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28 hoursAdd U-Boot x86_64 payloadLeah Rowe
Currently seems to stall when booted from the GRUB payload, but works when booted from the SeaBIOS menu. I also tested it as a standalone payload and it seems to boot. Will test on hardware next, and start adding it to more mainboards. Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-11-05data/coreboot: add missing variableLeah Rowe
payload_uboot_i386 must be defined here, or the build will fail for coreboot targets Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-11-03Experimental U-Boot payload (32-bit dtb, U-Boot)Leah Rowe
NOTE: Support added for xarch target x86_64-elf, but U-Boot failed to build with this error: OBJCOPY lib/efi_loader/helloworld.efi x86_64-elf-objcopy: lib/efi_loader/helloworld_efi.so: invalid bfd target make[2]: *** [scripts/Makefile.lib:476: lib/efi_loader/helloworld.efi] Error 1 Since I'm building U-Boot for x86_64 *on* an x86-64 host, and since that is currently the recommended type of machine to use for lbmk development, and since the other x86 payloads currently don't cross compile anyway, this is an acceptable compromise for now. This is because at present, I'm not making U-Boot the primary payload on x86, instead preferring to chain it from GRUB and SeaBIOS. The target.cfg file for x86 u-boot shows xarch/xtree commented. Uncomment these to compile on crossgcc instead of hostcc. I mention 64-bit because I initially did this first, but decided to do 32-bit first. I'll work on the 64-bit one next (SPL). It's only enabled in QEMU for now. Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-07-22rom.sh: re-add seabios-only roms and grub keymapsLeah Rowe
this time, only handle multiple keymaps on seagrub images. for images where seabios is first but does not immediately load grub, whether grub is still available in flash, just do one image (US Qwerty) this still results in fewer images per target than Libreboot 20240612, but should prevent most users from being annoyed. i got a few people asking repeatedly, and i hadn't documented yet how to add keymap.gkb or how to remove bootorder, to get a different keymap or disable seagrub respectively. i anticipate that i'll get such questions a lot, even if i do document it, so i'm reversing that decision. it doesn't result in much extra code. the new design in lbmk makes this sort of thing much simpler. Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-07-10trees: remove project-specific hacksLeah Rowe
move the coreboot-specific includes into mkhelper.cfg for that project. on some projects, we need variables from mkhelper.cfg to be global, so I was including serprog and coreboot mkhelper.cfg files in this script. instead, set a new variable "mkhelpercfg" pointing to the config file. if it doesn't exist, create and then point to a temporary (empty) mkhelper.cfg file. the rom.sh include has been moved to coreboot mkhelper.cfg The only remaining project-specific logic, in this trees script, is now the coreboot crossgcc handling, but this needs to be there as it's also used to build U-Boot. The way this now works, certain includes are done twice. For example, include/rom.sh will be included once globally, outside of main(), and then again in configure_project(). This means that certain functions will be defined twice. I'm uncertain if shell has anything equivalent to an ifdef guard as in C, but we actually want this here anyway, and it shouldn't cause any problems. It's a bit of a hack, but otherwise results in much cleaner code. Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-07-09trees: support -d (dry run) for custom build logicLeah Rowe
-d does the same as -b, except for actually building anything! in effect, it does the same as -f (fetch) except that the resulting variable assignments will not be recursive (as with -f). if -d is passed, configuration is still loaded, defconfig files are still cycled through, and more importantly: helper functions are still processed. the grub, serprog and coreboot helper functions have been modified to return early (zero status) if -d is passed. this behaviour will be used to integrate vendor.sh logic in with the trees script, for cases where the user wants to only handle vendor files. e.g.: ./update trees -b coreboot x230_12mb this would download the files as usual, build coreboot, with those files, and then build the payloads. but: ./update trees -d coreboot x230_12mb this would download the files, NOT build coreboot, and NOT build the payloads. this change increases the sloccount a bit, but i'm relying on the fact that the vendor.sh script already re-implements config handling wastefully; the plan is to only use trees. for now, simply stub the same ./vendor download command. there is one additional benefit to doing it this way: this method is *per-kconfig* rather than per-target. this way, one kconfig might specify a given vendor file that is not specified in the other. although the stub still simply handles this per target, it's done in premake, which means that the given .config file has been copied. this means that when i properly re-integrate the logic into script/trees, i'll be able to go for it per-kconfig. the utils command has been removed, e.g. ./update trees -b coreboot utils default the equivalent is now: ./update trees -d coreboot default this would technically download vendor files, but here we are specifying a target for which no kconfigs exist; a check is also in place, to avoid running the vendor file download logic if tree==target the overall effect of this change is that the trees script no longer contains any project-specific logic, except for the crossgcc build logic. it does include some config/data mkhelper files at the top, for serprog and coreboot, so that those variables defined in those files can be global, but another solution to mitigate that will also be implemented in a future commit. the purpose of this and other revisions (in the final push to complete lbmk audit 6 / cbmk audit 2) is to generalise as much logic as possible, removing various ugly hacks. Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-07-07rom.sh: new file, to replace script/romsLeah Rowe
stub it from the trees script. the way it works now, there is less code in the build system. ./build roms this is no longer a thing ./build roms serprog this is also no longer a thing. instead, do: ./update trees -b coreboot targetnamehere ./update trees -b pico-serprog ./update trees -b stm32-vserprog the old commands still works, which causes the new commands to run coreboot roms now appear in elf/, not bin/, as before, but those images now contain payloads. NOTE: to contradict the above: ./build roms is no longer a thing, in that it's now deprecated, but backward compatibility is present for now. it will be removed in a future release. ./build roms list also still works! it will do: ./update trees -b coreboot list also: ./update trees -b grub list this is now possible too if a target "list" is provided, for multi-tree sources, the targets are shown. there is another difference: seagrub roms are now seagrub_, instead of seabios_withgrub. seabios-only roms are no longer provided, where grub is also enabled; only seagrub is used. the user can easily remove the bootorder file, if they want seabios to not try grub first. Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-07-06coreboot: set build_depend on target.cfg filesLeah Rowe
set a default one in mkhelper.cfg Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-07-05trees: just do makeargs on coreboot, not cbmakeargLeah Rowe
stick the makeargs in mkhelper i previously did cbmakeargs because the old revisions had to define makeargs per-target otherwise. mkhelper was done specifically to solve that problem. Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-06-06handle build.list from config/data/, not config/Leah Rowe
certain code checks for build.list, to skip it, for example in items() we already use config/data/grub to store grub config data that applied to all trees create these directories too: config/data/coreboot config/data/u-boot config/data/seabios move the respective build.list files in here, and also to config/data/grub now multi-tree projects contain, per directory, just the target.cfg file and the patches directory. this is much cleaner, because some of the logic can be simplified more Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>