User:GNUtoo
- I did the port to the M4A785T-M
- I've an x60
- I've an alix.1C
scripts to help getting rid of the vbios of the x60
Script 1: generate the io access for the coreboot driver
- follow "Case study: new laptop (not complete, sorry)" in https://docs.google.com/document/d/1g8FMob25VZYxbWri2iFB8YiSL8gwF9vKJH3HGxr0xQU/edit?pli=1
- pacman -S plan9port
- cp /opt/plan9/bin/ssam ./
- replace the following line in ./ssam:
#!/usr/local/plan9/bin/rc
by the following line:
#!/opt/plan9/bin/rc
- create the ssamfix file with:
,s/\[ *[0-9]+\..[0-9]+\]//g ,s/^ *//g y/^[RWU]/s/^/M /g ,s/\nU/ ;;;UDELAY/g ,|uniq -c ,s/^ *//g ,s/(^[0-9]+) ([MRW])/\2 \1/g ,s/"/\\"/g ,s/^M ([0-9]+) *(\[.*)/{M, \1, "\2"},/g ,s/^M ([0-9]+) *(.*)/{M, \1, "\2"},/g ,s/: */:/g ,s/...UDELAY *([0-9]+)/\1/g ,s/^([RW]) ([0-9]+) (.*):0x([0-9a-f]+)(.*)/{\1, \2, "", \3, 0x\4, \5},/g
- run the following commands:
. /etc/profile.d/plan9.sh cat dmesg| ./ssam -f ssamfix > foo.c
Script2: compare the io access that were too fast
- Replace {V,0,}, with {V,7,}, in src/mainboard/vendor/device/i915io.c
- cat /dev/ttyUSB0 > accesses.txt
- Use that script against accesses.txt to find the guilty accesses:
#!/usr/bin/env python2 import sys,re def main(args): try: f = open(args[1],'ro') except: print args[0], " <file>" for line in f: if re.match("0x[0-9]*: Got .*, expect .*",line): line = line.replace('\r\n',).replace(", expect ",':').replace(": Got ",':') split = line.split(':') #print split if split[1] != split[2]: print line if __name__ == '__main__': main(sys.argv)
How to get semantic IOs
In i915tool:
- import your IOs in prettyregs.c
- compile prettyregs.c
- run prettyregs
How to get rid of the vbios of the x60 [New Version]
WARNING: DO NOT ATTEMPT TO DO THAT WITHOUT A FLASH RECOVERY MECANISM
Apply the coreboot patches, and adapt them for your mainboard
Then configure coreboot with:
[*] Output verbose x86emu debug messages [ ] Trace JMP/RETF [ ] Trace all opcodes [ ] Log Plug&Play accesses [ ] Log Disk I/O [ ] Log PMM [ ] Debug VESA BIOS Extensions [ ] Redirect INT10 output to console [ ] Log intXX calls [ ] Log special memory accesses [ ] Log all memory accesses [*] Log IO accesses
Build and flash coreboot.
git clone my fork of the i915tool until the code is merged in the official i915tool.
Get the tarball that contains the generated code, extract it.
Also get the i915_regs.h.gz file, decompress it and put it in final/
Then go into i915tool and apply some patches for the x60 or redo them for your mainboard.
Run make:
$ cd i915tool $ make
Then go into the x60 directory(or the directory of your device):
$ cd x60
use picocom -b 115200 /dev/ttyUSB0 or stty to set the bauds of the Serial port. Then get logs:
$ cat /dev/ttyUSB0 | tee coreboot.log
Then remove the binary symbols, dos2unix will help identifying where they are:
$ dos2unix coreboot.log dos2unix: Binary symbol found at line 136332 dos2unix: Skipping binary file coreboot.log
Then do:
$ dos2unix coreboot.log
Then remove the lines before and after the log, the log looks like that:
[0047229e]c000:51cb outl(0x80001014, 0x0cf8) [0047325f]c000:51d4 inw(0x0cfc) = 0x50a1
Then run make and fix the errors:
$ make
Then copy to coreboot as it says. Then if necessary try to compact the source code a bit, here for me I have a really long list of:
io_i915_write32(0xcffbe001,0x8001); io_i915_write32(0xcffbe001,0x8005); io_i915_write32(0xcffbe001,0x8009); io_i915_write32(0xcffbe001,0x800d); io_i915_write32(0xcffbe001,0x8011);
That can be replaced with:
int i = 0; for (i=0x8001;i<0x3fffa;i+=4){ io_i915_write32(0xcffbe001,i); }
Import the final code into the chromium fork of coreboot with my patches on top.