edgerouter: clarify diskboot instructions

There was some missing details in how to boot from the edgerouter USB
storage. With this update, we have the information required to boot from
either the vfat, or ext3 partition.

[YOCTO #6113]

(From meta-yocto rev: ed2eba333d13cc544648169d06bc47c7e2bbb3f2)

Signed-off-by: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
This commit is contained in:
Bruce Ashfield 2014-04-09 15:41:32 -04:00 committed by Richard Purdie
parent 046a9ea303
commit 1f42d829fe
1 changed files with 85 additions and 14 deletions

View File

@ -291,13 +291,85 @@ Load the kernel, and boot the system as follows:
--- Booting from USB root ---
NOTE: Since the USB disk is inside the edgerouter box, it's inconvenient to
plug and unplug the USB disk. So in the following instructions it is
assumed that you have already booted the device from NFS. Additionally,
since vmlinux is not contained in core-image-xxx by default, it is
necessary to copy it to the USB disk separately.
To boot from the USB disk, you either need to remove it from the edgerouter
box and populate it from another computer, or use a previously booted NFS
image and populate from the edgerouter itself.
Type 1: Mounted USB disk
------------------------
To boot from the USB disk there are two available partitions on the factory
USB storage. The rest of this guide assumes that these partitions are left
intact. If you change the partition scheme, you must update your boot method
appropriately.
The standard partitions are:
- 1: vfat partition containing factory kernels
- 2: ext3 partition for the root filesystem.
You can place the kernel on either partition 1, or partition 2, but the roofs
must go on partition 2 (due to its size).
Note: If you place the kernel on the ext3 partition, you must re-create the
ext3 filesystem, since the factory u-boot can only handle 128 byte inodes and
cannot read the partition otherwise.
Steps:
1. Remove the USB disk from the edgerouter and insert it into a computer
that has access to your build artifacts.
2. Copy the kernel image to the USB storage (assuming discovered as 'sdb' on
the development machine):
2a) if booting from vfat
# mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt
# cp tmp/deploy/images/edgerouter/vmlinux /mnt
# umount /mnt
2b) if booting from ext3
# mkfs.ext3 -I 128 /dev/sdb2
# mount /dev/sdb2 /mnt
# mkdir /mnt/boot
# cp tmp/deploy/images/edgerouter/vmlinux /mnt/boot
# umount /mnt
3. Extract the rootfs to the USB storage ext3 partition
# mount /dev/sdb2 /mnt
# tar -xvjpf core-image-minimal-XXX.tar.bz2 -C /mnt
# umount /mnt
4. Reboot the board and press a key on the terminal when prompted to get to the U-Boot
command line:
5. Load the kernel and boot:
5a) vfat boot
=> fatload usb 0:1 $loadaddr vmlinux
5b) ext3 boot
=> ext2load usb 0:2 $loadaddr boot/vmlinux
=> bootoctlinux $loadaddr coremask=0x3 root=/dev/sda2 rw rootwait mtdparts=phys_mapped_flash:512k(boot0),512k(boot1),64k@3072k(eeprom)
Type 2: NFS
-----------
Note: If you place the kernel on the ext3 partition, you must re-create the
ext3 filesystem, since the factory u-boot can only handle 128 byte inodes and
cannot read the partition otherwise.
These boot instructions assume that you have recreated the ext3 filesystem with
128 byte inodes, you have an updated uboot or you are running and image capable
of making the filesystem on the board itself.
Load the kernel, and boot the system as follows:
1. Boot from NFS root
@ -309,11 +381,11 @@ Load the kernel, and boot the system as follows:
and then,
# mount /dev/sda2 /media/sda2
# tar -xvjpf core-image-minimal-XXX.tar.bz2 -C /media/sda2
# cp vmlinux /media/sda2/boot/vmlinux
# umount /media/sda2
# reboot
# mount /dev/sda2 /media/sda2
# tar -xvjpf core-image-minimal-XXX.tar.bz2 -C /media/sda2
# cp vmlinux /media/sda2/boot/vmlinux
# umount /media/sda2
# reboot
3. Reboot the board and press a key on the terminal when prompted to get to the U-Boot
command line:
@ -322,6 +394,5 @@ Load the kernel, and boot the system as follows:
4. Load the kernel and boot:
=> ext2load usb 0:2 $loadaddr boot/vmlinux
=> bootoctlinux $loadaddr coremask=0x3 root=/dev/sda2 rw rootwait mtdparts=phys_mapped_flash:512k(boot0),512k(boot1),64k@3072k(eeprom)
=> ext2load usb 0:2 $loadaddr boot/vmlinux
=> bootoctlinux $loadaddr coremask=0x3 root=/dev/sda2 rw rootwait mtdparts=phys_mapped_flash:512k(boot0),512k(boot1),64k@3072k(eeprom)