.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 .. Copyright (C) 2021 Arm Ltd. Arm Juno development platform ============================= The `Juno development board`_ is an open, vendor-neutral, Armv8-A development platform, made by Arm Ltd. It is part of the Versatile Express family. There are three revisions of the board: * Juno r0, with two Cortex-A57 and four Cortex-A53 cores, without PCIe. * Juno r1, with two Cortex-A57 and four Cortex-A53 cores, in later silicon revisions, and with PCIe slots, Gigabit Ethernet and two SATA ports. * Juno r2, with two Cortex-A72 and four Cortex-A53 cores, otherwise the same as r1. Among other things, the motherboard contains a management controller (MCC), an FPGA providing I/O interfaces (IOFPGA) and 64MB of NOR flash. The provided platform devices resemble the VExpress peripherals. The actual SoC also contains a Cortex-M3 based System Control Processor (SCP). The `V2M-Juno TRM`_ contains more technical details. U-Boot build ------------ There is only one defconfig and one binary build that covers all three board revisions, so to generate the needed ``u-boot.bin``: .. code-block:: bash $ make vexpress_aemv8a_juno_defconfig $ make The automatic distro boot sequence looks for UEFI boot applications and ``boot.scr`` scripts on various boot media, starting with USB, then on disks connected to the two SATA ports, PXE, DHCP and eventually on the NOR flash. U-Boot installation ------------------- This assumes there is some firmware on the SD card or NOR flash (see below for more details). The U-Boot binary is included in the Trusted Firmware FIP image, so after building U-Boot, this needs to be repackaged or recompiled. The NOR flash will be updated by the MCC, based on the content of a micro-SD card, which is exported as a USB mass storage device via the rear USB-B socket. So to access that SD card, connect a cable to some host computer, and mount the FAT16 partition of the UMS device. If there is no device, check the upper serial port for a prompt, and explicitly enable the USB interface:: Cmd> usb_on Enabling debug USB... Repackaging an existing FIP image ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ To prevent problems, it is probably a good idea to backup the existing firmware, for instance by just copying the entire ``SOFTWARE/`` directory, or at least the current ``fip.bin``, beforehand. To just replace the BL33 image in the exising FIP image, you can use `fiptool`_ from the Trusted Firmware repository, on the image file: .. code-block:: bash git clone https://git.trustedfirmware.org/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a.git cd trusted-firmware-a make fiptool tools/fiptool/fiptool update --nt-fw=/path/to/your/u-boot.bin /mnt/juno/SOFTWARE/fip.bin Unmount the USB mass storage device and reboot the board, the new ``fip.bin`` will be automatically written to the NOR flash and then used. Rebuilding Trusted Firmware ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can also generate a new FIP image by compiling Arm Trusted Firmware, and providing ``u-boot.bin`` as the BL33 file. For that you can either build the required `SCP firmware`_ yourself, or just extract the existing version from your ``fip.bin``, using `fiptool`_ (see above): .. code-block:: bash mkdir /tmp/juno; cd /tmp/juno fiptool unpack /mnt/juno/SOFTWARE/fip.bin Then build TF-A: .. code-block:: bash git clone https://git.trustedfirmware.org/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a.git cd trusted-firmware-a make CROSS_COMPILE=aarch64-linux-gnu- PLAT=juno DEBUG=1 \ SCP_BL2=/tmp/juno/scp-fw.bin BL33=/path/to/your/u-boot.bin fiptool all fip cp build/juno/debug/bl1.bin build/juno/debug/fip.bin /mnt/juno/SOFTWARE Then umount the USB device, and reboot, as above. Device trees ------------ The device tree files for the boards are maintained in the Linux kernel repository. They end up in the ``SOFTWARE/`` directory of the SD card, as ``juno.dtb``, ``juno-r1.dtb``, and ``juno-r2.dtb``, respectively. The MCC firmware will look into the images.txt file matching the board revision, from the ``SITE1/`` directory. Each version there will reference its respective DTB file in ``SOFTWARE/``, and so the correct version will end in the NOR flash, in the ``board.dtb`` partition. U-Boot picks its control DTB from there, you can pass this on to a kernel using ``$fdtcontroladdr``. You can update the DTBs anytime, by building them using the ``dtbs`` make target from a Linux kernel tree, then just copying the generated binaries to the ``SOFTWARE/`` directory of the SD card. .. _`Juno development board`: https://developer.arm.com/tools-and-software/development-boards/juno-development-board .. _`V2M-Juno TRM`: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/100113/latest .. _`fiptool`: https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware/tree/master/tools/fiptool .. _`SCP firmware`: https://github.com/ARM-software/SCP-firmware.git