Lesson1

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The wiki is being retired!

Documentation is now handled by the same processes we use for code: Add something to the Documentation/ directory in the coreboot repo, and it will be rendered to https://doc.coreboot.org/. Contributions welcome!

coreboot lesson 1 - Starting from scratch

From a fresh ubuntu 16.04 linux install, here are all the steps required for a very basic build:

Download, configure, and build coreboot

Step 1 - Install tools and libraries needed for coreboot

$ sudo apt-get install -y git libncurses5-dev m4 bison flex zlib1g-dev

Step 2 - Download coreboot source tree

$ git clone https://review.coreboot.org/coreboot
$ cd coreboot

Step 3 - Build the coreboot toolchain

Please note that this can take a significant amount of time

$ make crossgcc-i386 CPUS=$(nproc)

Step 4 - Build the payload - coreinfo

$ make -C payloads/coreinfo olddefconfig
$ make -C payloads/coreinfo

Step 5 - Configure the mainboard

$ make menuconfig
   select 'Mainboard' menu
   Beside 'Mainboard vendor' should be '(Emulation)'
   Beside 'Mainboard model' should be 'QEMU x86 i440fx/piix4'
   select exit
   
   select 'Payload' menu
   select 'Add a Payload'
   choose 'An Elf executable payload'
   select 'Payload path and filename'
   enter 'payloads/coreinfo/build/coreinfo.elf'
   select exit
   select exit
   select yes

check your configuration (optional step):

$ make savedefconfig
$ cat defconfig

There should only be two lines:

CONFIG_PAYLOAD_ELF=y
CONFIG_PAYLOAD_FILE="payloads/coreinfo/build/coreinfo.elf"

Step 6 - build coreboot

$ make

At the end of the build, you should see:

Build emulation/qemu-i440fx (QEMU x86 i440fx/piix4)

This means your build was successful. The output from the build is in the build directory. build/coreboot.rom is the full rom file.

Test the image using QEMU

Step 7 - Install QEMU

$ sudo apt-get install -y qemu

Step 8 - Run QEMU

Start QEMU, and point it to the ROM you just built:

$ qemu-system-x86_64 -bios build/coreboot.rom -serial stdio

You should see the serial output of coreboot in the original console window, and a new window will appear running the coreinfo payload.

Summary:

1

Install tools and libraries needed for coreboot.

You installed the minimum additional requirements for ubuntu to download and build coreboot. Ubuntu already has most of the other tools that would be required installed by default.

- git is needed to download coreboot from the coreboot git repository.
- libncurses5-dev is needed to build the menu for 'make menuconfig'
-  m4, bison, flex, and zlib1g-dev are needed to build the coreboot toolchain.

If you had started from a different distribution, you might need to install the basic gcc toolchain, wget, make, or many other items.

2

Download coreboot source tree.

This will download a 'read-only' copy of the coreboot tree. This just means that if you made changes to the coreboot tree, you couldn't immediately contribute them back to the community. To pull a copy of coreboot that would allow you to contribute back, you would first need to sign up for an account on gerrit.

3

Build the coreboot toolchain.

This builds one of the coreboot cross-compiler toolchains for X86 platforms. Because of the variability of compilers and the other required tools between the various operating systems that coreboot can be built on, coreboot supplies and uses its own cross-compiler toolchain to build the binaries that end up as part of the coreboot ROM. The toolchain provided by the operating system (the 'host toolchain') is used to build various tools that will run on the local system during the build process.

4

Build the payload.

To actually do anything useful with coreboot, you need to build a payload to include in the rom. The idea behind coreboot is that it does the minimum amount possible before passing control of the machine to a payload. There are various payloads such as grub or SeaBIOS that are typically used to boot the operating system. Instead, we used coreinfo, a small demonstration payload that allows the user to look at various things such as memory and the contents of coreboot's cbfs - the pieces that make up the coreboot rom.

5

Configure the mainboard.

This step configures coreboot's build options using the menuconfig interface to Kconfig. Kconfig is the same configuration program used by the linux kernel. It allows you to enable, disable, and change various values to control the coreboot build process, including which mainboard(motherboard) to use, which toolchain to use, and how the runtime debug console should be presented and saved.

6

Build coreboot.

You may notice that a number of other pieces are downloaded at the beginning of the build process. These are the git submodules used in various coreboot builds. By default, the BLOBs submodule is not downloaded. This git submodule may be required for other builds for microcode or other binaries. To enable downloading this submodule, select the option "Allow use of binary-only repository" in the "General Setup" menu of Kconfig

This attempts to build the coreboot rom. The rom file itself ends up in the build directory as 'coreboot.rom'. At the end of the build process, the build displayed the contents of the rom file.

7

Install QEMU

QEMU is a processor emulator which we can use to show coreboot

8

Run QEMU.

Here's the command line broken down:

qemu-system-x86_64

This starts the QEMU emulator with the i440FX host PCI bridge and PIIX3 PCI to ISA bridge.

-bios build/coreboot.rom

Use the bios rom image that we just built. If this is left off, the standard SeaBIOS image that comes with QEMU is used.

-serial stdio

Send the serial output to the console. This allows you to view the coreboot debug output.