Where to put a large bootloader-supplied device tree on ARM ?

Mitch Bradley wmb at firmworks.com
Thu Jul 12 02:52:43 EDT 2012


On 7/8/2012 6:30 PM, Nicolas Pitre wrote:
> On Fri, 6 Jul 2012, Mitch Bradley wrote:
> 
>> On 7/6/2012 3:23 PM, David VomLehn (dvomlehn) wrote:
>>> The kernel *must* go where it is linked, but the FDT contains only relative
>>> references and is thus free to go anywhere. The same is true of ramdisks,
>>> which
>>> are usually placed after the kernel.
> 
> The kernel must go where it is linked *only* if you are using the 
> 'Image' output.  When using 'zImage' you can put the kernel anywhere in 
> memory, or in the first 128MB of RAM if CONFIG_AUTO_ZRELADDR is used.
> 
>> Right, but the kernel image is compressed, so after decompression it expands
>> into the area just after it.  Also, the .bss segment is in that vicinity.
> 
> To be exact, the compressed kernel moves itself out of the region where 
> the decompressed kernel will end up before doing the decompression, but 
> only if necessary.  So it is a good idea to load zImage away from the 
> decompressed kernel area to avoid this extra move and save some fraction 
> of a second on boot time.
> 
>> There's some code in arch/arm/boot/compressed/head.S to relocate
>> device tree blobs, but it requires CONFIG_ARM_APPENDED_DTB which
>> is not recommended - arch/arm/Kconfig recommends using the
>> documented boot protocol istead .
> 
> This is in case a DTB is appended to zImage.  When the DTB is detected, 
> the moving of zImage out of the decompressed area must take care of 
> moving the DTB as well.
> 
>> Documentation/arm/Booting says
>> to put the dtb "in a region of memory where the kernel decompressor
>> will not overwrite it", further recommending the first 16KiB.
>>
>> As noted, the first 16KiB loses if the dtb is too large.  And
>> "where the kernel decompressor will not overwrite it" says what
>> won't work, not what will.  It appears that the decompressor works
>> out its addresses dynamically, so there's no hard prescription even
>> for what to avoid.
> 
> A good rule of thumb is to take the size of the decompressed kernel and 
> multiply this by 3.  Rounding up is also fine.  So for example if your 
> arch/arm/boot/Image is 5MB, then putting anciliary data such as a 
> ramdisk or a large DTB from 16MB into RAM or above should be fine.
> 
>> For now, I'm putting the initrd at the end of memory and the dtb
>> below that.  That seems to work, but I'm unsure whether or not
>> I'm just "getting lucky".
> 
> That's also perfectly fine.


Alas, that worked for machines with 512 MiB of main memory, but failed
on 1 GiB machines.  My guess is that, when the initrd and dtb are near
the top of a 1 GiB memory, the virtual address gets too near the top of
the kernel's 1 GiB of virtual space (which starts at 0xc0000000),
perhaps colliding with the VMALLOC space.

Putting them just below the 128 MiB boundary seems to work.

> 
> 
> Nicolas
> 




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