linux/usr/initramfs_data.S
Masahiro Yamada 65e00e04e5 initramfs: refactor the initramfs build rules
Currently, usr/gen_initramfs.sh takes care of all the use-cases:

 [1] generates a cpio file unless CONFIG_INITRAMFS_SOURCE points to
     a single cpio archive

 [2] If CONFIG_INITRAMFS_SOURCE is the path to a cpio archive,
     use it as-is.

 [3] Compress the cpio file according to CONFIG_INITRAMFS_COMPRESSION_*
     unless it is passed a compressed archive.

To simplify the script, move [2] and [3] to usr/Makefile.

If CONFIG_INITRAMFS_SOURCE is the path to a cpio archive, there is
no need to run this shell script.

For the cpio archive compression, you can re-use the rules from
scripts/Makefile.lib .

Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org>
2020-01-16 00:26:21 +09:00

37 lines
1.2 KiB
ArmAsm

/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
/*
initramfs_data includes the compressed binary that is the
filesystem used for early user space.
Note: Older versions of "as" (prior to binutils 2.11.90.0.23
released on 2001-07-14) dit not support .incbin.
If you are forced to use older binutils than that then the
following trick can be applied to create the resulting binary:
ld -m elf_i386 --format binary --oformat elf32-i386 -r \
-T initramfs_data.scr initramfs_data.cpio.gz -o initramfs_data.o
ld -m elf_i386 -r -o built-in.a initramfs_data.o
For including the .init.ramfs sections, see include/asm-generic/vmlinux.lds.
The above example is for i386 - the parameters vary from architectures.
Eventually look up LDFLAGS_BLOB in an older version of the
arch/$(ARCH)/Makefile to see the flags used before .incbin was introduced.
Using .incbin has the advantage over ld that the correct flags are set
in the ELF header, as required by certain architectures.
*/
.section .init.ramfs,"a"
__irf_start:
.incbin "usr/initramfs_inc_data"
__irf_end:
.section .init.ramfs.info,"a"
.globl __initramfs_size
__initramfs_size:
#ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
.quad __irf_end - __irf_start
#else
.long __irf_end - __irf_start
#endif