[PATCH 1/2] ubi: mount partitions specified in device tree
Daniel Golle
daniel at makrotopia.org
Sun Jun 19 04:25:10 PDT 2016
Hi Richard,
On Sun, Jun 19, 2016 at 10:53:42AM +0200, Richard Weinberger wrote:
> Am 19.06.2016 um 01:20 schrieb Daniel Golle:
> > In MBR there used to be an 'active' flag stored for each partition.
> > Maybe it'd be nice to introduce something similar to mark UBI volumes
> > to be the default rootfs.
> > Currently we solve this issue by convention: If a volume is named
> > 'rootfs' it is automatically mounted during boot. Depending on the
> > filesystem in use a ubiblock device has to be created as well.
> > This is mostly just the continuation of the existing naming convention
> > of mtd partitions, a patch OpenWrt is carrying around for a long
> > while already.
> > To support the same on UBI, another set of patches was made.
>
> Sorry, I still have troubles to understand your use case.
> Both of you seem to hate the kernel command line for reasons
> I don't fully understand so far.
I like the kernel command line a lot :)
And *being the end-user* I like to be the one defining and modifying it
according to my current needs. For that reason I do *not* like firmware
bootloaders to prepend/append or even overwrite the cmdline for things
like selecting the rootfs, because usually that restricts the use of
the relevant parameters by device owners.
Imagine: The device runs a bootloader which already sets rootfs= or
overwrites the cmdline of the stock firmware. How will an end-user
who cannot change the bootloader use an alternative OS which uses e.g.
a USB pendrive as it's rootfs? This is why we end up with things like
renaming kernel cmdline parameters in alternative firmware projects,
e.g. rootfs2=...., so end-users can re-gain access to cmdline
parameters augmented by the bootloader.
For that reason I believe that using the cmdline to pass
*non-user-defined* details from the bootloader to the kernel is just
not such a nice thing to do.
>
> > I agree that there should be a way to pass this through the of_node
> > of the mtd partition which is defined in the device tree.
> > Selecting to-be-ubi-attached mtd partitions in device-tree would
> > replace patch:
> >
> > https://git.lede-project.org/?p=source.git;a=blob;f=target/linux/generic/patches-4.4/490-ubi-auto-attach-mtd-device-named-ubi-or-data-on-boot.patch
>
> What is the need of this? Use use the kernel command line to tell UBI from which MTD to attach.
The same kernel gets used on many devices having different $vendor
mtd-partition layouts. A way other than the kernel cmdline allows
to specify the default behaviour without restricting the user to
manually use those cmdline options.
>
> > To auto-select the rootfs, we currently carry another bunch of patches
> >
> > https://git.lede-project.org/?p=source.git;a=blob;f=target/linux/generic/patches-4.4/491-ubi-auto-create-ubiblock-device-for-rootfs.patch
>
> Same question here.
>
> > https://git.lede-project.org/?p=source.git;a=blob;f=target/linux/generic/patches-4.4/492-try-auto-mounting-ubi0-rootfs-in-init-do_mounts.c.patch
>
> Ditto.
>
> > https://git.lede-project.org/?p=source.git;a=blob;f=target/linux/generic/patches-4.4/493-ubi-set-ROOT_DEV-to-ubiblock-rootfs-if-unset.patch
>
> Ditto.
>
Same arguments as above. In addition, we do not want to hard-code the
filesystem type used for the rootfs volume, as it can either be UBIFS
or a read-only filesystem needing a ubiblock device. Thus we would
need the bootloader to know which filesystem *type* is being used and
then decide wether to pass 'rootfs=ubiX:Y' or
'ubiblock=... rootfs=/dev/ubiblock0'.
> > This is more or less filesystem-agnostic and works fine as long as
> > there is only one volume called 'rootfs' and this volume is always
> > used as rootfs.
> >
> > Dual-boot setups will need some way to pass the active rootfs volume to
> > the kernel. While I agree that this is possible by appending or
> > prepending to the cmdline string passed to the kernel, this either
> > limits the users' ability to manually specify the rootfs using the
> > cmdline or becomes a more complex task to only append/prepend the
> > cmdline in case the user-defined string doesn't already contain
> > relevant parameters...
>
> Sorry, but this is just a tooling problem and not to be addressed in the kernel.
> There is also the possibility to use an initramfs (either as file or embedded in the kernel)
> if the mount/attach logic becomes *really* complicated...
>
> > Thus it'd be nicer to flag the default rootfs volume via the device-
> > tree.
>
> As I said, as far I'm informed device tree is for configuring Linux, it describes
> the hardware. We also don't have LVM, DM or iSCSI bindings in DT. ;)
> Maybe device tree folks will tell more...
But we do have MTD and MTD partitions in DT. To me it'd feel more
consistent if MTD devices, partitioning and which MTD partition(s) to
use as UBI would be defined in the same place.
Cheers
Daniel
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