1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+ 2# Copyright (c) 2016 Google, Inc 3 4Introduction 5------------ 6 7Firmware often consists of several components which must be packaged together. 8For example, we may have SPL, U-Boot, a device tree and an environment area 9grouped together and placed in MMC flash. When the system starts, it must be 10able to find these pieces. 11 12So far U-Boot has not provided a way to handle creating such images in a 13general way. Each SoC does what it needs to build an image, often packing or 14concatenating images in the U-Boot build system. 15 16Binman aims to provide a mechanism for building images, from simple 17SPL + U-Boot combinations, to more complex arrangements with many parts. 18 19 20What it does 21------------ 22 23Binman reads your board's device tree and finds a node which describes the 24required image layout. It uses this to work out what to place where. The 25output file normally contains the device tree, so it is in principle possible 26to read an image and extract its constituent parts. 27 28 29Features 30-------- 31 32So far binman is pretty simple. It supports binary blobs, such as 'u-boot', 33'spl' and 'fdt'. It supports empty entries (such as setting to 0xff). It can 34place entries at a fixed location in the image, or fit them together with 35suitable padding and alignment. It provides a way to process binaries before 36they are included, by adding a Python plug-in. The device tree is available 37to U-Boot at run-time so that the images can be interpreted. 38 39Binman does not yet update the device tree with the final location of 40everything when it is done. A simple C structure could be generated for 41constrained environments like SPL (using dtoc) but this is also not 42implemented. 43 44Binman can also support incorporating filesystems in the image if required. 45For example x86 platforms may use CBFS in some cases. 46 47Binman is intended for use with U-Boot but is designed to be general enough 48to be useful in other image-packaging situations. 49 50 51Motivation 52---------- 53 54Packaging of firmware is quite a different task from building the various 55parts. In many cases the various binaries which go into the image come from 56separate build systems. For example, ARM Trusted Firmware is used on ARMv8 57devices but is not built in the U-Boot tree. If a Linux kernel is included 58in the firmware image, it is built elsewhere. 59 60It is of course possible to add more and more build rules to the U-Boot 61build system to cover these cases. It can shell out to other Makefiles and 62build scripts. But it seems better to create a clear divide between building 63software and packaging it. 64 65At present this is handled by manual instructions, different for each board, 66on how to create images that will boot. By turning these instructions into a 67standard format, we can support making valid images for any board without 68manual effort, lots of READMEs, etc. 69 70Benefits: 71- Each binary can have its own build system and tool chain without creating 72any dependencies between them 73- Avoids the need for a single-shot build: individual parts can be updated 74and brought in as needed 75- Provides for a standard image description available in the build and at 76run-time 77- SoC-specific image-signing tools can be accomodated 78- Avoids cluttering the U-Boot build system with image-building code 79- The image description is automatically available at run-time in U-Boot, 80SPL. It can be made available to other software also 81- The image description is easily readable (it's a text file in device-tree 82format) and permits flexible packing of binaries 83 84 85Terminology 86----------- 87 88Binman uses the following terms: 89 90- image - an output file containing a firmware image 91- binary - an input binary that goes into the image 92 93 94Relationship to FIT 95------------------- 96 97FIT is U-Boot's official image format. It supports multiple binaries with 98load / execution addresses, compression. It also supports verification 99through hashing and RSA signatures. 100 101FIT was originally designed to support booting a Linux kernel (with an 102optional ramdisk) and device tree chosen from various options in the FIT. 103Now that U-Boot supports configuration via device tree, it is possible to 104load U-Boot from a FIT, with the device tree chosen by SPL. 105 106Binman considers FIT to be one of the binaries it can place in the image. 107 108Where possible it is best to put as much as possible in the FIT, with binman 109used to deal with cases not covered by FIT. Examples include initial 110execution (since FIT itself does not have an executable header) and dealing 111with device boundaries, such as the read-only/read-write separation in SPI 112flash. 113 114For U-Boot, binman should not be used to create ad-hoc images in place of 115FIT. 116 117 118Relationship to mkimage 119----------------------- 120 121The mkimage tool provides a means to create a FIT. Traditionally it has 122needed an image description file: a device tree, like binman, but in a 123different format. More recently it has started to support a '-f auto' mode 124which can generate that automatically. 125 126More relevant to binman, mkimage also permits creation of many SoC-specific 127image types. These can be listed by running 'mkimage -T list'. Examples 128include 'rksd', the Rockchip SD/MMC boot format. The mkimage tool is often 129called from the U-Boot build system for this reason. 130 131Binman considers the output files created by mkimage to be binary blobs 132which it can place in an image. Binman does not replace the mkimage tool or 133this purpose. It would be possible in some situtions to create a new entry 134type for the images in mkimage, but this would not add functionality. It 135seems better to use the mkiamge tool to generate binaries and avoid blurring 136the boundaries between building input files (mkimage) and packaging then 137into a final image (binman). 138 139 140Example use of binman in U-Boot 141------------------------------- 142 143Binman aims to replace some of the ad-hoc image creation in the U-Boot 144build system. 145 146Consider sunxi. It has the following steps: 147 1481. It uses a custom mksunxiboot tool to build an SPL image called 149sunxi-spl.bin. This should probably move into mkimage. 150 1512. It uses mkimage to package U-Boot into a legacy image file (so that it can 152hold the load and execution address) called u-boot.img. 153 1543. It builds a final output image called u-boot-sunxi-with-spl.bin which 155consists of sunxi-spl.bin, some padding and u-boot.img. 156 157Binman is intended to replace the last step. The U-Boot build system builds 158u-boot.bin and sunxi-spl.bin. Binman can then take over creation of 159sunxi-spl.bin (by calling mksunxiboot, or hopefully one day mkimage). In any 160case, it would then create the image from the component parts. 161 162This simplifies the U-Boot Makefile somewhat, since various pieces of logic 163can be replaced by a call to binman. 164 165 166Example use of binman for x86 167----------------------------- 168 169In most cases x86 images have a lot of binary blobs, 'black-box' code 170provided by Intel which must be run for the platform to work. Typically 171these blobs are not relocatable and must be placed at fixed areas in the 172firmare image. 173 174Currently this is handled by ifdtool, which places microcode, FSP, MRC, VGA 175BIOS, reference code and Intel ME binaries into a u-boot.rom file. 176 177Binman is intended to replace all of this, with ifdtool left to handle only 178the configuration of the Intel-format descriptor. 179 180 181Running binman 182-------------- 183 184Type: 185 186 binman -b <board_name> 187 188to build an image for a board. The board name is the same name used when 189configuring U-Boot (e.g. for sandbox_defconfig the board name is 'sandbox'). 190Binman assumes that the input files for the build are in ../b/<board_name>. 191 192Or you can specify this explicitly: 193 194 binman -I <build_path> 195 196where <build_path> is the build directory containing the output of the U-Boot 197build. 198 199(Future work will make this more configurable) 200 201In either case, binman picks up the device tree file (u-boot.dtb) and looks 202for its instructions in the 'binman' node. 203 204Binman has a few other options which you can see by running 'binman -h'. 205 206 207Enabling binman for a board 208--------------------------- 209 210At present binman is invoked from a rule in the main Makefile. Typically you 211will have a rule like: 212 213ifneq ($(CONFIG_ARCH_<something>),) 214u-boot-<your_suffix>.bin: <input_file_1> <input_file_2> checkbinman FORCE 215 $(call if_changed,binman) 216endif 217 218This assumes that u-boot-<your_suffix>.bin is a target, and is the final file 219that you need to produce. You can make it a target by adding it to ALL-y 220either in the main Makefile or in a config.mk file in your arch subdirectory. 221 222Once binman is executed it will pick up its instructions from a device-tree 223file, typically <soc>-u-boot.dtsi, where <soc> is your CONFIG_SYS_SOC value. 224You can use other, more specific CONFIG options - see 'Automatic .dtsi 225inclusion' below. 226 227 228Image description format 229------------------------ 230 231The binman node is called 'binman'. An example image description is shown 232below: 233 234 binman { 235 filename = "u-boot-sunxi-with-spl.bin"; 236 pad-byte = <0xff>; 237 blob { 238 filename = "spl/sunxi-spl.bin"; 239 }; 240 u-boot { 241 pos = <CONFIG_SPL_PAD_TO>; 242 }; 243 }; 244 245 246This requests binman to create an image file called u-boot-sunxi-with-spl.bin 247consisting of a specially formatted SPL (spl/sunxi-spl.bin, built by the 248normal U-Boot Makefile), some 0xff padding, and a U-Boot legacy image. The 249padding comes from the fact that the second binary is placed at 250CONFIG_SPL_PAD_TO. If that line were omitted then the U-Boot binary would 251immediately follow the SPL binary. 252 253The binman node describes an image. The sub-nodes describe entries in the 254image. Each entry represents a region within the overall image. The name of 255the entry (blob, u-boot) tells binman what to put there. For 'blob' we must 256provide a filename. For 'u-boot', binman knows that this means 'u-boot.bin'. 257 258Entries are normally placed into the image sequentially, one after the other. 259The image size is the total size of all entries. As you can see, you can 260specify the start position of an entry using the 'pos' property. 261 262Note that due to a device tree requirement, all entries must have a unique 263name. If you want to put the same binary in the image multiple times, you can 264use any unique name, with the 'type' property providing the type. 265 266The attributes supported for entries are described below. 267 268pos: 269 This sets the position of an entry within the image. The first byte 270 of the image is normally at position 0. If 'pos' is not provided, 271 binman sets it to the end of the previous region, or the start of 272 the image's entry area (normally 0) if there is no previous region. 273 274align: 275 This sets the alignment of the entry. The entry position is adjusted 276 so that the entry starts on an aligned boundary within the image. For 277 example 'align = <16>' means that the entry will start on a 16-byte 278 boundary. Alignment shold be a power of 2. If 'align' is not 279 provided, no alignment is performed. 280 281size: 282 This sets the size of the entry. The contents will be padded out to 283 this size. If this is not provided, it will be set to the size of the 284 contents. 285 286pad-before: 287 Padding before the contents of the entry. Normally this is 0, meaning 288 that the contents start at the beginning of the entry. This can be 289 offset the entry contents a little. Defaults to 0. 290 291pad-after: 292 Padding after the contents of the entry. Normally this is 0, meaning 293 that the entry ends at the last byte of content (unless adjusted by 294 other properties). This allows room to be created in the image for 295 this entry to expand later. Defaults to 0. 296 297align-size: 298 This sets the alignment of the entry size. For example, to ensure 299 that the size of an entry is a multiple of 64 bytes, set this to 64. 300 If 'align-size' is not provided, no alignment is performed. 301 302align-end: 303 This sets the alignment of the end of an entry. Some entries require 304 that they end on an alignment boundary, regardless of where they 305 start. If 'align-end' is not provided, no alignment is performed. 306 307 Note: This is not yet implemented in binman. 308 309filename: 310 For 'blob' types this provides the filename containing the binary to 311 put into the entry. If binman knows about the entry type (like 312 u-boot-bin), then there is no need to specify this. 313 314type: 315 Sets the type of an entry. This defaults to the entry name, but it is 316 possible to use any name, and then add (for example) 'type = "u-boot"' 317 to specify the type. 318 319 320The attributes supported for images are described below. Several are similar 321to those for entries. 322 323size: 324 Sets the image size in bytes, for example 'size = <0x100000>' for a 325 1MB image. 326 327align-size: 328 This sets the alignment of the image size. For example, to ensure 329 that the image ends on a 512-byte boundary, use 'align-size = <512>'. 330 If 'align-size' is not provided, no alignment is performed. 331 332pad-before: 333 This sets the padding before the image entries. The first entry will 334 be positionad after the padding. This defaults to 0. 335 336pad-after: 337 This sets the padding after the image entries. The padding will be 338 placed after the last entry. This defaults to 0. 339 340pad-byte: 341 This specifies the pad byte to use when padding in the image. It 342 defaults to 0. To use 0xff, you would add 'pad-byte = <0xff>'. 343 344filename: 345 This specifies the image filename. It defaults to 'image.bin'. 346 347sort-by-pos: 348 This causes binman to reorder the entries as needed to make sure they 349 are in increasing positional order. This can be used when your entry 350 order may not match the positional order. A common situation is where 351 the 'pos' properties are set by CONFIG options, so their ordering is 352 not known a priori. 353 354 This is a boolean property so needs no value. To enable it, add a 355 line 'sort-by-pos;' to your description. 356 357multiple-images: 358 Normally only a single image is generated. To create more than one 359 image, put this property in the binman node. For example, this will 360 create image1.bin containing u-boot.bin, and image2.bin containing 361 both spl/u-boot-spl.bin and u-boot.bin: 362 363 binman { 364 multiple-images; 365 image1 { 366 u-boot { 367 }; 368 }; 369 370 image2 { 371 spl { 372 }; 373 u-boot { 374 }; 375 }; 376 }; 377 378end-at-4gb: 379 For x86 machines the ROM positions start just before 4GB and extend 380 up so that the image finished at the 4GB boundary. This boolean 381 option can be enabled to support this. The image size must be 382 provided so that binman knows when the image should start. For an 383 8MB ROM, the position of the first entry would be 0xfff80000 with 384 this option, instead of 0 without this option. 385 386 387Examples of the above options can be found in the tests. See the 388tools/binman/test directory. 389 390 391Special properties 392------------------ 393 394Some entries support special properties, documented here: 395 396u-boot-with-ucode-ptr: 397 optional-ucode: boolean property to make microcode optional. If the 398 u-boot.bin image does not include microcode, no error will 399 be generated. 400 401 402Order of image creation 403----------------------- 404 405Image creation proceeds in the following order, for each entry in the image. 406 4071. GetEntryContents() - the contents of each entry are obtained, normally by 408reading from a file. This calls the Entry.ObtainContents() to read the 409contents. The default version of Entry.ObtainContents() calls 410Entry.GetDefaultFilename() and then reads that file. So a common mechanism 411to select a file to read is to override that function in the subclass. The 412functions must return True when they have read the contents. Binman will 413retry calling the functions a few times if False is returned, allowing 414dependencies between the contents of different entries. 415 4162. GetEntryPositions() - calls Entry.GetPositions() for each entry. This can 417return a dict containing entries that need updating. The key should be the 418entry name and the value is a tuple (pos, size). This allows an entry to 419provide the position and size for other entries. The default implementation 420of GetEntryPositions() returns {}. 421 4223. PackEntries() - calls Entry.Pack() which figures out the position and 423size of an entry. The 'current' image position is passed in, and the function 424returns the position immediately after the entry being packed. The default 425implementation of Pack() is usually sufficient. 426 4274. CheckSize() - checks that the contents of all the entries fits within 428the image size. If the image does not have a defined size, the size is set 429large enough to hold all the entries. 430 4315. CheckEntries() - checks that the entries do not overlap, nor extend 432outside the image. 433 4346. ProcessEntryContents() - this calls Entry.ProcessContents() on each entry. 435The default implementatoin does nothing. This can be overriden to adjust the 436contents of an entry in some way. For example, it would be possible to create 437an entry containing a hash of the contents of some other entries. At this 438stage the position and size of entries should not be adjusted. 439 4406. WriteEntryInfo() 441 4427. BuildImage() - builds the image and writes it to a file. This is the final 443step. 444 445 446Automatic .dtsi inclusion 447------------------------- 448 449It is sometimes inconvenient to add a 'binman' node to the .dts file for each 450board. This can be done by using #include to bring in a common file. Another 451approach supported by the U-Boot build system is to automatically include 452a common header. You can then put the binman node (and anything else that is 453specific to U-Boot, such as u-boot,dm-pre-reloc properies) in that header 454file. 455 456Binman will search for the following files in arch/<arch>/dts: 457 458 <dts>-u-boot.dtsi where <dts> is the base name of the .dts file 459 <CONFIG_SYS_SOC>-u-boot.dtsi 460 <CONFIG_SYS_CPU>-u-boot.dtsi 461 <CONFIG_SYS_VENDOR>-u-boot.dtsi 462 u-boot.dtsi 463 464U-Boot will only use the first one that it finds. If you need to include a 465more general file you can do that from the more specific file using #include. 466If you are having trouble figuring out what is going on, you can uncomment 467the 'warning' line in scripts/Makefile.lib to see what it has found: 468 469 # Uncomment for debugging 470 # This shows all the files that were considered and the one that we chose. 471 # u_boot_dtsi_options_debug = $(u_boot_dtsi_options_raw) 472 473 474Access to binman entry positions at run time 475-------------------------------------------- 476 477Binman assembles images and determines where each entry is placed in the image. 478This information may be useful to U-Boot at run time. For example, in SPL it 479is useful to be able to find the location of U-Boot so that it can be executed 480when SPL is finished. 481 482Binman allows you to declare symbols in the SPL image which are filled in 483with their correct values during the build. For example: 484 485 binman_sym_declare(ulong, u_boot_any, pos); 486 487declares a ulong value which will be assigned to the position of any U-Boot 488image (u-boot.bin, u-boot.img, u-boot-nodtb.bin) that is present in the image. 489You can access this value with something like: 490 491 ulong u_boot_pos = binman_sym(ulong, u_boot_any, pos); 492 493Thus u_boot_pos will be set to the position of U-Boot in memory, assuming that 494the whole image has been loaded, or is available in flash. You can then jump to 495that address to start U-Boot. 496 497At present this feature is only supported in SPL. In principle it is possible 498to fill in such symbols in U-Boot proper, as well. 499 500 501Code coverage 502------------- 503 504Binman is a critical tool and is designed to be very testable. Entry 505implementations target 100% test coverage. Run 'binman -T' to check this. 506 507To enable Python test coverage on Debian-type distributions (e.g. Ubuntu): 508 509 $ sudo apt-get install python-pip python-pytest 510 $ sudo pip install coverage 511 512 513Advanced Features / Technical docs 514---------------------------------- 515 516The behaviour of entries is defined by the Entry class. All other entries are 517a subclass of this. An important subclass is Entry_blob which takes binary 518data from a file and places it in the entry. In fact most entry types are 519subclasses of Entry_blob. 520 521Each entry type is a separate file in the tools/binman/etype directory. Each 522file contains a class called Entry_<type> where <type> is the entry type. 523New entry types can be supported by adding new files in that directory. 524These will automatically be detected by binman when needed. 525 526Entry properties are documented in entry.py. The entry subclasses are free 527to change the values of properties to support special behaviour. For example, 528when Entry_blob loads a file, it sets content_size to the size of the file. 529Entry classes can adjust other entries. For example, an entry that knows 530where other entries should be positioned can set up those entries' positions 531so they don't need to be set in the binman decription. It can also adjust 532entry contents. 533 534Most of the time such essoteric behaviour is not needed, but it can be 535essential for complex images. 536 537If you need to specify a particular device-tree compiler to use, you can define 538the DTC environment variable. This can be useful when the system dtc is too 539old. 540 541 542History / Credits 543----------------- 544 545Binman takes a lot of inspiration from a Chrome OS tool called 546'cros_bundle_firmware', which I wrote some years ago. That tool was based on 547a reasonably simple and sound design but has expanded greatly over the 548years. In particular its handling of x86 images is convoluted. 549 550Quite a few lessons have been learned which are hopefully be applied here. 551 552 553Design notes 554------------ 555 556On the face of it, a tool to create firmware images should be fairly simple: 557just find all the input binaries and place them at the right place in the 558image. The difficulty comes from the wide variety of input types (simple 559flat binaries containing code, packaged data with various headers), packing 560requirments (alignment, spacing, device boundaries) and other required 561features such as hierarchical images. 562 563The design challenge is to make it easy to create simple images, while 564allowing the more complex cases to be supported. For example, for most 565images we don't much care exactly where each binary ends up, so we should 566not have to specify that unnecessarily. 567 568New entry types should aim to provide simple usage where possible. If new 569core features are needed, they can be added in the Entry base class. 570 571 572To do 573----- 574 575Some ideas: 576- Fill out the device tree to include the final position and size of each 577 entry (since the input file may not always specify these). See also 578 'Access to binman entry positions at run time' above 579- Use of-platdata to make the information available to code that is unable 580 to use device tree (such as a very small SPL image) 581- Write an image map to a text file 582- Allow easy building of images by specifying just the board name 583- Produce a full Python binding for libfdt (for upstream) 584- Add an option to decode an image into the constituent binaries 585- Suppoort hierarchical images (packing of binaries into another binary 586 which is then placed in the image) 587- Support building an image for a board (-b) more completely, with a 588 configurable build directory 589- Consider making binman work with buildman, although if it is used in the 590 Makefile, this will be automatic 591- Implement align-end 592 593-- 594Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> 5957/7/2016 596