NAND Boot Issue

Kamel BOUHARA k.bouhara at gmail.com
Tue Oct 18 03:35:38 EDT 2011


I tried with a zImage, here is what I'm getting :

barebox:/ bootz /dev/nand0.kernel.bb
invalid magic 0x00002018

And here the ls -l /dev/nand0.* output :

 barebox:/ ls -l /dev/nand0.*
crw-------     393216 /dev/nand0.barebox.bb
crw-------     131072 /dev/nand0.bareboxenv.bb
crw-------    2883584 /dev/nand0.kernel.bb
crw-------  533200896 /dev/nand0.root.bb
crw-------  533667840 /dev/nand0.root
crw-------    2764800 /dev/nand0.kernel
crw-------     131072 /dev/nand0.bareboxenv
crw-------     307200 /dev/nand0.barebox

Here is how I did my kernel and root partitions, following this steps :

addpart /dev/nand0 300k(barebox)ro,128k(bareboxenv),2700k(kernel),-(root)
nand -a /dev/nand0.*
update -t kernel -d nand
update -t rootfs -d nand

Is there any specific command to erase the nand before flashing it ?



2011/10/18 Sascha Hauer <s.hauer at pengutronix.de>

> On Mon, Oct 17, 2011 at 10:31:38PM +0200, Kamel BOUHARA wrote:
> > > bootu is for starting raw kernel images. Do you have such an image?
> > > Normally you have an uImage (bootm) or a zImage (bootz)
> >
> >
> > Ok so that maybe the solution because I didn't tried with the bootm ....
> my
> > bad ! But why did I don't have the "Bad magic number" error like when I
> > tried the boot command ???
>
> A raw image does not have any magic number you could check, so the bootu
> command relies on the user passing the correct image.
>
> >
> > Here is the ls /dev result:
> >
> > barebox:/ ls /dev/
> > zero                   defaultenv             mem
> > nor0                   nand0                  nand_oob0
> > ram0                   phy0                   self_raw
> > self0                  env_raw                env0
> > nor0.barebox           nor0.bareboxenv        nor0.kernel
> > nor0.root              nand0.barebox          nand0.bareboxenv
> > nand0.kernel           nand0.root             nand0.root.bb
> > nand0.kernel.bb        nand0.bareboxenv.bb    nand0.barebox.bb
>
> Sorry, I meant the output of 'ls -l /dev/nand0.*' to check the sizes of
> your partitions.
>
> Sascha
>
>
> --
> Pengutronix e.K.                           |                             |
> Industrial Linux Solutions                 | http://www.pengutronix.de/  |
> Peiner Str. 6-8, 31137 Hildesheim, Germany | Phone: +49-5121-206917-0    |
> Amtsgericht Hildesheim, HRA 2686           | Fax:   +49-5121-206917-5555 |
>



-- 
__________________________________
*Kamel BOUHARA*
7 rue Jules César
02100 SAINT-QUENTIN
06.17.83.29.04
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