OpenMoko under QEMU
From Openmoko
(USB slave usage information) |
m (→Setting up USB connection: Use 192.168.0.200 as IP, for consistency) |
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== Setting up USB connection == | == Setting up USB connection == | ||
− | It is possible (although not very straight forward) to connect the virtual, emulated Neo1973 to the Linux PC on which the emulator is running, and work with it as if a real Neo1973 was plugged into the computer's USB port, but no twiddling with cables is needed. If you're testing your applications on the Neo, it may be worth setting up this kind of connection because it lets you enable normal networking between the PC and the phone and ssh into it (which is much more comfortable than typing commands into the OpenMoko's terminal emulator via on-screen keyboard). Here's what you will need in order to get this working: | + | It is possible (although not very straight forward, probably about the complexity of tun-tap networking) to connect the virtual, emulated Neo1973 to the Linux PC on which the emulator is running, and work with it as if a real Neo1973 was plugged into the computer's USB port, but no twiddling with cables is needed. If you're testing your applications on the Neo, it may be worth setting up this kind of connection because it lets you enable normal networking between the PC and the phone and ssh into it (which is much more comfortable than typing commands into the OpenMoko's terminal emulator via on-screen keyboard). Here's what you will need in order to get this working: |
A Linux host with a 2.6 series kernel. The following drivers compiled-in or in modules: dummy_hcd, gadgetfs, usbnet, cdc_ether. Note that you need root access to perform most actions described here. Here's how to enable them in menuconfig. | A Linux host with a 2.6 series kernel. The following drivers compiled-in or in modules: dummy_hcd, gadgetfs, usbnet, cdc_ether. Note that you need root access to perform most actions described here. Here's how to enable them in menuconfig. | ||
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Find and enable '''Device Drivers''' -> '''USB support''' -> '''USB Network Adapters''' -> '''CDC Ethernet support (smart devices such as cable modems)''' | Find and enable '''Device Drivers''' -> '''USB support''' -> '''USB Network Adapters''' -> '''CDC Ethernet support (smart devices such as cable modems)''' | ||
− | These last two drivers are the same drivers that you need to work with a real Neo over USB network. After you've built the drivers, make sure that the kernel headers | + | These last two drivers are the same [[Getting Started with your Neo1973#By using Ethernet emulation over a USB cable|drivers that you need to work with a real Neo over USB network]]. After you've built the drivers, make sure that the copy of kernel headers in /usr/include/linux is up to date. In particular the file /usr/include/linux/usb_gadgetfs.h needs to be present and if your distribution came with headers older than 2.6.18 or so, then you need tell the package manager to update them, or you can do that manually with |
<pre> # cp -a /usr/src/linux/include/linux/* /usr/include/linux/</pre> | <pre> # cp -a /usr/src/linux/include/linux/* /usr/include/linux/</pre> | ||
− | (assuming that your kernel sources are in /usr/src/linux). It is important that this is done before building qemu because the build system checks if these headers are functional and in case they aren't found it | + | (assuming that your kernel sources are in /usr/src/linux). It is important that this is done before building qemu because the build system checks if these headers are functional and in case they aren't found it will disable the USB Slave functionality. |
− | After building qemu and before running it make sure that the modules are loaded into the kernel. I found it useful to load gadgetfs with the following command: | + | After building qemu and before running it, make sure that the modules are loaded into the kernel. I found it useful to load gadgetfs with the following command: |
<pre> # modprobe gadgetfs default_uid=1000 # assuming my User ID is 1000</pre> | <pre> # modprobe gadgetfs default_uid=1000 # assuming my User ID is 1000</pre> | ||
and added the following line to my /etc/fstab: | and added the following line to my /etc/fstab: | ||
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Make sure that the mountpoint /dev/gadget exists: | Make sure that the mountpoint /dev/gadget exists: | ||
<pre> # mkdir -p /dev/gadget</pre> | <pre> # mkdir -p /dev/gadget</pre> | ||
− | After that the rest of | + | After that the rest of the procedure can be performed from your regular user account. Mounting gadgetfs is done with: |
<pre> $ mount /dev/gadget</pre> | <pre> $ mount /dev/gadget</pre> | ||
− | The "default_uid" parameter changes the ownership on all files under /dev/gadget to your own and since the files there are created and destroyed dynamically, there's no easy way to have that performed by | + | The "default_uid" parameter changes the ownership on all files under /dev/gadget to your own and since the files there are created and destroyed dynamically, there's no easy way to have that performed by ''udev''. Now running qemu as you usually do but appending "-usb -usbgadget" should enable the USB Slave functionality. The qemu monitor commands "info usbslave" and "usb_add gadget" will be useful. The former instruction asks the OS running under the emulator (OpenMoko) to describe its slave features (that's what ''lsusb'' does after a Neo1973 is connected to a PC). You can see the available USB configurations in this command's output. Since gadgetfs allows only one configuration, we will need to choose the desired configuration - most device have only one such configuration, in which case you can use just "usb_add gadget" to connect to host; CDC ethernet devices however usually include a second configuration for RNDIS networking (i.e. Ms Windows compatibility) and so does OpenMoko when using the g_ether driver. Hence, to get this right, wait for OpenMoko to fully boot up and execute the following in QEMU monitor: |
<pre> | <pre> | ||
QEMU 0.9.0 monitor - type 'help' for more information | QEMU 0.9.0 monitor - type 'help' for more information | ||
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(qemu) usb_add gadget:1 | (qemu) usb_add gadget:1 | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
− | The "1" in "usb_add gadget:N" is the number of USB configuration that we want to use. If everything went correctly - you can check that in dmesg - you should now have a new network interface called | + | The "1" in "usb_add gadget:N" is the number of the USB configuration that we want to use. If everything went correctly - you can check that in dmesg - you should now have a new network interface called ''usb0'' on the PC, through which you can talk to the OpenMoko running in QEMU: |
<pre> | <pre> | ||
$ dmesg | tail | $ dmesg | tail | ||
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bNumConfigurations 1 | bNumConfigurations 1 | ||
− | # ifconfig usb0 inet 192.168.0. | + | # ifconfig usb0 inet 192.168.0.200 netmask 255.255.255.0 |
# exit | # exit | ||
$ ssh root@192.168.0.202 | $ ssh root@192.168.0.202 |
Revision as of 00:25, 9 May 2007
QEMU can basically be used in three ways to run OpenMoko. Depending on the purpose that you are going to use the emulator for, you should decide on the target platform.
- PC - OpenMoko can be built to run on regular i386 hardware, 32- or 64-bit and this is probably the fastest way to get OpenMoko running if you want to get an impression of how it looks. In this scenario QEMU would only serve for isolating your OpenMoko installation from your normal system, or, if you're not on a UNIX system, QEMU provides a non-intrusive way to get Linux up quickly. More information can be found in the FAQ and here.
- Integrator/CP - this is the default ARM-based machine that QEMU knows about. This target is used with MACHINE="qemuarm" and it is sufficient to run the original OpenMoko rootfs image, although it doesn't emulate any of the Neo1973 Hardware except the CPU. Read more in the FAQ.
- Neo1973 - the QEMU tree available from OpenMoko repositories is also capable of emulating most of the actual Neo1973 hardware, although not all of it at this moment. It is a work-in-progress and when it's more mature it is going to be submitted for merging to the main QEMU development tree.
Contents |
Neo1973 emulation
This target will (obviously) run original OpenMoko rootfs images, but then it should also be able to run the original u-boot and kernel images, the same ones that a real Neo1973 uses. Among other differences you will notice between this approach and the Integrator/CP target is you also get correct screen resolution, some (fake) battery readings, and other goodness. Currently missing parts of the emulator are: GSM modem, AGPS and Bluetooth, as well as the USB slave functionality - these things will still be worked on, as well as general usability. Even with these things missing, QEMU should provide substantial help in debugging kernel and u-boot issues to developers.
What QEMU can *not* be used for, and probably no other emulator can, is speed measures and getting the general feel of OpenMoko performance. Code running in qemu runs with the maximum speed your host computer can provide with an overhead of translating target code to host code, and this overhead is not uniform across different instructions. This means that even if your virtual Neo reports near 100 BogoMIPS (which is the speed of a real Neo), different actions performed in the emulator will not run with the same speed. On most PCs you will notice the virtual Neo running faster than a real one (Audio related operations may be one of the exceptions).
What hardware is supported
Rough status for each of the components that need emulation, following the outline of Neo1973 Hardware page.
Hardware | Status | Usage notes |
---|---|---|
S3C2410A Processor | ||
ARM920T core | Works | Already in mainline QEMU. |
Basic guts | Work | This includes GPIO interface, DMA, Interrupt Controller, Timers, NAND controller, MMC/SD host, I2C and IIS interfaces, Memory & Clock & Power management controllers, RAM. |
Serial ports | Work | Use the "-serial" switch (maybe be specified multiple times) to tell QEMU where serial input/output should go to. GSM module will be connected on UART0. |
RTC | Works | On start QEMU will load it with current time/date - the Neo1973 kernel doesn't use it for time/date source currently. |
SPI | Works | The guest kernel can drive it using either the SPI interface or raw GPIO bitbanging. |
LCD | Works | The virtual LCD will display as in QEMU window iff "-nographic" is not specified. |
ADC | Works | Mouse events in QEMU window generate what would be touchscreen events on a Neo1973 and are passed to the guest OS through the on-chip ADC. |
OHCI USB | Works | This part is in mainline QEMU. Use the "-usb" switch to enable the controller and "usb_add" in QEMU monitor to attach new virtual or physical USB devices. |
Slave USB | Works | Linux's dummy HCD in conjunction with gadget filesystem API is used to make the virtual Neo appear as a real one connected to the host computer. See Setting up USB connection below. (Experimental) |
Watchdog | To Do | This is one of the less important on-chip peripherals in S3C2410. It is however used by Linux for rebooting the board. |
I2C bus peripherals | ||
PCF50606 | Works | (Aka PMU) Fakes the battery charge level (set at 88%), POWER button, etc. Also contains and RTC, also unused by Linux. |
LM4857 | Works | |
WM8753L | Works | The CODEC is also connect to the CPU's IIS port. Basic audio functionality is supported - see QEMU documentation on getting audio input/output from the emulator. Volume control has no effects. |
Other peripherals | ||
NAND Flash | Works | However, some pieces are not confirmed to be completely compatible with the real hardware because of lack thereof. Use "-mtdblock flashimagefilenamehere" switch to point QEMU to your flash image. The file should be at least 69206016 bytes big. |
JBT6K74-AS(PI) | Works | (Aka LCM) Wired to the SPI channel 1 |
Buttons | Work | Enter is the AUX button, Space is the POWER button. Wired to on-chip GPIO and PCF50606. |
SD card | Works | This part is already in mainline QEMU. Use the "-sd cardimagegoeshere" switch to point QEMU to the card image. The regular QEMU monitor commands for removable media can also be used. The card works, however the on-chip host controller gave block length errors on heavy I/O despite working as described in specification. I suspect the kernel driver. DMA operation is not tested. |
Bluetooth | To Do | Will require implementing the Delta DBFM chip and connecting it to USB. The ROM will likely be replaced with code to translate communication directly to TCP/UDP networking (like Slirp). A real bluetooth dongle can also be attached to the emulator (see USB documentation in QEMU). |
GSM | In Progress | A fake modem will be connected to UART0 with as much functionality as possible (basic AT commands understanding, fake GPRS connections and SMS send/receive). This way all parts of the phone subsystem (CALYPSO, TWL3014, TRF6151) will not have to be emulated. There is a possibility to wire a real GSM modem to QEMU's serial port. |
AGPS | To Do | There are obvious difficulties emulating the chip, but hopefully it can be made to present the guest OS with some fixed coordinates later when more is known about the chip. Again a real chip could be connected to QEMU's serial port. |
How to get it running
Using MokoMakefile
This is the easiest way since you won't need to deal with the compiling and flashing processes yourself. See MokoMakefile for details.
Manual setup
To obtain the latest source code for the emulator, you will want to do something like the following:
$ svn checkout https://svn.openmoko.org/trunk/src/host/qemu-neo1973 $ cd qemu-neo1973
Now, we're going to configure and build the emulator (Note Requirements below):
$ ./configure --target-list=arm-softmmu # GCC 3.x will be required, see --cc= $ make
See other available options for the configure script by appending "--help". Now you should have a working emulator under the name "arm-softmmu/qemu-system-arm". To run OpenMoko you will also need to somehow install OpenMoko on your virtual phone, which is totally clean of any software at this moment. There are several block devices to choose from, the best option is probably to do exactly what the Neo1973 manufacturer does before it ships the device to the final user. This process is described in Bootloader, Kernel, NAND bad blocks and Devirginator but you don't need to know all the details. Two scripts are provided to generate a firmware for your phone, as realistic as possible. First run
$ openmoko/download.sh
which will look up the list of latest available OpenMoko snapshot builds from buildhost.openmoko.org and choose the most recent u-boot, Kernel, and root filesystem images, and download the images (unless they are already found in the openmoko/ directory). These binaries will be used by the next command:
$ openmoko/flash.sh
which runs the emulator, loads u-boot into it and then uses u-boot's capability to program the Flash memory to install all the necessary parts of the system into the virtual Flash. It will also set up all the bootloading process including a boot menu (ENTER is [AUX] and SPACE is [POWER]), splash, u-boot environment and some default kernel parameters. If everything goes OK, the script should print a command which you can use to start using the emulator.
QEMU has *tons* of commandline switches and things that can be configured. You can look them up in QEMU user docs. You will probably want to use the "-snapshot" switch, among other ones.
Pre-built binaries
Win32 binaries shipped with firmware can be downloaded from openmoko-emulator-win32-bin-20070416.zip. Tested on Ms Windows XP.
Requirements
This QEMU tree has only been tested on GNU/Linux. To get graphical (not counting VNC) and/or audio output from the emulator you will need either SDL or Cocoa installed on your computer. To enable audio, see the available switches to the ./configure script.
The scripts that sit in openmoko/ require lynx, wget, python and most GNU base utilities installed in standard locations.
All of the build-time and run-time requirements listed in QEMU documentation apply. This includes zlib, etc. On distributions that use binary packages, remember that you need the packages ending in -dev or -devel.
QEMU and GNU debugger
QEMU lets you debug operating system kernels and bootloaders like you debug all other programs. To do this you will need a debugger that speaks the GDB remote debugging protocol - GDB is the obvious choice. Some cross toolchains come with GDB already set up. Otherwise building cross-GDB yourself is quick and easy (compared to building binutils and cross-gcc).
To debug u-boot, load the file "u-boot" into gdb (not "u-boot.bin") that is produced by "make" when building u-boot. To debug a Linux kernel, load the file "vmlinux" from the main source directory into gdb. These files are in ELF format and contain all the symbol information and are not stripped of debugging data until you run "strip" on them, unlike "u-boot.bin" and "Image"/"zImage"/"uImage". Next, tell QEMU to enable the gdbserver by appending the "-s" switch or issuing "gdbserver" in the monitor. Use the command(gdb) target remote localhost:1234to make a connection to the emulator. From there you should be able to use all the usual GDB commands, including stepping instructions, setting breakpoints, watchpoints, inspecting stack, variables, registers and more. If gdb is running in the same directory from which it grabbed the ELF executable, the "edit" command should work so you can jump right to the source line which is executing.
Setting up USB connection
It is possible (although not very straight forward, probably about the complexity of tun-tap networking) to connect the virtual, emulated Neo1973 to the Linux PC on which the emulator is running, and work with it as if a real Neo1973 was plugged into the computer's USB port, but no twiddling with cables is needed. If you're testing your applications on the Neo, it may be worth setting up this kind of connection because it lets you enable normal networking between the PC and the phone and ssh into it (which is much more comfortable than typing commands into the OpenMoko's terminal emulator via on-screen keyboard). Here's what you will need in order to get this working:
A Linux host with a 2.6 series kernel. The following drivers compiled-in or in modules: dummy_hcd, gadgetfs, usbnet, cdc_ether. Note that you need root access to perform most actions described here. Here's how to enable them in menuconfig.
Find and enable Device Drivers -> USB support -> USB Gadget Support -> Support for USB Gadgets
Find Device Drivers -> USB support -> USB Gadget Support -> USB Peripheral Controller and set it to Dummy HCD (DEVELOPMENT)
Find and enable Device Drivers -> USB support -> USB Gadget Support -> Gadget Filesystem (EXPERIMENTAL) (this one is good to have as a module)
Find and enable Device Drivers -> USB support -> USB Network Adapters -> Multi-purpose USB Networking Framework
Find and enable Device Drivers -> USB support -> USB Network Adapters -> CDC Ethernet support (smart devices such as cable modems)
These last two drivers are the same drivers that you need to work with a real Neo over USB network. After you've built the drivers, make sure that the copy of kernel headers in /usr/include/linux is up to date. In particular the file /usr/include/linux/usb_gadgetfs.h needs to be present and if your distribution came with headers older than 2.6.18 or so, then you need tell the package manager to update them, or you can do that manually with
# cp -a /usr/src/linux/include/linux/* /usr/include/linux/
(assuming that your kernel sources are in /usr/src/linux). It is important that this is done before building qemu because the build system checks if these headers are functional and in case they aren't found it will disable the USB Slave functionality.
After building qemu and before running it, make sure that the modules are loaded into the kernel. I found it useful to load gadgetfs with the following command:
# modprobe gadgetfs default_uid=1000 # assuming my User ID is 1000
and added the following line to my /etc/fstab:
gadget /dev/gadget gadgetfs noauto,user,group 0 0
Make sure that the mountpoint /dev/gadget exists:
# mkdir -p /dev/gadget
After that the rest of the procedure can be performed from your regular user account. Mounting gadgetfs is done with:
$ mount /dev/gadget
The "default_uid" parameter changes the ownership on all files under /dev/gadget to your own and since the files there are created and destroyed dynamically, there's no easy way to have that performed by udev. Now running qemu as you usually do but appending "-usb -usbgadget" should enable the USB Slave functionality. The qemu monitor commands "info usbslave" and "usb_add gadget" will be useful. The former instruction asks the OS running under the emulator (OpenMoko) to describe its slave features (that's what lsusb does after a Neo1973 is connected to a PC). You can see the available USB configurations in this command's output. Since gadgetfs allows only one configuration, we will need to choose the desired configuration - most device have only one such configuration, in which case you can use just "usb_add gadget" to connect to host; CDC ethernet devices however usually include a second configuration for RNDIS networking (i.e. Ms Windows compatibility) and so does OpenMoko when using the g_ether driver. Hence, to get this right, wait for OpenMoko to fully boot up and execute the following in QEMU monitor:
QEMU 0.9.0 monitor - type 'help' for more information (qemu) info usbslave USB2.2 device 1457:5122: Manufacturer: Linux 2.6.20.7-moko8/s3c2410_udc Product: RNDIS/Ethernet Gadget Configuration 0: RNDIS Configuration 1: CDC Ethernet (qemu) (qemu) usb_add gadget:1
The "1" in "usb_add gadget:N" is the number of the USB configuration that we want to use. If everything went correctly - you can check that in dmesg - you should now have a new network interface called usb0 on the PC, through which you can talk to the OpenMoko running in QEMU:
$ dmesg | tail <6>gadgetfs: bound to dummy_udc driver <7>hub 3-0:1.0: debounce: port 1: total 100ms stable 100ms status 0x101 <6>usb 3-1: new high speed USB device using dummy_hcd and address 3 <6>gadgetfs: connected <7>usb 3-1: default language 0x0409 <7>usb 3-1: new device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=0 <6>usb 3-1: Product: RNDIS/Ethernet Gadget <6>usb 3-1: Manufacturer: Linux 2.6.20.7-moko8/s3c2410_udc <6>usb 3-1: configuration #1 chosen from 1 choice <7>usb 3-1: adding 3-1:1.0 (config #1, interface 0) <7>usb 3-1:1.0: uevent <7>cdc_ether 3-1:1.0: usb_probe_interface - got id <7>cdc_ether 3-1:1.0: status ep3in, 16 bytes period 14 <7>usb 3-1: adding 3-1:1.1 (config #1, interface 1) <7>usb 3-1:1.1: uevent $ su - Password: # tail /var/log/everything/current May 8 19:25:32 [kernel] gadgetfs: connected May 8 19:25:32 [kernel] gadgetfs: disconnected May 8 19:25:32 [kernel] gadgetfs: configuration #1 May 8 19:25:32 [kernel] usb0: register 'cdc_ether' at usb-dummy_hcd-1, CDC Ethernet Device, 52:e7:eb:76:0a:d0 # lsusb -vvv Bus 003 Device 003: ID 1457:5122 Device Descriptor: bLength 18 bDescriptorType 1 bcdUSB 2.00 bDeviceClass 2 Communications bDeviceSubClass 0 bDeviceProtocol 0 bMaxPacketSize0 64 idVendor 0x1457 idProduct 0x5122 bcdDevice 2.12 iManufacturer 1 Linux 2.6.20.7-moko8/s3c2410_udc iProduct 2 RNDIS/Ethernet Gadget iSerial 0 bNumConfigurations 1 Configuration Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 2 wTotalLength 80 bNumInterfaces 2 bConfigurationValue 1 iConfiguration 7 CDC Ethernet bmAttributes 0xc0 Self Powered MaxPower 0mA Interface Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 4 bInterfaceNumber 0 bAlternateSetting 0 bNumEndpoints 1 bInterfaceClass 2 Communications bInterfaceSubClass 6 Ethernet Networking bInterfaceProtocol 0 iInterface 5 CDC Communications Control CDC Header: bcdCDC 1.10 CDC Union: bMasterInterface 0 bSlaveInterface 1 CDC Ethernet: iMacAddress 3 52E7EB760AD0 bmEthernetStatistics 0x00000000 wMaxSegmentSize 1514 wNumberMCFilters 0x0000 bNumberPowerFilters 0 Endpoint Descriptor: bLength 7 bDescriptorType 5 bEndpointAddress 0x83 EP 3 IN bmAttributes 3 Transfer Type Interrupt Synch Type None Usage Type Data wMaxPacketSize 0x0010 1x 16 bytes bInterval 14 Interface Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 4 bInterfaceNumber 1 bAlternateSetting 0 bNumEndpoints 0 bInterfaceClass 10 Data bInterfaceSubClass 0 Unused bInterfaceProtocol 0 iInterface 0 Interface Descriptor: bLength 9 bDescriptorType 4 bInterfaceNumber 1 bAlternateSetting 1 bNumEndpoints 2 bInterfaceClass 10 Data bInterfaceSubClass 0 Unused bInterfaceProtocol 0 iInterface 4 Ethernet Data Endpoint Descriptor: bLength 7 bDescriptorType 5 bEndpointAddress 0x81 EP 1 IN bmAttributes 2 Transfer Type Bulk Synch Type None Usage Type Data wMaxPacketSize 0x0040 1x 64 bytes bInterval 0 Endpoint Descriptor: bLength 7 bDescriptorType 5 bEndpointAddress 0x02 EP 2 OUT bmAttributes 2 Transfer Type Bulk Synch Type None Usage Type Data wMaxPacketSize 0x0040 1x 64 bytes bInterval 0 Device Qualifier (for other device speed): bLength 10 bDescriptorType 6 bcdUSB 2.00 bDeviceClass 2 Communications bDeviceSubClass 0 bDeviceProtocol 0 bMaxPacketSize0 64 bNumConfigurations 1 # ifconfig usb0 inet 192.168.0.200 netmask 255.255.255.0 # exit $ ssh root@192.168.0.202 The authenticity of host '192.168.0.202 (192.168.0.202)' can't be established. RSA key fingerprint is de:21:87:93:52:1c:6b:c7:69:29:6c:af:66:50:02:02. Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes Warning: Permanently added '192.168.0.202' (RSA) to the list of known hosts. root@192.168.0.202's password: root@fic-gta01:~$ uname -a Linux fic-gta01 2.6.20.7-moko8 #1 PREEMPT Wed Apr 25 11:13:52 UTC 2007 armv4tl unknown