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authorMoritz Fischer <moritz.fischer@ettus.com>2015-08-14 16:18:00 -0700
committerMartin Braun <martin.braun@ettus.com>2015-08-17 18:04:46 -0700
commitbaa5bb1247b7acf27c6f50a9147bf31e68421595 (patch)
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parent099c7d4eb46b51999c8a3769a6f3303cf907b5e9 (diff)
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e3xx: Added paragraph about NFS root booting.
Signed-off-by: Moritz Fischer <moritz.fischer@ettus.com>
-rw-r--r--host/docs/usrp_e3x0.dox70
1 files changed, 70 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/host/docs/usrp_e3x0.dox b/host/docs/usrp_e3x0.dox
index e6a574a51..db4114360 100644
--- a/host/docs/usrp_e3x0.dox
+++ b/host/docs/usrp_e3x0.dox
@@ -753,6 +753,76 @@ Example device address string representation for 2 USRPs with IPv4 addresses **1
addr0=192.168.10.2, addr1=192.168.20.2
+\subsection e3xx_nfs_root Booting from a NFS root
+
+Booting your device from a NFS root might be desirable for remote deployment, management or similar applications.
+
+Requirements:
+
+- NFS server (for configuration see your Linux distribution's documentation)
+- dtc (devicetree compiler)
+- Filesystem image
+
+\subsubsection e3xx_nfs_root_extract Extracting the filesystems
+
+The first step to make a root filesystem available via NFS is to extract the root file system.
+This can be done as follows:
+
+ $ sfdisk -l -uS <your-image>.direct
+
+Which should produce output similar to:
+
+ Disk release3-image.direct: 7 GiB, 7516197888 bytes, 14680074 sectors
+ Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
+ Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
+ I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
+ Disklabel type: dos
+ Disk identifier: 0x8bc3587b
+
+ Device Boot Start End Sectors Size Id Type
+ release3-image.direct1 * 8 36871 36864 18M c W95 FAT32 (LBA)
+ release3-image.direct2 36872 14680071 14643200 7G 83 Linux
+
+From this one can see the second partition (root filesystem) starts at sector *36872*,
+and has a length of *14680071*. We can use the *dd* tool to extract the root filesystem
+into a handy file.
+
+ $ dd if=<yourimage>.direct of=<yourimage_rootfs>.direct offset=36872 count=14643200
+
+The same procedure can be done for the boot partition.
+
+ $ dd if=<yourimage>.direct of=<yourimage_boot>.direct offset=8 count=36864
+
+Both of these files are mountable on your NFS server, e.g. by:
+
+ $ mount <yourimage_rootfs>.direct /srv/nfs/root-e3xx
+ $ mount <yourimage_rootfs>.direct /srv/nfs/root-e3xx/media/FAT
+
+Copy the uImage, uEnv.txt, u-boot.img, boot.bin from the extracted boot partition to the
+boot partition of your device's card.
+
+Use the devicetree compiler to modify e300-devicetree.dtb file as follows:
+
+ $ dtc -I dtb -O dts e300-devicetree.dtb -o e300-devicetree.dts
+
+Using your editor of choice modify the *chosen* property in e300-devicetree.dts from:
+
+ console=ttyPS0,115200 root=/dev/mmc0blkp2 rw rootwait earlyprintk
+
+to:
+
+ console=ttyPS0,115200 root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=<yourserverip>:<yourpath>,vers=3 rootwait ip=dhcp earlyprintk
+
+Use the devicetree compiler to compile the modified devicetree as follows:
+
+ $ dtc e300-devicetree.dts -o e300-devicetree.dtb
+
+Copy the modified *e300-devicetree.dtb* to your device's card.
+
+For more information on server configuration please refer to your Linux distribution's NFS Server manual,
+for more information about NFS root see the
+<a href=https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsroot.txt>Linux Kernel NFS Root documentation</a>
+
\section e3x0_comm_problems Communication Problems
When setting up a development machine for the first time,