| Copyright (c) 2016 Xilinx Inc. |
| |
| This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later. See |
| the COPYING file in the top-level directory. |
| |
| |
| The 'loader' device allows the user to load multiple images or values into |
| QEMU at startup. |
| |
| Loading Data into Memory Values |
| ------------------------------- |
| The loader device allows memory values to be set from the command line. This |
| can be done by following the syntax below: |
| |
| -device loader,addr=<addr>,data=<data>,data-len=<data-len> |
| [,data-be=<data-be>][,cpu-num=<cpu-num>] |
| |
| <addr> - The address to store the data in. |
| <data> - The value to be written to the address. The maximum size of |
| the data is 8 bytes. |
| <data-len> - The length of the data in bytes. This argument must be |
| included if the data argument is. |
| <data-be> - Set to true if the data to be stored on the guest should be |
| written as big endian data. The default is to write little |
| endian data. |
| <cpu-num> - The number of the CPU's address space where the data should |
| be loaded. If not specified the address space of the first |
| CPU is used. |
| |
| All values are parsed using the standard QemuOps parsing. This allows the user |
| to specify any values in any format supported. By default the values |
| will be parsed as decimal. To use hex values the user should prefix the number |
| with a '0x'. |
| |
| An example of loading value 0x8000000e to address 0xfd1a0104 is: |
| -device loader,addr=0xfd1a0104,data=0x8000000e,data-len=4 |
| |
| Setting a CPU's Program Counter |
| ------------------------------- |
| The loader device allows the CPU's PC to be set from the command line. This |
| can be done by following the syntax below: |
| |
| -device loader,addr=<addr>,cpu-num=<cpu-num> |
| |
| <addr> - The value to use as the CPU's PC. |
| <cpu-num> - The number of the CPU whose PC should be set to the |
| specified value. |
| |
| All values are parsed using the standard QemuOps parsing. This allows the user |
| to specify any values in any format supported. By default the values |
| will be parsed as decimal. To use hex values the user should prefix the number |
| with a '0x'. |
| |
| An example of setting CPU 0's PC to 0x8000 is: |
| -device loader,addr=0x8000,cpu-num=0 |
| |
| Loading Files |
| ------------- |
| The loader device also allows files to be loaded into memory. It can load ELF, |
| U-Boot, and Intel HEX executable formats as well as raw images. The syntax is |
| shown below: |
| |
| -device loader,file=<file>[,addr=<addr>][,cpu-num=<cpu-num>][,force-raw=<raw>] |
| |
| <file> - A file to be loaded into memory |
| <addr> - The memory address where the file should be loaded. This is |
| required for raw images and ignored for non-raw files. |
| <cpu-num> - This specifies the CPU that should be used. This is an |
| optional argument and will cause the CPU's PC to be set to |
| the memory address where the raw file is loaded or the entry |
| point specified in the executable format header. This option |
| should only be used for the boot image. |
| This will also cause the image to be written to the specified |
| CPU's address space. If not specified, the default is CPU 0. |
| <force-raw> - Setting force-raw=on forces the file to be treated as a raw |
| image. This can be used to load supported executable formats |
| as if they were raw. |
| |
| All values are parsed using the standard QemuOps parsing. This allows the user |
| to specify any values in any format supported. By default the values |
| will be parsed as decimal. To use hex values the user should prefix the number |
| with a '0x'. |
| |
| An example of loading an ELF file which CPU0 will boot is shown below: |
| -device loader,file=./images/boot.elf,cpu-num=0 |
| |
| Restrictions and ToDos |
| ---------------------- |
| - At the moment it is just assumed that if you specify a cpu-num then you |
| want to set the PC as well. This might not always be the case. In future |
| the internal state 'set_pc' (which exists in the generic loader now) should |
| be exposed to the user so that they can choose if the PC is set or not. |