
SD or flash rootfs. So, initramfs is NOT your true problem, is it???

The thing is that the boot works but I want an initramfs that can
be used for updating (in case the rootfs is broken). However I
need to be able to intercept the boot process there because
otherwise I can't deploy an update mechanism, that's what I was
trying.

Zoran
_______


No, the boot does not stop. Even if I do issue "break=premount" I
end up
in my graphical interface with the rootfs mounted. This is  the
last message
in the log: EXT4-fs (sdb2): re-mounted. Opts: (null) The rootfs
partition is
always 2, so either /dev/sda2 or /dev/sdb2 (when booting from stick)


So for the issue...
I expected yocto to put the bundled bzImage onto my rootfs. This
was not the case. My image directory contains 2x bzImage, one
bundled and one unbundled. Apparently yocto puts the >un<bundled
image onto my /boot partition and uses it for boot. So of course I
couldn't access initramfs in this case. Now I get to the initramfs
statement "dropping to shell" if I intentionally boot with wrong
rootfs.
Still I don't get the interactive shell.
On the github ostroproject site I found this:

# debug: adds debug boot parameters like 'shell' and 'debug', see
# meta/recipes-core/initrdscripts/initramfs-framework/debug for
details
# Could be removed in more minimal product image.
PACKAGE_INSTALL += "initramfs-module-debug"

including the module-debug still does not enable me to get an
interactive shell.
I was following this site: https://wiki.debian.org/InitramfsDebug
I am aware that yocto is no debian but I expected that kernel
parameters (like 'break') would be independent of the distribution.

Lastly I do not really need the interactive shell, it is enough if
I can deploy a custom init script in the initramfs. Still I think
that getting an initramfs shell should be as simple as stating the
name of the initramfs image and setting the "INITRAMFS_DO_BUNDLE"
variable.

Best regards
Moritz


On Mon, Jul 1, 2019 at 11:20 AM Moritz Porst <moritz.po...@gmx.de>
wrote:

Hello Zoran,
thanks for your answer

On 28.06.19 14:26, Zoran Stojsavljevic wrote:

INITRAMFS_IMAGE = "core-image-minimal-initramfs"
INITRAMFS_IMAGE_BUNDLE = "1"

...

You can find the /var/log/dmesg here: https://pastebin.com/ya7iCtq7I

Some hints...

[1] Kernel command line: BOOT_IMAGE=/bzImage
root=PARTUUID=71d1d94a-83e8-4895-98eb-35309f58119f
break=premount quiet rootwait rootwait rootfstype=ext4
console=ttyS0,115200 console=tty0

input: Video Bus as
/devices/LNXSYSTM:00/LNXSYBUS:00/PNP0A08:00/LNXVIDEO:00/input/input7
fbcon: inteldrmfb (fb0) is primary device
Console: switching to colour frame buffer device 128x48
i915 0000:00:02.0: fb0: inteldrmfb frame buffer device
snd_hda_intel 0000:00:1b.0: bound 0000:00:02.0 (ops
i915_audio_component_bind_ops [i915])

Hmmmmm... You are using console and serial, but full i915 GFX
kernel driver is still included in the build???

I started from the core-image-minimal to have a small image and
extended it with the features I need, which is e.g. a graphical
system. The console=[...] part in the kernel command line is
probably a remnant but my image boots into the GUI. Is this a
problem ?


[2] efi: EFI v2.31 by American Megatrends

Using AMI BIOS as boot loader FW... OK?! Am I correct?

My bootloader is currently grub, the EFI is AM.


[3] smpboot: CPU0: Intel(R) Atom(TM) CPU  E3825  @ 1.33GHz
(family: 0x6, model: 0x37, stepping: 0x9)

This is CPUID ID 0x30679, which uses MCU... Which MicroCodeUnit?
M0130679xxx (info from AMI BIOS)?

Sorry but I can't find this info in the EFI


[4] Using INTEL ATOM BYT E3825 dual core (sans Hyper-threading),
implies that you are using
4GB (e820 messages) as single channel (one memory module DDR3 as
4GB)! Am I correct (important)?

2GB, single channel.


[5] Dracut phase?!

To my understanding the initramfs should be embedded in
/boot/bzImage.
However since I use an intel platform I also have a
/boot/microcode.cpio
which gets loaded via "initrd /microcode.cpio". Removing this line in
grub does not enable me to get an initramfs prompt either (again,
using
break as option).

You are obviously stopping in boot phase called dracut. Please,
try to mount by hand
/dev/sda(whatever)... You should use fdisk -l command, or do ls
-al /dev | grep sda to
dig out which partition you need to mount to /tmp dir to see
rootfstype=ext4 (HDD/SSD)

No, the boot does not stop. Even if I do issue "break=premount" I
end up in my graphical interface with the rootfs mounted. This is
the last message in the log:
EXT4-fs (sdb2): re-mounted. Opts: (null)
The rootfs partition is always 2, so either /dev/sda2 or /dev/sdb2
(when booting from stick)

_______

Just thinking loud... .. .

Hope this helps (has very little to do with YOCTO build system,
BTW) . ;-)

Zoran
_______


On Fri, Jun 28, 2019 at 11:22 AM Moritz Porst
<moritz.po...@gmx.de> wrote:

Hello,
I currently try to deploy a single rootfs update mechanism for my
embedded device. I can't boot to initramfs using either "break" or
"break=premount" (without quotes...). I tried this in systemd-boot
and
grub-efi (always efi boot) but the boot process just continues
normally.
If I insert at the same point e.g. "quiet" this argument is
recognised.
I boot the .wic image with a separate boot partition from a USB
stick.
in local.conf I have set:
INITRAMFS_IMAGE = "core-image-minimal-initramfs"
INITRAMFS_IMAGE_BUNDLE = "1"

In order to reduce complexity I now use the standard
core-image-minimal-initramfs without .bbappend. I can confirm (from
seeing the task) that bitbake bundled the kernel with the initramfs.

You can find the /var/log/dmesg here: https://pastebin.com/ya7iCtq7

To my understanding the initramfs should be embedded in
/boot/bzImage.
However since I use an intel platform I also have a
/boot/microcode.cpio
which gets loaded via "initrd /microcode.cpio". Removing this line in
grub does not enable me to get an initramfs prompt either (again,
using
break as option).

Did I forget some configuration or do I have to put the break
statement
at a very specific position within the "linux ..." boot command ?
Do you
know which bitbake variables to check ? (both set in local.conf do
not
get overwritten, already checked this). I got the thud branch checked
out in all my meta-layers except for meta-qt which is currently on
master branch.

Help is much appreciated !

Best regards
Moritz

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