xref: /openbmc/qemu/docs/system/riscv/sifive_u.rst (revision d0f0cd5b)
1SiFive HiFive Unleashed (``sifive_u``)
2======================================
3
4SiFive HiFive Unleashed Development Board is the ultimate RISC-V development
5board featuring the Freedom U540 multi-core RISC-V processor.
6
7Supported devices
8-----------------
9
10The ``sifive_u`` machine supports the following devices:
11
12* 1 E51 / E31 core
13* Up to 4 U54 / U34 cores
14* Core Local Interruptor (CLINT)
15* Platform-Level Interrupt Controller (PLIC)
16* Power, Reset, Clock, Interrupt (PRCI)
17* L2 Loosely Integrated Memory (L2-LIM)
18* DDR memory controller
19* 2 UARTs
20* 1 GEM Ethernet controller
21* 1 GPIO controller
22* 1 One-Time Programmable (OTP) memory with stored serial number
23* 1 DMA controller
24* 2 QSPI controllers
25* 1 ISSI 25WP256 flash
26* 1 SD card in SPI mode
27* PWM0 and PWM1
28
29Please note the real world HiFive Unleashed board has a fixed configuration of
301 E51 core and 4 U54 core combination and the RISC-V core boots in 64-bit mode.
31With QEMU, one can create a machine with 1 E51 core and up to 4 U54 cores. It
32is also possible to create a 32-bit variant with the same peripherals except
33that the RISC-V cores are replaced by the 32-bit ones (E31 and U34), to help
34testing of 32-bit guest software.
35
36Hardware configuration information
37----------------------------------
38
39The ``sifive_u`` machine automatically generates a device tree blob ("dtb")
40which it passes to the guest, if there is no ``-dtb`` option. This provides
41information about the addresses, interrupt lines and other configuration of
42the various devices in the system. Guest software should discover the devices
43that are present in the generated DTB instead of using a DTB for the real
44hardware, as some of the devices are not modeled by QEMU and trying to access
45these devices may cause unexpected behavior.
46
47If users want to provide their own DTB, they can use the ``-dtb`` option.
48These DTBs should have the following requirements:
49
50* The /cpus node should contain at least one subnode for E51 and the number
51  of subnodes should match QEMU's ``-smp`` option
52* The /memory reg size should match QEMU’s selected ram_size via ``-m``
53* Should contain a node for the CLINT device with a compatible string
54  "riscv,clint0" if using with OpenSBI BIOS images
55
56Boot options
57------------
58
59The ``sifive_u`` machine can start using the standard -kernel functionality
60for loading a Linux kernel, a VxWorks kernel, a modified U-Boot bootloader
61(S-mode) or ELF executable with the default OpenSBI firmware image as the
62-bios. It also supports booting the unmodified U-Boot bootloader using the
63standard -bios functionality.
64
65Machine-specific options
66------------------------
67
68The following machine-specific options are supported:
69
70- serial=nnn
71
72  The board serial number. When not given, the default serial number 1 is used.
73
74  SiFive reserves the first 1 KiB of the 16 KiB OTP memory for internal use.
75  The current usage is only used to store the serial number of the board at
76  offset 0xfc. U-Boot reads the serial number from the OTP memory, and uses
77  it to generate a unique MAC address to be programmed to the on-chip GEM
78  Ethernet controller. When multiple QEMU ``sifive_u`` machines are created
79  and connected to the same subnet, they all have the same MAC address hence
80  it creates an unusable network. In such scenario, user should give different
81  values to serial= when creating different ``sifive_u`` machines.
82
83- start-in-flash
84
85  When given, QEMU's ROM codes jump to QSPI memory-mapped flash directly.
86  Otherwise QEMU will jump to DRAM or L2LIM depending on the msel= value.
87  When not given, it defaults to direct DRAM booting.
88
89- msel=[6|11]
90
91  Mode Select (MSEL[3:0]) pins value, used to control where to boot from.
92
93  The FU540 SoC supports booting from several sources, which are controlled
94  using the Mode Select pins on the chip. Typically, the boot process runs
95  through several stages before it begins execution of user-provided programs.
96  These stages typically include the following:
97
98  1. Zeroth Stage Boot Loader (ZSBL), which is contained in an on-chip mask
99     ROM and provided by QEMU. Note QEMU implemented ROM codes are not the
100     same as what is programmed in the hardware. The QEMU one is a simplified
101     version, but it provides the same functionality as the hardware.
102  2. First Stage Boot Loader (FSBL), which brings up PLLs and DDR memory.
103     This is U-Boot SPL.
104  3. Second Stage Boot Loader (SSBL), which further initializes additional
105     peripherals as needed. This is U-Boot proper combined with an OpenSBI
106     fw_dynamic firmware image.
107
108  msel=6 means FSBL and SSBL are both on the QSPI flash. msel=11 means FSBL
109  and SSBL are both on the SD card.
110
111Running Linux kernel
112--------------------
113
114Linux mainline v5.10 release is tested at the time of writing. To build a
115Linux mainline kernel that can be booted by the ``sifive_u`` machine in
11664-bit mode, simply configure the kernel using the defconfig configuration:
117
118.. code-block:: bash
119
120  $ export ARCH=riscv
121  $ export CROSS_COMPILE=riscv64-linux-
122  $ make defconfig
123  $ make
124
125To boot the newly built Linux kernel in QEMU with the ``sifive_u`` machine:
126
127.. code-block:: bash
128
129  $ qemu-system-riscv64 -M sifive_u -smp 5 -m 2G \
130      -display none -serial stdio \
131      -kernel arch/riscv/boot/Image \
132      -initrd /path/to/rootfs.ext4 \
133      -append "root=/dev/ram"
134
135Alternatively, we can use a custom DTB to boot the machine by inserting a CLINT
136node in fu540-c000.dtsi in the Linux kernel,
137
138.. code-block:: none
139
140    clint: clint@2000000 {
141        compatible = "riscv,clint0";
142        interrupts-extended = <&cpu0_intc 3 &cpu0_intc 7
143                               &cpu1_intc 3 &cpu1_intc 7
144                               &cpu2_intc 3 &cpu2_intc 7
145                               &cpu3_intc 3 &cpu3_intc 7
146                               &cpu4_intc 3 &cpu4_intc 7>;
147        reg = <0x00 0x2000000 0x00 0x10000>;
148    };
149
150with the following command line options:
151
152.. code-block:: bash
153
154  $ qemu-system-riscv64 -M sifive_u -smp 5 -m 8G \
155      -display none -serial stdio \
156      -kernel arch/riscv/boot/Image \
157      -dtb arch/riscv/boot/dts/sifive/hifive-unleashed-a00.dtb \
158      -initrd /path/to/rootfs.ext4 \
159      -append "root=/dev/ram"
160
161To build a Linux mainline kernel that can be booted by the ``sifive_u`` machine
162in 32-bit mode, use the rv32_defconfig configuration. A patch is required to
163fix the 32-bit boot issue for Linux kernel v5.10.
164
165.. code-block:: bash
166
167  $ export ARCH=riscv
168  $ export CROSS_COMPILE=riscv64-linux-
169  $ curl https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/linux-riscv/patch/20201219001356.2887782-1-atish.patra@wdc.com/mbox/ > riscv.patch
170  $ git am riscv.patch
171  $ make rv32_defconfig
172  $ make
173
174Replace ``qemu-system-riscv64`` with ``qemu-system-riscv32`` in the command
175line above to boot the 32-bit Linux kernel. A rootfs image containing 32-bit
176applications shall be used in order for kernel to boot to user space.
177
178Running VxWorks kernel
179----------------------
180
181VxWorks 7 SR0650 release is tested at the time of writing. To build a 64-bit
182VxWorks mainline kernel that can be booted by the ``sifive_u`` machine, simply
183create a VxWorks source build project based on the sifive_generic BSP, and a
184VxWorks image project to generate the bootable VxWorks image, by following the
185BSP documentation instructions.
186
187A pre-built 64-bit VxWorks 7 image for HiFive Unleashed board is available as
188part of the VxWorks SDK for testing as well. Instructions to download the SDK:
189
190.. code-block:: bash
191
192  $ wget https://labs.windriver.com/downloads/wrsdk-vxworks7-sifive-hifive-1.01.tar.bz2
193  $ tar xvf wrsdk-vxworks7-sifive-hifive-1.01.tar.bz2
194  $ ls bsps/sifive_generic_1_0_0_0/uboot/uVxWorks
195
196To boot the VxWorks kernel in QEMU with the ``sifive_u`` machine, use:
197
198.. code-block:: bash
199
200  $ qemu-system-riscv64 -M sifive_u -smp 5 -m 2G \
201      -display none -serial stdio \
202      -nic tap,ifname=tap0,script=no,downscript=no \
203      -kernel /path/to/vxWorks \
204      -append "gem(0,0)host:vxWorks h=192.168.200.1 e=192.168.200.2:ffffff00 u=target pw=vxTarget f=0x01"
205
206It is also possible to test 32-bit VxWorks on the ``sifive_u`` machine. Create
207a 32-bit project to build the 32-bit VxWorks image, and use exact the same
208command line options with ``qemu-system-riscv32``.
209
210Running U-Boot
211--------------
212
213U-Boot mainline v2024.01 release is tested at the time of writing. To build a
214U-Boot mainline bootloader that can be booted by the ``sifive_u`` machine, use
215the sifive_unleashed_defconfig with similar commands as described above for
216Linux:
217
218.. code-block:: bash
219
220  $ export CROSS_COMPILE=riscv64-linux-
221  $ export OPENSBI=/path/to/opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_dynamic.bin
222  $ make sifive_unleashed_defconfig
223
224You will get spl/u-boot-spl.bin and u-boot.itb file in the build tree.
225
226To start U-Boot using the ``sifive_u`` machine, prepare an SPI flash image, or
227SD card image that is properly partitioned and populated with correct contents.
228genimage_ can be used to generate these images.
229
230A sample configuration file for a 128 MiB SD card image is:
231
232.. code-block:: bash
233
234  $ cat genimage_sdcard.cfg
235  image sdcard.img {
236          size = 128M
237
238          hdimage {
239                  gpt = true
240          }
241
242          partition u-boot-spl {
243                  image = "u-boot-spl.bin"
244                  offset = 17K
245                  partition-type-uuid = 5B193300-FC78-40CD-8002-E86C45580B47
246          }
247
248          partition u-boot {
249                  image = "u-boot.itb"
250                  offset = 1041K
251                  partition-type-uuid = 2E54B353-1271-4842-806F-E436D6AF6985
252          }
253  }
254
255SPI flash image has slightly different partition offsets, and the size has to
256be 32 MiB to match the ISSI 25WP256 flash on the real board:
257
258.. code-block:: bash
259
260  $ cat genimage_spi-nor.cfg
261  image spi-nor.img {
262          size = 32M
263
264          hdimage {
265                  gpt = true
266          }
267
268          partition u-boot-spl {
269                  image = "u-boot-spl.bin"
270                  offset = 20K
271                  partition-type-uuid = 5B193300-FC78-40CD-8002-E86C45580B47
272          }
273
274          partition u-boot {
275                  image = "u-boot.itb"
276                  offset = 1044K
277                  partition-type-uuid = 2E54B353-1271-4842-806F-E436D6AF6985
278          }
279  }
280
281Assume U-Boot binaries are put in the same directory as the config file,
282we can generate the image by:
283
284.. code-block:: bash
285
286  $ genimage --config genimage_<boot_src>.cfg --inputpath .
287
288Boot U-Boot from SD card, by specifying msel=11 and pass the SD card image
289to QEMU ``sifive_u`` machine:
290
291.. code-block:: bash
292
293  $ qemu-system-riscv64 -M sifive_u,msel=11 -smp 5 -m 8G \
294      -display none -serial stdio \
295      -bios /path/to/u-boot-spl.bin \
296      -drive file=/path/to/sdcard.img,if=sd
297
298Changing msel= value to 6, allows booting U-Boot from the SPI flash:
299
300.. code-block:: bash
301
302  $ qemu-system-riscv64 -M sifive_u,msel=6 -smp 5 -m 8G \
303      -display none -serial stdio \
304      -bios /path/to/u-boot-spl.bin \
305      -drive file=/path/to/spi-nor.img,if=mtd
306
307Note when testing U-Boot, QEMU automatically generated device tree blob is
308not used because U-Boot itself embeds device tree blobs for U-Boot SPL and
309U-Boot proper. Hence the number of cores and size of memory have to match
310the real hardware, ie: 5 cores (-smp 5) and 8 GiB memory (-m 8G).
311
312Above use case is to run upstream U-Boot for the SiFive HiFive Unleashed
313board on QEMU ``sifive_u`` machine out of the box. This allows users to
314develop and test the recommended RISC-V boot flow with a real world use
315case: ZSBL (in QEMU) loads U-Boot SPL from SD card or SPI flash to L2LIM,
316then U-Boot SPL loads the combined payload image of OpenSBI fw_dynamic
317firmware and U-Boot proper.
318
319However sometimes we want to have a quick test of booting U-Boot on QEMU
320without the needs of preparing the SPI flash or SD card images, an alternate
321way can be used, which is to create a U-Boot S-mode image by modifying the
322configuration of U-Boot:
323
324.. code-block:: bash
325
326  $ export CROSS_COMPILE=riscv64-linux-
327  $ make sifive_unleashed_defconfig
328  $ ./scripts/config --enable OF_BOARD
329  $ ./scripts/config --disable BINMAN_FDT
330  $ ./scripts/config --disable SPL
331  $ make olddefconfig
332
333This changes U-Boot to use the QEMU generated device tree blob, and bypass
334running the U-Boot SPL stage.
335
336Boot the 64-bit U-Boot S-mode image directly:
337
338.. code-block:: bash
339
340  $ qemu-system-riscv64 -M sifive_u -smp 5 -m 2G \
341      -display none -serial stdio \
342      -kernel /path/to/u-boot.bin
343
344It's possible to create a 32-bit U-Boot S-mode image as well.
345
346.. code-block:: bash
347
348  $ export CROSS_COMPILE=riscv64-linux-
349  $ make sifive_unleashed_defconfig
350  $ ./scripts/config --disable ARCH_RV64I
351  $ ./scripts/config --enable ARCH_RV32I
352  $ ./scripts/config --set-val TEXT_BASE 0x80400000
353  $ ./scripts/config --enable OF_BOARD
354  $ ./scripts/config --disable BINMAN_FDT
355  $ ./scripts/config --disable SPL
356  $ make olddefconfig
357
358Use the same command line options to boot the 32-bit U-Boot S-mode image:
359
360.. code-block:: bash
361
362  $ qemu-system-riscv32 -M sifive_u -smp 5 -m 2G \
363      -display none -serial stdio \
364      -kernel /path/to/u-boot.bin
365
366.. _genimage: https://github.com/pengutronix/genimage
367