bootdev list [-p] - list all available bootdevs (-p to probe) bootdev hunt [-l|<spec>] - use hunt drivers to find bootdevs bootdev select <bm> - select a bootdev by name bootdev info [-p] - show information about a bootdev
The bootdev command is used to manage bootdevs. It can list available bootdevs, select one and obtain information about it.
See :doc:`../../develop/bootstd` for more information about bootdevs in general.
This lists available bootdevs
Scanning with -p causes the bootdevs to be probed. This happens automatically when they are used.
The list looks something like this:
Seq | Probed | Status | Uclass | Name |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | [ + ] | OK | mmc | mmc@7e202000.bootdev |
1 | [ ] | OK | mmc | sdhci@7e300000.bootdev |
2 | [ ] | OK | ethernet | smsc95xx_eth.bootdev |
The fields are as follows:
- Seq:
- Sequence number in the scan, used to reference the bootflow later
- Probed:
- Shows a plus (+) if the device is probed, empty if not.
- Status:
- Shows the status of the device. Typically this is OK meaning that there is no error. If you use -p and an error occurs when probing, then this shows the error number. You can look up Linux error codes to find the meaning of the number.
- Uclass:
- Name of the media device's Uclass. This indicates the type of the parent device (e.g. MMC, Ethernet).
- Name:
- Name of the bootdev. This is generated from the media device appended with .bootdev
This hunts for new bootdevs, or shows a list of hunters.
Use -l to list the available bootdev hunters.
To run hunters, specify the name of the hunter to run, e.g. "mmc". If no name is provided, all hunters are run.
Use this to select a particular bootdev. You can select it by the sequence number or name, as shown in bootdev list.
Once a bootdev is selected, you can use bootdev info to look at it or bootflow scan to scan it.
If no bootdev name or number is provided, then any existing bootdev is unselected.
This shows information on the current bootdev, with the format looking like this:
Name | mmc@7e202000.bootdev |
Sequence | 0 |
Status | Probed |
Uclass | mmc |
Bootflows | 1 (1 valid) |
Most of the information is the same as bootdev list above. The new fields are:
- Device
- Name of the bootdev
- Status
- Shows Probed if the device is probed, OK if not. If -p is used and the device fails to probe, an error code is shown.
- Bootflows
- Indicates the number of bootflows attached to the bootdev. This is 0 unless you have used 'bootflow scan' on the bootflow, or on all bootflows.
This example shows listing available bootdev and getting information about one of them:
U-Boot> bootdev list Seq Probed Status Uclass Name --- ------ ------ -------- ------------------ 0 [ + ] OK mmc mmc@7e202000.bootdev 1 [ ] OK mmc sdhci@7e300000.bootdev 2 [ ] OK ethernet smsc95xx_eth.bootdev --- ------ ------ -------- ------------------ (3 devices) U-Boot> bootdev sel 0 U-Boot> bootflow scan U-Boot> bootdev info Name: mmc@7e202000.bootdev Sequence: 0 Status: Probed Uclass: mmc Bootflows: 1 (1 valid)
This shows using one of the available hunters, then listing them:
=> bootdev hunt usb Hunting with: usb Bus usb@1: scanning bus usb@1 for devices... 3 USB Device(s) found => bootdev hunt -l Prio Used Uclass Hunter ---- ---- --------------- --------------- 6 ethernet eth_bootdev 1 simple_bus (none) 5 ide ide_bootdev 2 mmc mmc_bootdev 4 nvme nvme_bootdev 4 scsi scsi_bootdev 4 spi_flash sf_bootdev 5 * usb usb_bootdev 4 virtio virtio_bootdev (total hunters: 9) => usb stor Device 0: Vendor: sandbox Rev: 1.0 Prod: flash Type: Hard Disk Capacity: 4.0 MB = 0.0 GB (8192 x 512) Device 1: Vendor: sandbox Rev: 1.0 Prod: flash Type: Hard Disk Capacity: 0.0 MB = 0.0 GB (1 x 512) =>
The return value $? is always 0 (true).