Hello Simon, On 02.12.23 04:54, Simon Glass wrote: > Add a script which produces a Flat Image Tree (FIT), a single file > containing the built kernel and associated devicetree files. > Compression defaults to gzip which gives a good balance of size and > performance. > > The files compress from about 86MB to 24MB using this approach. > > The FIT can be used by bootloaders which support it, such as U-Boot > and Linuxboot. It permits automatic selection of the correct > devicetree, matching the compatible string of the running board with > the closest compatible string in the FIT. There is no need for > filenames or other workarounds. > > Add a 'make image.fit' build target for arm64, as well. Use > FIT_COMPRESSION to select a different algorithm. > > The FIT can be examined using 'dumpimage -l'. > > This features requires pylibfdt (use 'pip install libfdt'). It also > requires compression utilities for the algorithm being used. Supported > compression options are the same as the Image.xxx files. For now there > is no way to change the compression other than by editing the rule for > $(obj)/image.fit > > While FIT supports a ramdisk / initrd, no attempt is made to support > this here, since it must be built separately from the Linux build. > > Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@xxxxxxxxxxxx> kernel_noload support is now in barebox next branch and I tested this series against it: Tested-by: Ahmad Fatoum <a.fatoum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> # barebox > +"""Build a FIT containing a lot of devicetree files > + > +Usage: > + make_fit.py -A arm64 -n 'Linux-6.6' -O linux > + -f arch/arm64/boot/image.fit -k /tmp/kern/arch/arm64/boot/image.itk > + /tmp/kern/arch/arm64/boot/dts/ -E -c gzip > + > +Creates a FIT containing the supplied kernel and a directory containing the > +devicetree files. > + > +Use -E to generate an external FIT (where the data is placed after the > +FIT data structure). This allows parsing of the data without loading > +the entire FIT. > + > +Use -c to compress the data, using bzip2, gzip, lz4, lzma, lzo and > +zstd algorithms. > + > +The resulting FIT can be booted by bootloaders which support FIT, such > +as U-Boot, Linuxboot, Tianocore, etc. Feel free to add barebox to the list. Did you check whether Linuxboot and Tianocore support kernel_noload? > + fsw.property_u32('load', 0) > + fsw.property_u32('entry', 0) I still think load and entry dummy values are confusing and should be dropped. > + with fsw.add_node(f'fdt-{seq}'): > + # Get the compatible / model information > + with open(fname, 'rb') as inf: > + data = inf.read() > + fdt = libfdt.FdtRo(data) > + model = fdt.getprop(0, 'model').as_str() > + compat = fdt.getprop(0, 'compatible') > + > + fsw.property_string('description', model) > + fsw.property_string('type', 'flat_dt') > + fsw.property_string('arch', arch) > + fsw.property_string('compression', compress) > + fsw.property('compatible', bytes(compat)) > + > + with open(fname, 'rb') as inf: > + compressed = compress_data(inf, compress) > + fsw.property('data', compressed) > + return model, compat After Doug's elaboration, extracting multiple compatibles is fine by me. Cheers, Ahmad -- Pengutronix e.K. | | Steuerwalder Str. 21 | http://www.pengutronix.de/ | 31137 Hildesheim, Germany | Phone: +49-5121-206917-0 | Amtsgericht Hildesheim, HRA 2686 | Fax: +49-5121-206917-5555 |