That would be 543843.

Cheers,
Sean

On 06/11/2014 08:09 PM, Mike Hibbett wrote:

Hi Sean,

Would you have an IBL reference to that BYT-I_SEC_DUAL_BOOT_PV_GOLD file? I have a look and couldn't find it.

Regards,

Mike.

*From:*coreboot [mailto:[email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Sean McNeil
*Sent:* 11 June 2014 11:12
*To:* Gerald Otter
*Cc:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: [coreboot] Intel FSP on Bayley Bay CRB: No output

Hi Gerald,

You should either erase the TXE area or replace it with the correct one from BYT-I_SEC_DUAL_BOOT_PV_GOLD. The TXE within BIOS will not play nice with anything except the BIOS.

Cheers,
Sean

On 06/11/2014 03:16 PM, Gerald Otter wrote:

    Hi all,

    indeed, I think I misinterpreted the original issue, which is not
    solely due to the wrong/lack of microcode being loaded.

    I did not get any output on port 80 ( all zeros ).

    I just found out this had to do with the particular intel flash
    descriptor/txe I've been using, which doesn't seem to play nice
    with my coreboot build.

    I've been in contact with someone outside of the list who sent me
    a working image after my initial e-mail.

    I flashed the build with microcode over the top 2MB of his image,
    after which my build worked fine.

    I assumed it was the microcode, when it was actually (partly) due
    to the wrong txe/fd.

    When the wrong microcode is loaded, the 4digit display alternates
    between 0x66 and 0x07, so you're right that there should be output
    in that case as well.

    Right now I'm not really sure what the differences are between the
    working fd/txe I have, and the non-working fd/txe.

    If there is any particular version of the txe/fd that is working
    while others aren't, then I'd love to know.

    Another option is to erase the fd and txe and just start it in
    non-descriptor mode. There are apparently some downsides to that,
    but I haven't looked into the details of that just yet.

    Gerald

    On 11 Jun 2014, at 04:09, Sean McNeil <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



    Hi Marc,

    There is indeed a port80 4 digit hex display on that board, so
    Gerald should be getting something from that.

    Hi Gerald,

    If you had serial output from the BIOS, then I think you probably
    have the UART connected properly. I always use the microUSB
    connector, though, with a standard phone cable to get serial from
    those boards. It has an on-board usb to serial adapter. Coreboot
    usually sets baud rate to 115200, but it is configurable. Check
    your .config:

    CONFIG_CONSOLE_SERIAL=y
    CONFIG_TTYS0_BASE=0x3f8
    CONFIG_CONSOLE_SERIAL_115200=y
    CONFIG_TTYS0_BAUD=115200
    CONFIG_TTYS0_LCS=3
    CONFIG_POST_IO=y
    CONFIG_POST_DEVICE=y
    CONFIG_POST_DEVICE_NONE=y
    CONFIG_POST_IO_PORT=0x80

    Regardless of these settings, FSP will send info to the port80 so
    something should have shown.

    Other things you can check:

    1) Properly configured FSP for BayleyBay with the bct program.
    BayleyBay is a non-ECC RAM board and won't boot with ECC FSP.
    2) Have the appropriate microcode for your stepping of CPU. B0
    steppings are harder to get correct and the microcode is not in git.

    Cheers,
    Sean

    On 06/11/2014 03:04 AM, Marc Jones wrote:

    Gerald,

    Does the crb have a port80? You should get early postcodes from
    coreboot and the FSP. You are also correct that there might be
    something different in the descriptor.bin that isn't anticipated. You
    may want to use the coreboot util/ifdtool to get a look at the entire
    image.

    Marc


    On Tue, Jun 3, 2014 at 6:03 AM, Gerald Otter
    <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Hi all,

    I am trying to run coreboot + seabios payload on the bayley bay
    crb with the recently committed FSP integration, but have had no
    luck so far.
    This crb uses the bay trail I (now atom e3800) soc from intel.

    Following the instructions from commit d75800c7f , I have built a
    2MB image and flashed it to the upper 2MB of the 8MB flash,
    leaving the TXE / flash descriptor intact.
    I have added the config from the build. The FSP I used is
    BAYTRAIL_FSP_GOLD_002_10-JANUARY-2014, together with the flash
    descriptor and TXE from the 80.21 bios provided by intel, and vga
    bios 36.2.2.
    Fwiw, I have tried both the 32bit and 64bit releases of the bios,
    even though the flash descriptor and TXE binary seem to be exactly
    the same.

    The issue I'm running into is that I have no idea if anything is
    running at all.
    There is no output on the VGA/HDMI ports or uart.

    The legacy uart referred to in the source is working correctly
    with the original intel bios, but does not produce any output with
    the coreboot image.
    I have tried the most common baud rates (115200, 19200, 9600 ) and
    did some measurements with a scope in case I got the baud rate
    wrong, but no cigar.
    The uart I'm using is the PCU uart, as opposed to hsuart1/2 and
    the superIO uart. This matches with the configuration in coreboot
    when compared to the datasheet, so I'm assuming I got this set up
    correctly.
    Unfortunately, this is about all the information I have, so I hope
    I am missing something obvious when building the image / flashing
    it, etc.

    I have also used intel's flash image tool (fitc) to build a
    complete image, thinking that maybe the flash descriptor needed to
    contain some specific information regarding the coreboot image
    (size/checksums), but given the original instructions I wasn't
    surprised this didn't work.

    Thanks in advance!


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