From 2faa892e7a799dc7d87c5697e185185baa83a282 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Francis Rowe Date: Tue, 17 Feb 2015 01:24:25 -0500 Subject: move files to site/ --- (limited to 'vortex86ex/index.php') diff --git a/vortex86ex/index.php b/vortex86ex/index.php deleted file mode 100644 index 8a1370a..0000000 --- a/vortex86ex/index.php +++ /dev/null @@ -1,307 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - - - - dmp vortex86ex in libreboot - - - - - - - -
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dmp vortex86ex in libreboot

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- small embedded system (SoC), i586 CPU - made by a company called DMP. Seems like there are no blobs except a small firmware - for a keyboard controller (PS/2), could use usb keyboard instead if - the ps/2 'blob' is an issue. -

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- (Back to homepage) -

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- Last updated 00:22 UTC+0100 on November 23rd, 2014 -

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#libreboot on November 15th, 2014

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-<pehjota> After the conversation yesterday about KolibriOS, I stumbled upon some hardware that community seems to like: the Vortex86 series of i586-compatible SoCs and the DMP EBOX nettops that use those SoCs.  coreboot supports one computer by DMP (src/mainboard/dmp/vortex86ex/) which appears to be the EBOX-3100 (the only EBOX nettop AFAICT without VGA).  Three years ago someone ported coreboot to the
-<pehjota> EBOX-3300MX but apparently never upstreamed that work.  These Vortex86 SoCs look pretty good, freedom-wise: I think there's no microcode at all, the VGA cores don't seem to need option ROMs, and there are no blobs for things like ME/MRC/AGESA.  They have relatively low CPU clock rates (most at 600 or 933 MHz), so they aren't great for compiling or gaming.  But they're sold as nettops, thin clients,
-<pehjota> and embedded systems, and the prices ($95–$269 from the US distributor) aren't bad.
-<pehjota> DMP EBOX computers: http://www.compactpc.com.tw/en/index.html.  EBOX-3300MX coreboot port: https://github.com/XVilka/coreboot (last six commits).  Basic (and incomplete) information on the Vortex86 SoCs: http://www.vortex86.com/.  Some technical overviews and resources: http://www.dmp.com.tw/tech/.  DMP's BusyBox/Linux distribution (with a Linux config file but apparently no source code):
-<pehjota> http://www.dmp.com.tw/tech/os-xlinux/.
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#libreboot on November 16th, 2014

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-<fchmmr> pehjota, I added info about those vortex86 machines to libreboot.org/release.html and to git. 
-<fchmmr> By the way, xvilka (the person behind those commits on that github page) is in #coreboot at the moment. 
-<pehjota> Cool.  I can't discuss it right now either (busy and have to go idle soon), but I'm interested in his work and possibly seeing at least EBOX-3350MX (a nice cheap one with VGA) supported as well.
-<pehjota> The EBOX systems are cheap (once you add the cost of a power supply and enclosure to a BBB, it isn't much cheaper than an EBOX is) and most have VGA.  Some have dual Ethernet and miniPCI.
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-<mtjm> what is in dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc in coreboot sources?
-<fchmmr> mtjm, coreboot/src/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc is part of the "DEBLOB" file in libreboot. 
-<fchmmr> I'll check it's contents in a coreboot clone. 
-<fchmmr> it's referenced (included) by src/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/biosdata.{inc,lds}
-<fchmmr> src/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/biosdata.inc: #include "src/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc"
-<fchmmr> src/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/Makefile.inc:chipset_bootblock_inc += $(src)/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/biosdata.inc
-<mtjm> are there other blobs for that platform?
-<mtjm> for checking if it's code or data, see code that uses it (hardware only here?) and relevant documentation; if a disassembler produces reasonable code for an appropriate ISA, then it's most probably code, otherwise it's unknown
-<mtjm> (or is it e.g. a keymap?)
-<fchmmr> As far as I can tell, src/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc is the only blob
-<fchmmr> xvilka will know more, I'm sure
-I then asked for more info in #coreboot and emailed Andrew Wu (original maintainer for that board) asking the same question
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#coreboot on November 16th, 2014

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-<fchmmr> xvilka, what is src/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc for? What kind of data is it?
-<fchmmr> Is there a document that describes this data?
-<idwer> fchmmr: you haven't looked at biosdata.inc/.lds then
-<ruik> fchmmr: i think it is firmware for keyboard controller havent check
-<fchmmr> idwer, i looked at biosdata.inc, not lds. checking now. 
-<fchmmr> ruik, keyboard as in ps/2 keyboard?
-<ruik> fchmmr: yes
-<ruik> fchmmr: could be 8051
-<ruik> 0x2 can be LJMP
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back to #libreboot on November 16th, 2014

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-<fchmmr> mtjm, just a hunch from #coreboot discussion: I think it might just be for PS/2 keyboards, not sure. 
-<fchmmr> If that is the case though, you could basically just ignore it (not use it) and use a usb keyboard, I imagine.  
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-<pehjota> fchmmr: The EBOX-3100 (only Vortex86EX computer by DMP: <http://www.compactpc.com.tw/en/product/EBOX-3100/ebox-3100_1.html>.
-<fchmmr> coreboot menuconfig just says DMP -> Vortex86EX
-<pehjota> Yeah, it doesn't say which computer that is, but I'm guessing it's the EBOX-3100.
-<fchmmr> maybe there are more that also work. 
-<fchmmr> I found a few "86duino" boards for isntance. 
-<fchmmr> http://www.bttr-software.de/forum/mix_entry.php?id=13074
-<fchmmr> http://www.86duino.com/?page_id=85/installation-troubleshooting-1/recompiling-coreboot-seabios-need-config-files
-<pehjota> Yeah, there's 86duino which supposedly comes with coreboot installed.  There were some old configs posted to a forum but the links are dead.  Other than that I can't find source code.  And it's not in upstream coreboot.
-Surely someone had a git repository somewhere? Was it public (and is it still online)?
-So we need to check all the usual places (github, gitorious, search google/ddg, etc).
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-<pehjota> Yeah, that thread; the links are dead.
-<fchmmr> tried the wayback machine?
-<fchmmr> https://archive.org/web/
-<pehjota> Oh right, that's a Vortex86EX.  Maybe that's the one supported by coreboot.  DMP sells that one too.
-<fchmmr> a lot of the actual commits in coreboot seem to come from DMP themselves. 
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-<pehjota> I didn't, but the Wayback Machine usually doesn't archive .zip files or other things that aren't Web documents.
-<fchmmr> sometimes it does. 
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-<pehjota> Yeah, there's a developer at DMP who contributes this code to coreboot.
-<pehjota> And who is apparently active with KolibriOS too.
-<fchmmr> Andrew Wu
-<pehjota> Yup.
-
-<fchmmr> does trisquel 7 run on i586-only hardware?
-<fchmmr> i thought it was i686
-<fchmmr> I asked in #trisquel
-<pehjota> Not sure.
-<pehjota> Rereading the message in 8522f99 ("Add support for DMP Vortex86EX PCI mainboard.") and looking at <http://www.86duino.com/index.php?p=68>, I think that might be the board.
-<fchmmr> maybe it runs on all vortex86ex soc's
-<pehjota> The code in src/cpu/ should, but src/mainboard/ is specific to individual boards.
-<fchmmr> I meant that maybe the same rom will work on multiple boards. 
-Or maybe all those *many* menuconfig options means that it could...
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-<pehjota> Although src/mainboard/dmp/vortex86ex/Kconfig appears to support configuration for different Vortex86EX-based boards, which is interesting.
-<pehjota> With defaults for 86Duino ZERO.
-<fchmmr> yes. lots of config options in menuconfig. 
-<fchmmr> the default microcode options when selecting that board is "do not include microcode", which is promising. 
-<pehjota> Yeah, as I said I don't think there's any microcode on Vortex86.  I think the ISA is implemented directly in hardware.
-<fchmmr> Where does it say 86Duino in that Kconfigfile?
-<pehjota> It doesn't; I'm just guessing based on some of the default values.
-<fchmmr>  select BOARD_ROM_KB_256
-<fchmmr> in Kconfig
-<fchmmr> probably couldn't fit GRUB in there, then. Would hvae to use SeaBIOS. 
-<pehjota> And as I said, the initial commit message suggests it could have been originally for the 86Duino ZERO.
-<fchmmr> But if there's no vbios, or if it's a full (and free) vbios implementation, then seabios would be ok. 
-<pehjota> Yeah, it uses SeaBIOS.
-<pehjota> Yup.
-<fchmmr> personally I'd prefer to use GRUB, but seabios is also fine. 
-<fchmmr> GRUB wouldn't fit in such a small space
-<fchmmr> unless you build it with basically no modules
-<pehjota> It's basic VGA hardware with no option ROM AFAICT.  No GPU or anything to initialize.  The Linux driver is just a framebuffer one.
-<fchmmr> this all sounds very promising. 
-<fchmmr> That file for keyboard can apparently be ignored if it's a freedom issue
-<pehjota> So just a framebuffer that gets sent out on VGA.
-<fchmmr> (can use usb keyboard)
-<pehjota> Yeah.
-<fchmmr> <pehjota> So just a framebuffer that gets sent out on VGA.
-<fchmmr> <pehjota> The Linux driver is just a framebuffer one.
-<pehjota> There's no GPU driver enabled in DMP's Linux config, only a couple video framebuffer drivers.
-<fchmmr> I'll ask on the mailing list (coreboot one) who has vortex86 hardware to test on
-<pehjota> The Linux config file is in the "source" .zip files here: <http://www.dmp.com.tw/tech/os-xlinux/>.
-<pehjota> (Old version of Linux.)
-<fchmmr> Source for Vortex86DX/MX: xlinux-5.7-src-dx.zip (4.74 MB)
-<fchmmr> Source for Vortex86SX: xlinux-5.7-src-sx.zip (4.77 MB) 
-<fchmmr> isn't it vortex86ex that we're looking at?
-<pehjota> fchmmr: Yeah, the SoC supported in mainline coreboot is the EX, for which there are apparently no "sources" on that page.  I wouldn't use these systems for routers though; there are cheaper Atheros MIPS boards with dual Ethernet ports and built-in wireless chipsets, which should be able to run U-Boot.
-<pehjota> Good call on asking Andrew Wu.  I was planning to just ask DMP in general about coreboot support for the EBOX systems.
-<pehjota> Personally I'm not all that interested in the EX-based systems like 86Duino.  They don't have VGA, which would be necessary at least for the use cases I currently have in mind.  I think the MX ones are more interesting from a practical perspective (they should be just as potentially free and xvilka ported coreboot to one of them).  DX2 ones are also nice, but more expensive.
-
-DMP sells the 86Duino directly, and distributors sell the EBOX-3100 (as well as the other EBOX computers).
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Firmware for keyboard

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- In coreboot, see src/cpu/dmp/vortex86ex/dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc. It is believed to be - firmware for a PS/2 keyboard controller, though it's actual purpose is yet to be - confirmed. You could probably exclude this - (libreboot already does, in the DEBLOB script) and plug in a USB keyboard. -

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- A copy of dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc: dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc.txt. -

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- The hex arrays were copied and formated in a PHP file. - This outputs the array in intel hex format. - See results at array.php (for src, clone the libreboot site using the info from the - home page). - The output was then saved as dis.inc and dis.inc.hex. -

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- According to ruik in #coreboot IRC channel, this is either 8051 or 8052 assembly code. I installed - 2 disassemblers: dis51 (8051 disassembly) and d52 (8052 disassembly).
- $ dis51 < dis.inc > dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc.disassembled.dis51.txt
- And for 8052 disassembly:
- $ d52 -dh dis.inc.hex
- $ mv dis.inc.d52 dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc.disassembled.d52.txt -

- -

- Disassembly results here:
- 8051 (dis51) disassembly: - dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc.disassembled.dis51.txt - - lots of data (non-instruction) sections, might be unknown instructions from 8052?
- 8052 (d52) disassembly: - dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc.disassembled.d52.txt - - it's 8051 code. See below. -

- -

- The original dmp_kbd_fw_part1.inc in coreboot also has a GPL licence attached, so it's possible - that DMP might give the source code for this. Otherwise, if all else fails, we have the - disassembled code to try to reverse engineer. -

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- Todo's from mtjm: -

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    -
  • check if there is any documented load address, check if jump addresses are reasonable
  • -
  • check if there are reasonable code sequences (so it's probably really 8051 code)
  • -
  • - make sure that it's really under the GPL, then work on generating the same binary from disassembly - + comments added when trying to understand it -
  • -
  • check if anything reads the code (there are different memory spaces for code and modifiable data)
  • -
  • maybe it has data or unaligned instructions
  • -
  • (check that you disassembled it properly, in other words)
  • -
  • - you want to get code that a machine runs, while you send some (maybe not all) code to it, - that code has instructions that can read the available code and probably does some i/o that - can be used to send that code -
  • -
  • not sure if it would have any bootrom; 8051 starts running code at address 0
  • -
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- Andrew Wu replied to my email. The keyboard controller firmware is non-free; no source code available. - The GPL license on it is bogus. So libreboot will simply not include PS/2 keyboard support for this machine, - unless it can be reverse engineered based on the above. (not needed. just use USB) -

- -

- Andrew also said that the firmware is 8051 code, not 8052. The firmware - implements a standard PC/AT 8042 keyboard controller (handling PS/2 KB_CLK, KB_DATA signals, etc) - There are datasheets for this!!. -

- -

- Andrew also said that he doesn't know about specific hardware as he is in sotfware, - so he forwarded me to sales, they/he will let me know what vortex86ex systems are actually available for coreboot. -

- -
-The 8051 PS/2 keyboard controller firmware not only controls PS/2 keyboard/mouse, but also handles some system functions, like system reset, A20 line enable, etc, via I/O port 60h/64h.
-
-(Because standard PC/AT 8042 keyboard controller does so).
-
-In short, if software reads or writes I/O port 60h/64h in vortex86ex, then you need the 8051 firmware, otherwise these I/O ports won’t work correctly.
-
-I think most OSes, like DOS or Windows, will access port 60h/64h on startup, so removing the firmware code may cause many compatibility problems. 
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- -
-Instead I propose that I take some minimal time to re-disassemble it
-trough the usual free software tools like gdb, binutils(readelf, and
-objdump), or radare2.
-
-^ other approaches.
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- If GNU/Linux will work, then it's ok. -

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- - - - -- cgit v0.9.1