| Samsung XE303C12 aka Chromebook Snow |
| ==================================== |
| |
| This file describes booting the Chromebook from an SD card containing |
| Buildroot kernel and rootfs, using the original bootloader. This is |
| the least invasive way to get Buildroot onto the devices and a good |
| starting point. |
| |
| The bootloader will only boot a kernel from a GPT partition marked |
| bootable with cgpt tool from vboot-utils package. |
| The kernel image must be signed using futility from the same package. |
| The signing part is done by sign.sh script in this directory. |
| |
| It does not really matter where rootfs is as long as the kernel is able |
| to find it, but this particular configuration assumes the kernel is on |
| partition 1 and rootfs is on partition 2 of the SD card. |
| Make sure to check kernel.args if you change this. |
| |
| Making the boot media |
| --------------------- |
| Start by configuring and building the images. |
| |
| make chromebook_snow_defconfig |
| make menuconfig # if necessary |
| make |
| |
| The important files are: |
| |
| uImage.kpart (kernel and device tree, signed) |
| rootfs.tar |
| bootsd.img (SD card image containing both kernel and rootfs) |
| |
| Write the image directly to some SD card. |
| WARNING: make sure there is nothing important on that card, |
| and double-check the device name! |
| |
| SD=/dev/mmcblk1 # may be /dev/sdX on some hosts |
| dd if=output/images/bootsd.img of=$SD |
| |
| Switching to developer mode and booting from SD |
| ----------------------------------------------- |
| Power Chromebook down, then power it up while holding Esc+F3. |
| BEWARE: switching to developer mode deletes all user data. |
| Create backups if you need them. |
| |
| While in developer mode, Chromebook will boot into a white screen saying |
| "OS verification is off". |
| |
| Press Ctrl-D at this screen to boot Chromium OS from eMMC. |
| Press Ctrl-U at this screen to boot from SD (or USB) |
| Press Power to power it off. |
| Do NOT press Space unless you mean it. |
| This will switch it back to normal mode. |
| |
| The is no way to get rid of the white screen without re-flashing the bootloader. |
| |
| Troubleshooting |
| --------------- |
| Loud *BEEP* after pressing Ctrl-U means there's no valid partition to boot from. |
| Which in turn means either bad GPT or improperly signed kernel. |
| |
| Return to the OS verification screen without any sounds means the code managed |
| to reboot the board. May indicate properly signed but invalid image. |
| |
| Blank screen means the image is valid and properly signed but cannot boot |
| for some reason, like missing or incorrect DT. |
| |
| In case the board becomes unresponsive: |
| |
| * Press Esc+F3+Power. The board should reboot instantly. |
| Remove SD card to prevent it from attempting a system recovery. |
| |
| * Hold Power button for around 10s. The board should shut down into |
| its soft-off mode. Press Power button again or open the lid to turn in on. |
| |
| * If that does not work, disconnect the charger and push a hidden |
| button on the underside with a pin of some sort. The board should shut |
| down completely. Opening the lid and pressing Power button will not work. |
| To turn it back on, connect the charger. |
| |
| Partitioning SD card manually |
| ----------------------------- |
| Check mksd.sh for partitioning commands. |
| |
| Use parted and cgpt on a real device, and calculate the partition |
| sizes properly. The kernel partition may be as small as 4MB, but |
| you will probably want the rootfs to occupy the whole remaining space. |
| |
| cgpt may be used to check current layout: |
| |
| output/host/bin/cgpt show $SD |
| |
| All sizes and all offsets are in 512-byte blocks. |
| |
| Writing kernel and rootfs to a partitioned SD card |
| -------------------------------------------------- |
| Write .kpart directly to the bootable partition: |
| |
| dd if=output/images/uImage.kpart of=${SD}1 |
| |
| Make a new filesystem on the rootfs partition, and unpack rootfs.tar there: |
| |
| mkfs.ext4 ${SD}2 |
| mount ${SD2} /mnt/<ROOTFS-PARTITION> |
| tar -xvf output/images/rootfs.tar -C /mnt/<ROOTFS-PARTITION> |
| umount /mnt/<ROOTFS-PARTITION> |
| |
| This will require root permissions even if you can write to $SD. |
| |
| Kernel command line |
| ------------------- |
| The command line is taken from board/chromebook/snow/kernel.args and stored |
| in the vboot header (which also holds the signature). |
| |
| The original bootloader prepends "cros_secure console= " to the supplied |
| command line. The only way to suppress this is to enable CMDLINE_FORCE |
| in the kernel config, disabling external command line completely. |
| |
| That's not necessary however. The mainline kernel ignores cros_secure, |
| and supplying console=tty1 in kernel.args undoes the effect of console= |
| |
| Booting with console= suppresses all kernel output. |
| As a side effect, it makes /dev/console unusable, which the init in use must |
| be able to handle. |
| |
| WiFi card |
| --------- |
| Run modprobe mwifiex_sdio to load the driver. |
| The name of the device should be mlan0. |
| |
| Further reading |
| --------------- |
| https://www.chromium.org/chromium-os/developer-information-for-chrome-os-devices/samsung-arm-chromebook |
| http://linux-exynos.org/wiki/Samsung_Chromebook_XE303C12/Installing_Linux |
| http://archlinuxarm.org/platforms/armv7/samsung/samsung-chromebook |
| http://www.de7ec7ed.com/2013/05/application-processor-ap-uart-samsung.html |
| http://www.de7ec7ed.com/2013/05/embedded-controller-ec-uart-samsung.html |