1--------------------------------- 2 Ethernet Address (MAC) Handling 3--------------------------------- 4 5There are a variety of places in U-Boot where the MAC address is used, parsed, 6and stored. This document covers proper usage of each location and the moving 7of data between them. 8 9----------- 10 Locations 11----------- 12 13Here are the places where MAC addresses might be stored: 14 15 - board-specific location (eeprom, dedicated flash, ...) 16 Note: only used when mandatory due to hardware design etc... 17 18 - environment ("ethaddr", "eth1addr", ...) 19 Note: this is the preferred way to permanently store MAC addresses 20 21 - ethernet data (struct eth_device -> enetaddr) 22 Note: these are temporary copies of the MAC address which exist only 23 after the respective init steps have run and only to make usage 24 in other places easier (to avoid constant env lookup/parsing) 25 26 - struct bd_info and/or device tree 27 Note: these are temporary copies of the MAC address only for the 28 purpose of passing this information to an OS kernel we are about 29 to boot 30 31Correct flow of setting up the MAC address (summarized): 32 331. Read from hardware in initialize() function 342. Read from environment in net/eth.c after initialize() 353. The environment variable will be compared to the driver initialized 36 struct eth_device->enetaddr. If they differ, a warning is printed, and the 37 environment variable will be used unchanged. 38 If the environment variable is not set, it will be initialized from 39 eth_device->enetaddr, and a warning will be printed. 40 If both are invalid and CONFIG_NET_RANDOM_ETHADDR is defined, a random, 41 locally-assigned MAC is written to eth_device->enetaddr. 424. Program the address into hardware if the following conditions are met: 43 a) The relevant driver has a 'write_addr' function 44 b) The user hasn't set an 'ethmacskip' environment variable 45 c) The address is valid (unicast, not all-zeros) 46 47Previous behavior had the MAC address always being programmed into hardware 48in the device's init() function. 49 50------- 51 Usage 52------- 53 54If the hardware design mandates that the MAC address is stored in some special 55place (like EEPROM etc...), then the board specific init code (such as the 56board-specific misc_init_r() function) is responsible for locating the MAC 57address(es) and initializing the respective environment variable(s) from it. 58Note that this shall be done if, and only if, the environment does not already 59contain these environment variables, i.e. existing variable definitions must 60not be overwritten. 61 62During runtime, the ethernet layer will use the environment variables to sync 63the MAC addresses to the ethernet structures. All ethernet driver code should 64then only use the enetaddr member of the eth_device structure. This is done 65on every network command, so the ethernet copies will stay in sync. 66 67Any other code that wishes to access the MAC address should query the 68environment directly. The helper functions documented below should make 69working with this storage much smoother. 70 71--------- 72 Helpers 73--------- 74 75To assist in the management of these layers, a few helper functions exist. You 76should use these rather than attempt to do any kind of parsing/manipulation 77yourself as many common errors have arisen in the past. 78 79 * void eth_parse_enetaddr(const char *addr, uchar *enetaddr); 80 81Convert a string representation of a MAC address to the binary version. 82char *addr = "00:11:22:33:44:55"; 83uchar enetaddr[6]; 84eth_parse_enetaddr(addr, enetaddr); 85/* enetaddr now equals { 0x00, 0x11, 0x22, 0x33, 0x44, 0x55 } */ 86 87 * int eth_env_get_enetaddr(char *name, uchar *enetaddr); 88 89Look up an environment variable and convert the stored address. If the address 90is valid, then the function returns 1. Otherwise, the function returns 0. In 91all cases, the enetaddr memory is initialized. If the env var is not found, 92then it is set to all zeros. The common function is_valid_ethaddr() is used 93to determine address validity. 94uchar enetaddr[6]; 95if (!eth_env_get_enetaddr("ethaddr", enetaddr)) { 96 /* "ethaddr" is not set in the environment */ 97 ... try and setup "ethaddr" in the env ... 98} 99/* enetaddr is now set to the value stored in the ethaddr env var */ 100 101 * int eth_env_set_enetaddr(char *name, const uchar *enetaddr); 102 103Store the MAC address into the named environment variable. The return value is 104the same as the env_set() function. 105uchar enetaddr[6] = { 0x00, 0x11, 0x22, 0x33, 0x44, 0x55 }; 106eth_env_set_enetaddr("ethaddr", enetaddr); 107/* the "ethaddr" env var should now be set to "00:11:22:33:44:55" */ 108 109 * the %pM format modifier 110 111The %pM format modifier can be used with any standard printf function to format 112the binary 6 byte array representation of a MAC address. 113uchar enetaddr[6] = { 0x00, 0x11, 0x22, 0x33, 0x44, 0x55 }; 114printf("The MAC is %pM\n", enetaddr); 115 116char buf[20]; 117sprintf(buf, "%pM", enetaddr); 118/* the buf variable is now set to "00:11:22:33:44:55" */ 119