DESCRIPTION
altboot is a standalone program which works on top of a NAS product's bootloader. It is capable of loading a
NetBSD kernel from an IDE or SATA disk drive, or via network with NFS or TFTP protocol.
altboot can be stored in flash ROM. Typically you will first copy it from flash into RAM and then invoke it there to boot the
NetBSD kernel.
altboot runs in conjunction with popular U-Boot/PPCBoot bootloaders used by NAS products. With an appropriate boot command line, saved in the environment, altboot can load and start a NetBSD kernel without manual intervention. The original U-Boot/PPCBoot bootloaders remain useful and altboot works as a functional extension of them.
EXAMPLES
altboot occupies less than 128KB in volume and can be stored to any vacant space of the system's flash. It is made to run at RAM address offset 0x0100'0000. U-Boot/PPCboot is instructed to copy the program to RAM in this way:
=> cp.b fffe0000 1000000 20000
Here 0xfffe'0000 is the flash address where altboot is stored while 0x0100'0000 is the RAM address to copy to.
The invocation syntax is:
=> go 1000000 ide:N opt1 opt2 ... bootname
-
ide:N
-
where N is a string of digits, which defines the number of connected drives on each PATA channel. This option is useful to avoid the delays, when altboot is trying to detect a non-existing drive. Examples:
-
ide:10
-
A single master drive on the first channel. Nothing on the second channel.
-
ide:22
-
A master and slave drive on both channels of the first controller.
-
ide:1111
-
A master drive on each channel. The first two digits belong to the first controller, the last two to the second controller.
Unspecified digits will be read as 0. The ide option has only a meaning for PATA disks. Omitting it makes it default to ide:10.
-
optN
-
multi, auto, ask, single, ddb, userconf, norm, quiet, verb, silent, debug
Omitting optN makes altboot default to multi-user mode boot.
N.B., the maximum number of allowed go command arguments varies and depends on the U-Boot/PPCBoot buildtime configuration.
-
bootname
-
One of the following:
nfs:filename
nfs:
tftp:filename
tftp:
wdNp:filename
wdNp:
mem:address
net:
The last one is a synonym for “nfs”.
-
nfs:filename
-
issue a DHCP request to determine the IP address and download filename from the NFS server.
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nfs:
-
target file is determined by filename field of /etc/dhcpd.conf
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tftp:filename
-
issue a DHCP request to determine IP address and download filename from the TFTP server.
-
tftp:
-
target file is determined by filename field of /etc/dhcpd.conf
-
wdNp:filename
-
load the ELF NetBSD kernel filename from an FFSv2 or FFSv1 filesystem. N is a number to distinguish the target drive. p is a partition specifier. When omitted, partition ‘a' is assumed. “wd0a” means partition ‘a' of the first disk drive.
-
wdNp:
-
use filename “netbsd” for booting the ELF NetBSD kernel.
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mem:address
-
boots the ELF NetBSD kernel from any address in memory. The address argument has to be specified as a hexadecimal number and denotes the start address of the ELF image in memory.
U-Boot/PPCBoot provides a way to run a short list of commands right after power-on. The following is a procedure to setup the system for starting NetBSD after a 5 second delay, allowing the user to break into interactive mode. Note that a backslashed ‘;' is necessary to enter the script correctly.
=> setenv bootcmd cp.b fffe0000 1000000 20000\; go 1000000 wd0:
=> setenv bootdelay 5
=> saveenv
When U-Boot/PPCBoot is lacking important commands like cp or go, or is unable to save the enviroment, then there is still the option to replace the Linux kernel module by altboot.img and save it to the same address in flash ROM. In this case you have only two options left to pass arguments:
-
Enter the interactive command line mode, after altboot has started. This requires a serial console.
-
Write a fixed command line into flash, replacing the Linux initrd image. The command line is a normal ASCII file, started by the identifier altboot: and terminated by any control character between 0 and 31. Example:
altboot:silent ide:1111 wd0:netbsd