kumquat-buildroot/board/qemu/arm-ebbr/readme.txt
Vincent Stehlé 73813c56c8 configs/qemu_{arm, aarch64}_ebbr: bump Linux, U-Boot and TF-A
Bump qemu_arm_ebbr_defconfig and qemu_aarch64_ebbr_defconfig in sync:

- Bump Linux to v6.6.11
- Bump U-Boot to 2024.01
- Bump TF-A to v2.10

While at it, adapt Qemu command line arguments to avoid a warning when
disabling ACPI.

Signed-off-by: Vincent Stehlé <vincent.stehle@arm.com>
Cc: Romain Naour <romain.naour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
2024-02-06 11:39:46 +01:00

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Introduction
============
The qemu_arm_ebbr_defconfig is meant to illustrate some aspects of the Arm
EBBR specification[1] and the Arm SystemReady IR[2] compliance program.
It allows building a 32b ARMv7-A U-Boot based firmware implementing the subset
of UEFI defined by EBBR, as well as a Linux OS disk image booting with UEFI, to
run on Qemu.
Building
========
$ make qemu_arm_ebbr_defconfig
$ make
Generated files under output/images:
* flash.bin: A firmware image comprising TF-A, OP-TEE and the U-Boot bootloader.
* disk.img: An OS disk image comprising the GRUB bootloader, the Linux kernel
and the root filesystem.
Running under Qemu
==================
Run the emulation with:
qemu-system-arm \
-M virt,secure=on,acpi=off \
-bios output/images/flash.bin \
-cpu cortex-a15 \
-device virtio-blk-device,drive=hd0 \
-device virtio-net-device,netdev=eth0 \
-device virtio-rng-device,rng=rng0 \
-drive file=output/images/disk.img,if=none,format=raw,id=hd0 \
-m 1024 \
-netdev user,id=eth0 \
-nographic \
-object rng-random,filename=/dev/urandom,id=rng0 \
-rtc base=utc,clock=host \
-smp 2 # qemu_arm_ebbr_defconfig
The login prompt will appear in the terminal that started Qemu.
Using the EBBR firmware to run another OS under Qemu
----------------------------------------------------
It is possible to use the generated firmware binary to run another OS
supporting the EBBR specification.
To run another OS on emulation using a live or pre-installed image, use the same
Qemu command line as for the generated OS but adapt the OS image path in the
-drive stanza.
The 32b Arm ACS-IR image[3] is an example of a pre-installed OS image.
Linux distributions such as Debian or openSUSE provide a pre-installed OS
image.
Miscellaneous
=============
This configuration is inspired by the qemu_arm_vexpress_tz_defconfig, the
qemu_aarch64_ebbr_defconfig and the Arm SystemReady IR IoT Integration, Test,
and Certification Guide[4].
Firmware update is currently not supported.
[1]: https://github.com/ARM-software/ebbr
[2]: https://developer.arm.com/Architectures/Arm%20SystemReady%20IR
[3]: https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-systemready/tree/main/IR/prebuilt_images
[4]: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/DUI1101/latest/