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- // -*- mode:doc; -*-
- // vim: set syntax=asciidoc:
- Running OpenADK created Linux firmware
- ======================================
- Bootloader
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
- The Bootloader is used to initialize the machine and load the Linux kernel.
- A list of popular Bootloaders can be found on http://elinux.org/Bootloader.
- OpenADK provides the Bootloader if necessary for a target system.
- You can find them in +make menuconfg+ under +Packages/Bootloader+.
- Some Bootloaders require the Linux kernel in a special format (SREC, ELF, ..),
- compressed or with a special header. This will be automatically done by
- OpenADK in +target/<arch>/Makefile+ while creating the firmware archives or
- images.
- Linux kernel
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The kernel is a program that constitutes the central core of a computer
- operating system. It has complete control over everything that occurs in the
- system. The Bootloader can provide some basic runtime configuration
- parameters via the kernel commandline feature.
- The Linux kernel in OpenADK is intended to be very small in size and will
- be by default compressed with xz compression algorithm, if available for
- the target system. You can configure the compression algorithm used for the
- compression of the Linux kernel and if choosen the initramfs filesystem in
- +make menuconfig+. In +Kernel configuration+ you have the choice between
- dfferent kernel versions. The latest version will be automatically used.
- There you can choose any needed addon drivers or any supported runtime
- and debugging features.
- The kernel expands itself on boot, if compressed, and then initialize the
- hardware. The additional kernel modules are loaded later by a init script.
- The kernel will autoamtically mount the virtual filesystem /dev as devtmpfs
- and then will execute +/sbin/init+ in userspace.
- init system
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
- The _init_ program is the first userspace program started by the kernel (it
- carries the PID number 1), and is responsible for starting the userspace
- services and programs (for example: web server, graphical applications, other
- network servers, etc.).
- OpenADK uses *Busybox* init. Amongst many programs, Busybox has an
- implementation of a basic +init+ program, which is sufficient for most embedded
- systems. The Busybox +init+ program will read the +/etc/inittab+ file at boot
- to know what to do. The syntax of this file can be found in
- http://git.busybox.net/busybox/tree/examples/inittab (note that Busybox
- +inittab+ syntax is special: do not use a random +inittab+ documentation from
- the Internet to learn about Busybox +inittab+). The default +inittab+ in
- OpenADK is generated while producing the +base-files+ package. The main job
- the default inittab does is to start the +/etc/init.d/rcS+ shell script, and
- start one or more +getty+ programs (which provides a login prompt).
- /dev management
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- On a Linux system, the +/dev+ directory contains special files, called
- _device files_, that allow userspace applications to access the
- hardware devices managed by the Linux kernel. Without these _device
- files_, your userspace applications would not be able to use the
- hardware devices, even if they are properly recognized by the Linux
- kernel.
- OpenADK uses *dynamic device nodes using devtmpfs and mdev*. This method relies
- on the _devtmpfs_ virtual filesystem in the kernel, which is enabled by default
- for all OpenADK generated kernels, and adds the +mdev+ userspace utility on top
- of it. +mdev+ is a program part of Busybox that the kernel will call every time
- a device is added or removed. Thanks to the +/etc/mdev.conf+ configuration
- file, +mdev+ can be configured to for example, set specific permissions or
- ownership on a device file, call a script or application whenever a device
- appears or disappear, etc. Basically, it allows _userspace_ to react on device
- addition and removal events. +mdev+ is also important if you have devices that
- require a firmware, as it will be responsible for pushing the firmware contents
- to the kernel. +mdev+ is a lightweight implementation (with fewer features) of
- +udev+. For more details about +mdev+ and the syntax of its configuration file,
- see http://git.busybox.net/busybox/tree/docs/mdev.txt.
- initscripts
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
- The /etc/init.d/rcS script will execute all shell scripts in /etc/init.d in
- order with the parameter +autostart+. The order is identified by the +#INIT+
- comment in the script. All scripts are sourcing the +/etc/rc.conf+ file to
- determine if a service should be started on boot and which flags if any are
- used for the service. By default all services are disabled. If the variable
- for a service is set to "DAEMON" and mksh is installed, the service starts
- asynchronously in the background. Most scripts provided by OpenADK via
- +package/<pkgname>/files/<pkgname>.init+ are like:
- ---------------------
- #!/bin/sh
- #PKG foo
- #INIT 60
- . /etc/rc.conf
- case $1 in
- autostop) ;;
- autostart)
- test x"${foo:-NO}" = x"NO" && exit 0
- test x"$foo" = x"DAEMON" && test -x /bin/mksh && exec mksh -T- $0 start
- exec sh $0 start
- ;;
- start)
- /usr/sbin/foo $foo_flags
- ;;
- stop)
- kill $(pgrep -f /usr/sbin/foo )
- ;;
- restart)
- sh $0 stop
- sh $0 start
- ;;
- *)
- echo "usage: $0 (start|stop|restart)"
- exit 1
- esac
- exit $?
- ---------------------
- cfgfs - configuration file system
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The cfgfs application for the OpenADK system uses a special small partition on
- the block device of your embedded system (f.e. flash, sd card, compact flash
- or hard disk). Only changes made to /etc on your embedded system are saved in a
- compressed form (using LZO1 compression algorithm) in this partition. There is
- no Linux filesystem on this partition. The embedded system initialization
- process will setup /etc correctly on boot up, when cfgfs application is found.
- After making any changes to /etc, which should survive a reboot of the embedded
- system must be written to the cfgfs partition via “cfgfs commit”. Trying to
- reboot, shutdown or halt an embedded system with unsaved changes will generate
- an error, which can be circumvented. Updates to /etc via a package
- manager (f.e. ipkg) will be reported.
- ---------------------
- cfgfs
- Configuration Filesystem Utility (cfgfs), Version 1.09
- Syntax:
- /sbin/cfgfs commit [-f]
- /sbin/cfgfs erase
- /sbin/cfgfs setup [-N]
- /sbin/cfgfs status [-rq]
- /sbin/cfgfs { dump | restore } [<filename>]
- ---------------------
- network configuration
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- On bootup +/etc/network/interfaces+ is used to find out which network configuration
- should be used. The default is to use DHCP (via busybox +udhcpc+) on the first found
- ethernet device to configure the network. See network configuration for detailed syntax
- of +/etc/network/interfaces+. It is similar to Debian network configuration and uses
- +ifupdown+ from +busybox+.
- See Appendix xref:network-configuration[]
- getting a shell on the system
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- There are two methods available to get a shell on your embedded system created with
- OpenADK. You can either login locally via serial console or graphical console or you
- can login remotely via secure shell.
- In both cases the default user is +root+ and the default password is
- +linux123+. *You should always change the default password!!* You can do this
- either via +passwd+ on the system or you can preconfigure a password via +make
- menuconfig+ under +Runtime configuration+.
- The default shell used in OpenADK is +mksh+ from http://www.mirbsd.org/mksh/.
- You can change the shell in +make menuconfig+ under +Runtime configuration+. Be
- aware of the fact that the bootup process might use some +mksh+ features to
- speedup the system start. When you change the shell for system +/bin/sh+ the
- slower startup is used as a fallback.
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