xref: /openbmc/u-boot/doc/README.POST (revision 5794619e)
1Power-On-Self-Test support in U-Boot
2------------------------------------
3
4This project is to support Power-On-Self-Test (POST) in U-Boot.
5
61. High-level requirements
7
8The key requirements for this project are as follows:
9
101) The project shall develop a flexible framework for implementing
11   and running Power-On-Self-Test in U-Boot. This framework shall
12   possess the following features:
13
14   o) Extensibility
15
16      The framework shall allow adding/removing/replacing POST tests.
17      Also, standalone POST tests shall be supported.
18
19   o) Configurability
20
21      The framework shall allow run-time configuration of the lists
22      of tests running on normal/power-fail booting.
23
24   o) Controllability
25
26      The framework shall support manual running of the POST tests.
27
282) The results of tests shall be saved so that it will be possible to
29   retrieve them from Linux.
30
313) The following POST tests shall be developed for MPC823E-based
32   boards:
33
34   o) CPU test
35   o) Cache test
36   o) Memory test
37   o) Ethernet test
38   o) Serial channels test
39   o) Watchdog timer test
40   o) RTC test
41   o) I2C test
42   o) SPI test
43   o) USB test
44
454) The LWMON board shall be used for reference.
46
472. Design
48
49This section details the key points of the design for the project.
50The whole project can be divided into two independent tasks:
51enhancing U-Boot/Linux to provide a common framework for running POST
52tests and developing such tests for particular hardware.
53
542.1. Hardware-independent POST layer
55
56A new optional module will be added to U-Boot, which will run POST
57tests and collect their results at boot time. Also, U-Boot will
58support running POST tests manually at any time by executing a
59special command from the system console.
60
61The list of available POST tests will be configured at U-Boot build
62time. The POST layer will allow the developer to add any custom POST
63tests. All POST tests will be divided into the following groups:
64
65  1) Tests running on power-on booting only
66
67     This group will contain those tests that run only once on
68     power-on reset (e.g. watchdog test)
69
70  2) Tests running on normal booting only
71
72     This group will contain those tests that do not take much
73     time and can be run on the regular basis (e.g. CPU test)
74
75  3) Tests running in special "slow test mode" only
76
77     This group will contain POST tests that consume much time
78     and cannot be run regularly (e.g. strong memory test, I2C test)
79
80  4) Manually executed tests
81
82     This group will contain those tests that can be run manually.
83
84If necessary, some tests may belong to several groups simultaneously.
85For example, SDRAM test may run in both normal and "slow test" mode.
86In normal mode, SDRAM test may perform a fast superficial memory test
87only, while running in slow test mode it may perform a full memory
88check-up.
89
90Also, all tests will be discriminated by the moment they run at.
91Specifically, the following groups will be singled out:
92
93  1) Tests running before relocating to RAM
94
95     These tests will run immediately after initializing RAM
96     as to enable modifying it without taking care of its
97     contents. Basically, this group will contain memory tests
98     only.
99
100  2) Tests running after relocating to RAM
101
102     These tests will run immediately before entering the main
103     loop as to guarantee full hardware initialization.
104
105The POST layer will also distinguish a special group of tests that
106may cause system rebooting (e.g. watchdog test). For such tests, the
107layer will automatically detect rebooting and will notify the test
108about it.
109
1102.1.1. POST layer interfaces
111
112This section details the interfaces between the POST layer and the
113rest of U-Boot.
114
115The following flags will be defined:
116
117#define POST_POWERON		0x01	/* test runs on power-on booting */
118#define POST_NORMAL		0x02	/* test runs on normal booting */
119#define POST_SLOWTEST		0x04	/* test is slow, enabled by key press */
120#define POST_POWERTEST		0x08	/* test runs after watchdog reset */
121#define POST_ROM		0x100	/* test runs in ROM */
122#define POST_RAM		0x200	/* test runs in RAM */
123#define POST_MANUAL		0x400	/* test can be executed manually */
124#define POST_REBOOT		0x800	/* test may cause rebooting */
125#define POST_PREREL             0x1000  /* test runs before relocation */
126
127The POST layer will export the following interface routines:
128
129  o) int post_run(bd_t *bd, char *name, int flags);
130
131     This routine will run the test (or the group of tests) specified
132     by the name and flag arguments. More specifically, if the name
133     argument is not NULL, the test with this name will be performed,
134     otherwise all tests running in ROM/RAM (depending on the flag
135     argument) will be executed. This routine will be called at least
136     twice with name set to NULL, once from board_init_f() and once
137     from board_init_r(). The flags argument will also specify the
138     mode the test is executed in (power-on, normal, power-fail,
139     manual).
140
141  o) void post_reloc(ulong offset);
142
143     This routine will be called from board_init_r() and will
144     relocate the POST test table.
145
146  o) int post_info(char *name);
147
148     This routine will print the list of all POST tests that can be
149     executed manually if name is NULL, and the description of a
150     particular test if name is not NULL.
151
152  o) int post_log(char *format, ...);
153
154     This routine will be called from POST tests to log their
155     results. Basically, this routine will print the results to
156     stderr. The format of the arguments and the return value
157     will be identical to the printf() routine.
158
159Also, the following board-specific routines will be called from the
160U-Boot common code:
161
162  o) int board_power_mode(void)
163
164     This routine will return the mode the system is running in
165     (POST_POWERON, POST_NORMAL or POST_SHUTDOWN).
166
167  o) void board_poweroff(void)
168
169     This routine will turn off the power supply of the board. It
170     will be called on power-fail booting after running all POST
171     tests.
172
173  o) int post_hotkeys_pressed(gd_t *gd)
174
175     This routine will scan the keyboard to detect if a magic key
176     combination has been pressed, or otherwise detect if the
177     power-on long-running tests shall be executed or not ("normal"
178     versus "slow" test mode).
179
180The list of available POST tests be kept in the post_tests array
181filled at U-Boot build time. The format of entry in this array will
182be as follows:
183
184struct post_test {
185    char *name;
186    char *cmd;
187    char *desc;
188    int flags;
189    int (*test)(bd_t *bd, int flags);
190};
191
192  o) name
193
194     This field will contain a short name of the test, which will be
195     used in logs and on listing POST tests (e.g. CPU test).
196
197  o) cmd
198
199     This field will keep a name for identifying the test on manual
200     testing (e.g. cpu). For more information, refer to section
201     "Command line interface".
202
203  o) desc
204
205     This field will contain a detailed description of the test,
206     which will be printed on user request. For more information, see
207     section "Command line interface".
208
209  o) flags
210
211     This field will contain a combination of the bit flags described
212     above, which will specify the mode the test is running in
213     (power-on, normal, power-fail or manual mode), the moment it
214     should be run at (before or after relocating to RAM), whether it
215     can cause system rebooting or not.
216
217  o) test
218
219     This field will contain a pointer to the routine that will
220     perform the test, which will take 2 arguments. The first
221     argument will be a pointer to the board info structure, while
222     the second will be a combination of bit flags specifying the
223     mode the test is running in (POST_POWERON, POST_NORMAL,
224     POST_SLOWTEST, POST_MANUAL) and whether the last execution of
225     the test caused system rebooting (POST_REBOOT). The routine will
226     return 0 on successful execution of the test, and 1 if the test
227     failed.
228
229The lists of the POST tests that should be run at power-on/normal/
230power-fail booting will be kept in the environment. Namely, the
231following environment variables will be used: post_poweron,
232powet_normal, post_slowtest.
233
2342.1.2. Test results
235
236The results of tests will be collected by the POST layer. The POST
237log will have the following format:
238
239...
240--------------------------------------------
241START <name>
242<test-specific output>
243[PASSED|FAILED]
244--------------------------------------------
245...
246
247Basically, the results of tests will be printed to stderr. This
248feature may be enhanced in future to spool the log to a serial line,
249save it in non-volatile RAM (NVRAM), transfer it to a dedicated
250storage server and etc.
251
2522.1.3. Integration issues
253
254All POST-related code will be #ifdef'ed with the CONFIG_POST macro.
255This macro will be defined in the config_<board>.h file for those
256boards that need POST. The CONFIG_POST macro will contain the list of
257POST tests for the board. The macro will have the format of array
258composed of post_test structures:
259
260#define CONFIG_POST \
261	{
262		"On-board peripherals test", "board", \
263		"  This test performs full check-up of the " \
264		"on-board hardware.", \
265		POST_RAM | POST_SLOWTEST, \
266		&board_post_test \
267	}
268
269A new file, post.h, will be created in the include/ directory. This
270file will contain common POST declarations and will define a set of
271macros that will be reused for defining CONFIG_POST. As an example,
272the following macro may be defined:
273
274#define POST_CACHE \
275	{
276		"Cache test", "cache", \
277		"  This test verifies the CPU cache operation.", \
278		POST_RAM | POST_NORMAL, \
279		&cache_post_test \
280	}
281
282A new subdirectory will be created in the U-Boot root directory. It
283will contain the source code of the POST layer and most of POST
284tests. Each POST test in this directory will be placed into a
285separate file (it will be needed for building standalone tests). Some
286POST tests (mainly those for testing peripheral devices) will be
287located in the source files of the drivers for those devices. This
288way will be used only if the test subtantially uses the driver.
289
2902.1.4. Standalone tests
291
292The POST framework will allow to develop and run standalone tests. A
293user-space library will be developed to provide the POST interface
294functions to standalone tests.
295
2962.1.5. Command line interface
297
298A new command, diag, will be added to U-Boot. This command will be
299used for listing all available hardware tests, getting detailed
300descriptions of them and running these tests.
301
302More specifically, being run without any arguments, this command will
303print the list of all available hardware tests:
304
305=> diag
306Available hardware tests:
307  cache             - cache test
308  cpu               - CPU test
309  enet              - SCC/FCC ethernet test
310Use 'diag [<test1> [<test2>]] ... ' to get more info.
311Use 'diag run [<test1> [<test2>]] ... ' to run tests.
312=>
313
314If the first argument to the diag command is not 'run', detailed
315descriptions of the specified tests will be printed:
316
317=> diag cpu cache
318cpu - CPU test
319  This test verifies the arithmetic logic unit of CPU.
320cache - cache test
321  This test verifies the CPU cache operation.
322=>
323
324If the first argument to diag is 'run', the specified tests will be
325executed. If no tests are specified, all available tests will be
326executed.
327
328It will be prohibited to execute tests running in ROM manually. The
329'diag' command will not display such tests and/or run them.
330
3312.1.6. Power failure handling
332
333The Linux kernel will be modified to detect power failures and
334automatically reboot the system in such cases. It will be assumed
335that the power failure causes a system interrupt.
336
337To perform correct system shutdown, the kernel will register a
338handler of the power-fail IRQ on booting. Being called, the handler
339will run /sbin/reboot using the call_usermodehelper() routine.
340/sbin/reboot will automatically bring the system down in a secure
341way. This feature will be configured in/out from the kernel
342configuration file.
343
344The POST layer of U-Boot will check whether the system runs in
345power-fail mode. If it does, the system will be powered off after
346executing all hardware tests.
347
3482.1.7. Hazardous tests
349
350Some tests may cause system rebooting during their execution. For
351some tests, this will indicate a failure, while for the Watchdog
352test, this means successful operation of the timer.
353
354In order to support such tests, the following scheme will be
355implemented. All the tests that may cause system rebooting will have
356the POST_REBOOT bit flag set in the flag field of the correspondent
357post_test structure. Before starting tests marked with this bit flag,
358the POST layer will store an identification number of the test in a
359location in IMMR. On booting, the POST layer will check the value of
360this variable and if it is set will skip over the tests preceding the
361failed one. On second execution of the failed test, the POST_REBOOT
362bit flag will be set in the flag argument to the test routine. This
363will allow to detect system rebooting on the previous iteration. For
364example, the watchdog timer test may have the following
365declaration/body:
366
367...
368#define POST_WATCHDOG \
369	{
370		"Watchdog timer test", "watchdog", \
371		"  This test checks the watchdog timer.", \
372		POST_RAM | POST_POWERON | POST_REBOOT, \
373		&watchdog_post_test \
374	}
375...
376
377...
378int watchdog_post_test(bd_t *bd, int flags)
379{
380	unsigned long start_time;
381
382	if (flags & POST_REBOOT) {
383		/* Test passed */
384		return 0;
385	} else {
386		/* disable interrupts */
387		disable_interrupts();
388		/* 10-second delay */
389		...
390		/* if we've reached this, the watchdog timer does not work */
391		enable_interrupts();
392		return 1;
393	}
394}
395...
396
3972.2. Hardware-specific details
398
399This project will also develop a set of POST tests for MPC8xx- based
400systems. This section provides technical details of how it will be
401done.
402
4032.2.1. Generic PPC tests
404
405The following generic POST tests will be developed:
406
407  o) CPU test
408
409     This test will check the arithmetic logic unit (ALU) of CPU. The
410     test will take several milliseconds and will run on normal
411     booting.
412
413  o) Cache test
414
415     This test will verify the CPU cache (L1 cache). The test will
416     run on normal booting.
417
418  o) Memory test
419
420     This test will examine RAM and check it for errors. The test
421     will always run on booting. On normal booting, only a limited
422     amount of RAM will be checked. On power-fail booting a fool
423     memory check-up will be performed.
424
4252.2.1.1. CPU test
426
427This test will verify the following ALU instructions:
428
429  o) Condition register istructions
430
431     This group will contain: mtcrf, mfcr, mcrxr, crand, crandc,
432     cror, crorc, crxor, crnand, crnor, creqv, mcrf.
433
434     The mtcrf/mfcr instructions will be tested by loading different
435     values into the condition register (mtcrf), moving its value to
436     a general-purpose register (mfcr) and comparing this value with
437     the expected one. The mcrxr instruction will be tested by
438     loading a fixed value into the XER register (mtspr), moving XER
439     value to the condition register (mcrxr), moving it to a
440     general-purpose register (mfcr) and comparing the value of this
441     register with the expected one. The rest of instructions will be
442     tested by loading a fixed value into the condition register
443     (mtcrf), executing each instruction several times to modify all
444     4-bit condition fields, moving the value of the conditional
445     register to a general-purpose register (mfcr) and comparing it
446     with the expected one.
447
448  o) Integer compare instructions
449
450     This group will contain: cmp, cmpi, cmpl, cmpli.
451
452     To verify these instructions the test will run them with
453     different combinations of operands, read the condition register
454     value and compare it with the expected one. More specifically,
455     the test will contain a pre-built table containing the
456     description of each test case: the instruction, the values of
457     the operands, the condition field to save the result in and the
458     expected result.
459
460  o) Arithmetic instructions
461
462     This group will contain: add, addc, adde, addme, addze, subf,
463     subfc, subfe, subme, subze, mullw, mulhw, mulhwu, divw, divwu,
464     extsb, extsh.
465
466     The test will contain a pre-built table of instructions,
467     operands, expected results and expected states of the condition
468     register. For each table entry, the test will cyclically use
469     different sets of operand registers and result registers. For
470     example, for instructions that use 3 registers on the first
471     iteration r0/r1 will be used as operands and r2 for result. On
472     the second iteration, r1/r2 will be used as operands and r3 as
473     for result and so on. This will enable to verify all
474     general-purpose registers.
475
476  o) Logic instructions
477
478     This group will contain: and, andc, andi, andis, or, orc, ori,
479     oris, xor, xori, xoris, nand, nor, neg, eqv, cntlzw.
480
481     The test scheme will be identical to that from the previous
482     point.
483
484  o) Shift instructions
485
486     This group will contain: slw, srw, sraw, srawi, rlwinm, rlwnm,
487     rlwimi
488
489     The test scheme will be identical to that from the previous
490     point.
491
492  o) Branch instructions
493
494     This group will contain: b, bl, bc.
495
496     The first 2 instructions (b, bl) will be verified by jumping to
497     a fixed address and checking whether control was transfered to
498     that very point. For the bl instruction the value of the link
499     register will be checked as well (using mfspr). To verify the bc
500     instruction various combinations of the BI/BO fields, the CTR
501     and the condition register values will be checked. The list of
502     such combinations will be pre-built and linked in U-Boot at
503     build time.
504
505  o) Load/store instructions
506
507     This group will contain: lbz(x)(u), lhz(x)(u), lha(x)(u),
508     lwz(x)(u), stb(x)(u), sth(x)(u), stw(x)(u).
509
510     All operations will be performed on a 16-byte array. The array
511     will be 4-byte aligned. The base register will point to offset
512     8. The immediate offset (index register) will range in [-8 ...
513     +7]. The test cases will be composed so that they will not cause
514     alignment exceptions. The test will contain a pre-built table
515     describing all test cases. For store instructions, the table
516     entry will contain: the instruction opcode, the value of the
517     index register and the value of the source register. After
518     executing the instruction, the test will verify the contents of
519     the array and the value of the base register (it must change for
520     "store with update" instructions). For load instructions, the
521     table entry will contain: the instruction opcode, the array
522     contents, the value of the index register and the expected value
523     of the destination register. After executing the instruction,
524     the test will verify the value of the destination register and
525     the value of the base register (it must change for "load with
526     update" instructions).
527
528  o) Load/store multiple/string instructions
529
530
531The CPU test will run in RAM in order to allow run-time modification
532of the code to reduce the memory footprint.
533
5342.2.1.2 Special-Purpose Registers Tests
535
536TBD.
537
5382.2.1.3. Cache test
539
540To verify the data cache operation the following test scenarios will
541be used:
542
543  1) Basic test #1
544
545    - turn on the data cache
546    - switch the data cache to write-back or write-through mode
547    - invalidate the data cache
548    - write the negative pattern to a cached area
549    - read the area
550
551    The negative pattern must be read at the last step
552
553  2) Basic test #2
554
555    - turn on the data cache
556    - switch the data cache to write-back or write-through mode
557    - invalidate the data cache
558    - write the zero pattern to a cached area
559    - turn off the data cache
560    - write the negative pattern to the area
561    - turn on the data cache
562    - read the area
563
564    The negative pattern must be read at the last step
565
566  3) Write-through mode test
567
568    - turn on the data cache
569    - switch the data cache to write-through mode
570    - invalidate the data cache
571    - write the zero pattern to a cached area
572    - flush the data cache
573    - write the negative pattern to the area
574    - turn off the data cache
575    - read the area
576
577    The negative pattern must be read at the last step
578
579  4) Write-back mode test
580
581    - turn on the data cache
582    - switch the data cache to write-back mode
583    - invalidate the data cache
584    - write the negative pattern to a cached area
585    - flush the data cache
586    - write the zero pattern to the area
587    - invalidate the data cache
588    - read the area
589
590    The negative pattern must be read at the last step
591
592To verify the instruction cache operation the following test
593scenarios will be used:
594
595  1) Basic test #1
596
597    - turn on the instruction cache
598    - unlock the entire instruction cache
599    - invalidate the instruction cache
600    - lock a branch instruction in the instruction cache
601    - replace the branch instruction with "nop"
602    - jump to the branch instruction
603    - check that the branch instruction was executed
604
605  2) Basic test #2
606
607    - turn on the instruction cache
608    - unlock the entire instruction cache
609    - invalidate the instruction cache
610    - jump to a branch instruction
611    - check that the branch instruction was executed
612    - replace the branch instruction with "nop"
613    - invalidate the instruction cache
614    - jump to the branch instruction
615    - check that the "nop" instruction was executed
616
617The CPU test will run in RAM in order to allow run-time modification
618of the code.
619
6202.2.1.4. Memory test
621
622The memory test will verify RAM using sequential writes and reads
623to/from RAM. Specifically, there will be several test cases that will
624use different patterns to verify RAM. Each test case will first fill
625a region of RAM with one pattern and then read the region back and
626compare its contents with the pattern. The following patterns will be
627used:
628
629 1) zero pattern (0x00000000)
630 2) negative pattern (0xffffffff)
631 3) checkerboard pattern (0x55555555, 0xaaaaaaaa)
632 4) bit-flip pattern ((1 << (offset % 32)), ~(1 << (offset % 32)))
633 5) address pattern (offset, ~offset)
634
635Patterns #1, #2 will help to find unstable bits. Patterns #3, #4 will
636be used to detect adherent bits, i.e. bits whose state may randomly
637change if adjacent bits are modified. The last pattern will be used
638to detect far-located errors, i.e. situations when writing to one
639location modifies an area located far from it. Also, usage of the
640last pattern will help to detect memory controller misconfigurations
641when RAM represents a cyclically repeated portion of a smaller size.
642
643Being run in normal mode, the test will verify only small 4Kb regions
644of RAM around each 1Mb boundary. For example, for 64Mb RAM the
645following areas will be verified: 0x00000000-0x00000800,
6460x000ff800-0x00100800, 0x001ff800-0x00200800, ..., 0x03fff800-
6470x04000000. If the test is run in power-fail mode, it will verify the
648whole RAM.
649
650The memory test will run in ROM before relocating U-Boot to RAM in
651order to allow RAM modification without saving its contents.
652
6532.2.2. Common tests
654
655This section describes tests that are not based on any hardware
656peculiarities and use common U-Boot interfaces only. These tests do
657not need any modifications for porting them to another board/CPU.
658
6592.2.2.1. I2C test
660
661For verifying the I2C bus, a full I2C bus scanning will be performed
662using the i2c_probe() routine. If any I2C device is found, the test
663will be considered as passed, otherwise failed. This particular way
664will be used because it provides the most common method of testing.
665For example, using the internal loopback mode of the CPM I2C
666controller for testing would not work on boards where the software
667I2C driver (also known as bit-banged driver) is used.
668
6692.2.2.2. Watchdog timer test
670
671To test the watchdog timer the scheme mentioned above (refer to
672section "Hazardous tests") will be used. Namely, this test will be
673marked with the POST_REBOOT bit flag. On the first iteration, the
674test routine will make a 10-second delay. If the system does not
675reboot during this delay, the watchdog timer is not operational and
676the test fails. If the system reboots, on the second iteration the
677POST_REBOOT bit will be set in the flag argument to the test routine.
678The test routine will check this bit and report a success if it is
679set.
680
6812.2.2.3. RTC test
682
683The RTC test will use the rtc_get()/rtc_set() routines. The following
684features will be verified:
685
686  o) Time uniformity
687
688     This will be verified by reading RTC in polling within a short
689     period of time (5-10 seconds).
690
691  o) Passing month boundaries
692
693     This will be checked by setting RTC to a second before a month
694     boundary and reading it after its passing the boundary. The test
695     will be performed for both leap- and nonleap-years.
696
6972.2.3. MPC8xx peripherals tests
698
699This project will develop a set of tests verifying the peripheral
700units of MPC8xx processors. Namely, the following controllers of the
701MPC8xx communication processor module (CPM) will be tested:
702
703  o) Serial Management Controllers (SMC)
704
705  o) Serial Communication Controllers (SCC)
706
7072.2.3.1. Ethernet tests (SCC)
708
709The internal (local) loopback mode will be used to test SCC. To do
710that the controllers will be configured accordingly and several
711packets will be transmitted. These tests may be enhanced in future to
712use external loopback for testing. That will need appropriate
713reconfiguration of the physical interface chip.
714
715The test routines for the SCC ethernet tests will be located in
716arch/powerpc/cpu/mpc8xx/scc.c.
717
7182.2.3.2. UART tests (SMC/SCC)
719
720To perform these tests the internal (local) loopback mode will be
721used. The SMC/SCC controllers will be configured to connect the
722transmitter output to the receiver input. After that, several bytes
723will be transmitted. These tests may be enhanced to make to perform
724"external" loopback test using a loopback cable. In this case, the
725test will be executed manually.
726
727The test routine for the SMC/SCC UART tests will be located in
728arch/powerpc/cpu/mpc8xx/serial.c.
729
7302.2.3.3. USB test
731
732TBD
733
7342.2.3.4. SPI test
735
736TBD
737