cros: Add information about booting Chrome OS on x86

Recent versions of Chrome OS do not have a kernel in the root disk, to
save space.

With the improvements to the 'zboot' command it is fairly easy to load
the kernel from the raw partition. Add instructions on how to do this.

Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Wolfgang Wallner <wolfgang.wallner@br-automation.com>
Reviewed-by: Bin Meng <bmeng.cn@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Simon Glass 2020-09-05 14:50:53 -06:00 committed by Bin Meng
parent dc8e7a91f4
commit d9778ff0d3

View File

@ -27,6 +27,9 @@ available:
since many of them only support coreboot as the bootloader and have
no bare-metal support in U-Boot. For this, use the 'coreboot' target.
- Running U-Boot and booting into a Chrome OS image, but without verified
boot. This can be useful for testing.
U-Boot with Chromium OS verified boot
-------------------------------------
@ -175,6 +178,35 @@ course the above sandbox feature provides a sort of functional test and can
detect problems that affect the flow or particular vboot features.
U-Boot without Chromium OS verified boot
----------------------------------------
The following script can be used to boot a Chrome OS image on coral:
# Read the image header and obtain the address of the kernel
# The offset 4f0 is defined by verified boot and may change for other
# Chromebooks
read mmc 2:2 100000 0 80; setexpr loader *001004f0;
# Get the kernel size and calculate the number of blocks (0x200 bytes each)
setexpr size *00100518; setexpr blocks $size / 200;
# Read the full kernel and calculate the address of the setup block
read mmc 2:2 100000 80 $blocks; setexpr setup $loader - 1000;
# Locate the command line
setexpr cmdline $loader - 2000;
# Start the zboot process with the loaded kernel, setup block and cmdline
zboot start 100000 0 0 0 $setup $cmdline;
# Load the kernel, fix up the 'setup' block, dump information
zboot load; zboot setup; zboot dump
# Boot into Chrome OS
zboot go
TO DO
-----