| .. |
| Copyright (c) 2020, Linaro |
| |
| Guest Loader |
| ------------ |
| |
| The guest loader is similar to the ``generic-loader`` although it is |
| aimed at a particular use case of loading hypervisor guests. This is |
| useful for debugging hypervisors without having to jump through the |
| hoops of firmware and boot-loaders. |
| |
| The guest loader does two things: |
| |
| - load blobs (kernels and initial ram disks) into memory |
| - sets platform FDT data so hypervisors can find and boot them |
| |
| This is what is typically done by a boot-loader like grub using it's |
| multi-boot capability. A typical example would look like: |
| |
| .. parsed-literal:: |
| |
| |qemu_system| -kernel ~/xen.git/xen/xen \ |
| -append "dom0_mem=1G,max:1G loglvl=all guest_loglvl=all" \ |
| -device guest-loader,addr=0x42000000,kernel=Image,bootargs="root=/dev/sda2 ro console=hvc0 earlyprintk=xen" \ |
| -device guest-loader,addr=0x47000000,initrd=rootfs.cpio |
| |
| In the above example the Xen hypervisor is loaded by the -kernel |
| parameter and passed it's boot arguments via -append. The Dom0 guest |
| is loaded into the areas of memory. Each blob will get |
| ``/chosen/module@<addr>`` entry in the FDT to indicate it's location and |
| size. Additional information can be passed with by using additional |
| arguments. |
| |
| Currently the only supported machines which use FDT data to boot are |
| the ARM and RiscV ``virt`` machines. |
| |
| Arguments |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The full syntax of the guest-loader is:: |
| |
| -device guest-loader,addr=<addr>[,kernel=<file>,[bootargs=<args>]][,initrd=<file>] |
| |
| ``addr=<addr>`` |
| This is mandatory and indicates the start address of the blob. |
| |
| ``kernel|initrd=<file>`` |
| Indicates the filename of the kernel or initrd blob. Both blobs will |
| have the "multiboot,module" compatibility string as well as |
| "multiboot,kernel" or "multiboot,ramdisk" as appropriate. |
| |
| ``bootargs=<args>`` |
| This is an optional field for kernel blobs which will pass command |
| like via the ``/chosen/module@<addr>/bootargs`` node. |