On Mon, Jun 10, 2024 at 11:16 PM Simon Glass <sjg@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi Chen-Yu, > > On Wed, 5 Jun 2024 at 03:48, Chen-Yu Tsai <wenst@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > The kernel tree builds some "composite" DTBs, where the final DTB is the > > result of applying one or more DTB overlays on top of a base DTB with > > fdtoverlay. > > > > The FIT image specification already supports configurations having one > > base DTB and overlays applied on top. It is then up to the bootloader to > > apply said overlays and either use or pass on the final result. This > > allows the FIT image builder to reuse the same FDT images for multiple > > configurations, if such cases exist. > > > > The decomposition function depends on the kernel build system, reading > > back the .cmd files for the to-be-packaged DTB files to check for the > > fdtoverlay command being called. This will not work outside the kernel > > tree. The function is off by default to keep compatibility with possible > > existing users. > > > > To facilitate the decomposition and keep the code clean, the model and > > compatitble string extraction have been moved out of the output_dtb > > function. The FDT image description is replaced with the base file name > > of the included image. > > > > Signed-off-by: Chen-Yu Tsai <wenst@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > --- > > This is a feature I alluded to in my replies to Simon's original > > submission of the make_fit.py script [1]. > > > > This is again made a runtime argument as not all firmware out there > > that boot FIT images support applying overlays. Like my previous > > submission for disabling compression for included FDT images, the > > bootloader found in RK3399 and MT8173 Chromebooks do not support > > applying overlays. Another case of this is U-boot shipped by development > > board vendors in binary form (without upstream) in an image or in > > SPI flash on the board that were built with OF_LIBFDT_OVERLAY=n. > > These would fail to boot FIT images with DT overlays. One such > > example is my Hummingboard Pulse. In these cases the firmware is > > either not upgradable or very hard to upgrade. > > > > I believe there is value in supporting these cases. A common script > > shipped with the kernel source that can be shared by distros means > > the distro people don't have to reimplement this in their downstream > > repos or meta-packages. For ChromeOS this means reducing the amount > > of package code we have in shell script. > > > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-kbuild/20231207142723.GA3187877@xxxxxxxxxx/ > > [2] > > > > scripts/Makefile.lib | 1 + > > scripts/make_fit.py | 70 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-------------- > > 2 files changed, 49 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) > > This is a clever way to discover the included files. Does it need to > rely on the Linux build information, or could this information somehow > be in the .dtb files? I had expected some sort of overlay scheme in (+CC DT folks and mailing list) I suppose we could make the `fdtoverlay` program embed this data during the kernel build. That would keep the information together, while also having one source of truth (the kernel Makefiles). Whether it belongs in the DTB or not is a separate matter. > the source, but perhaps people have given up on that? I wouldn't say given up, since we haven't agreed on anything either. Elliot had some concerns when I brought this up earlier [1] though. ChenYu [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mediatek/20240314113908471-0700.eberman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/