Recommonmark has been deprecated since 2021 [1] and the last release was over 3 years ago [2]. As per their announcement, Markedly Structured Text (MyST) Parser [3] is the recommended replacement. For the most part, the existing documentation is compatible with MyST, as both parsers are built around the CommonMark flavor of Markdown. The main difference that affects coreboot is how the Sphinx toctree is generated. Recommonmark has a feature called auto_toc_tree, which converts single level lists of references into a toctree: * [Part 1: Starting from scratch](part1.md) * [Part 2: Submitting a patch to coreboot.org](part2.md) * [Part 3: Writing unit tests](part3.md) * [Managing local additions](managing_local_additions.md) * [Flashing firmware](flashing_firmware/index.md) MyST Parser does not provide a replacement for this feature, meaning the toctree must be defined manually. This is done using MyST's syntax for Sphinx directives: ```{toctree} :maxdepth: 1 Part 1: Starting from scratch <part1.md> Part 2: Submitting a patch to coreboot.org <part2.md> Part 3: Writing unit tests <part3.md> Managing local additions <managing_local_additions.md> Flashing firmware <flashing_firmware/index.md> ``` Internally, auto_toc_tree essentially converts lists of references into the Sphinx toctree structure that the MyST syntax above more directly represents. The toctrees were converted to the MyST syntax using the following command and Python script: `find ./ -iname "*.md" | xargs -n 1 python conv_toctree.py` ``` import re import sys in_list = False f = open(sys.argv[1]) lines = f.readlines() f.close() with open(sys.argv[1], "w") as f: for line in lines: match = re.match(r"^[-*+] \[(.*)\]\((.*)\)$", line) if match is not None: if not in_list: in_list = True f.write("```{toctree}\n") f.write(":maxdepth: 1\n\n") f.write(match.group(1) + " <" + match.group(2) + ">\n") else: if in_list: f.write("```\n") f.write(line) in_list = False if in_list: f.write("```\n") ``` While this does add a little more work for creating the toctree, this does give more control over exactly what goes into the toctree. For instance, lists of links to external resources currently end up in the toctree, but we may want to limit it to pages within coreboot. This change does break rendering and navigation of the documentation in applications that can render Markdown, such as Okular, Gitiles, or the GitHub mirror. Assuming the docs are mainly intended to be viewed after being rendered to doc.coreboot.org, this is probably not an issue in practice. Another difference is that MyST natively supports Markdown tables, whereas with Recommonmark, tables had to be written in embedded rST [4]. However, MyST also supports embedded rST, so the existing tables can be easily converted as the syntax is nearly identical. These were converted using `find ./ -iname "*.md" | xargs -n 1 sed -i "s/eval_rst/{eval-rst}/"` Makefile.sphinx and conf.py were regenerated from scratch by running `sphinx-quickstart` using the updated version of Sphinx, which removes a lot of old commented out boilerplate. Any relevant changes coreboot had made on top of the previous autogenerated versions of these files were ported over to the newly generated file. From some initial testing the generated webpages appear and function identically to the existing documentation built with Recommonmark. TEST: `make -C util/docker docker-build-docs` builds the documentation successfully and the generated output renders properly when viewed in a web browser. [1] https://github.com/readthedocs/recommonmark/issues/221 [2] https://pypi.org/project/recommonmark/ [3] https://myst-parser.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ [4] https://doc.coreboot.org/getting_started/writing_documentation.html Change-Id: I0837c1722fa56d25c9441ea218e943d8f3d9b804 Signed-off-by: Nicholas Chin <nic.c3.14@gmail.com> Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/c/coreboot/+/73158 Reviewed-by: Matt DeVillier <matt.devillier@gmail.com> Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) <no-reply@coreboot.org>
2.7 KiB
Lenovo Sandy Bridge series
Flashing coreboot
+---------------------+--------------------+
| Type | Value |
+=====================+====================+
| Socketed flash | no |
+---------------------+--------------------+
| Size | 8 MiB |
+---------------------+--------------------+
| In circuit flashing | Yes |
+---------------------+--------------------+
| Package | SOIC-8 |
+---------------------+--------------------+
| Write protection | No |
+---------------------+--------------------+
| Dual BIOS feature | No |
+---------------------+--------------------+
| Internal flashing | Yes |
+---------------------+--------------------+
Installation instructions
Flashing coreboot for the first time needs to be done using an external programmer, because vendor firmware prevents rewriting the BIOS region.
- Update the EC firmware, as there's no support for EC updates in coreboot.
- Do NOT accidentally swap pins or power on the board while a SPI flasher is connected. It will destroy your device.
- It's recommended to only flash the BIOS region. In that case you don't need to extract blobs from vendor firmware. If you want to flash the whole chip, you need blobs when building coreboot.
- The shipped Flash layout allocates 3MiB to the BIOS region, which is the space usable by coreboot.
- ROM chip size should be set to 8MiB.
Please also have a look at the flashing tutorial
Flash layout
There's one 8MiB flash which contains IFD, GBE, ME and BIOS regions. On Lenovo's UEFI the EC firmware update is placed at the start of the BIOS region. The update is then written into the EC once.
Reducing Intel Management Engine firmware size
It is possible to reduce the Intel ME firmware size to free additional
space for the bios
region. This is usually referred to as cleaning the ME or
stripping the ME.
After reducing the Intel ME firmware size you must modify the original IFD
and then write a full ROM using an external programmer.
Have a look at me_cleaner for more information.
Tests on Lenovo X220 showed no issues with a stripped ME firmware.
Modified flash layout:
The overall size of the gbe
, me,
ifd
region is less than 128KiB, leaving
the remaining space for the bios
partition.