Files
system76-coreboot/payloads/libpayload
Shawn Nematbakhsh df6d09d0fb libpayload: Reduce media init timeout to 5 seconds.
Currently, we wait for up to 30 seconds for a device to become ready to
respond to a TEST_UNIT_READY command. In practice, all media devices become
ready much sooner. But, certain devices do not function with libpayload's
USB driver, and always timeout. To provide a better user experience when
booting with such devices, reduce the timeout to 5 seconds.

Change-Id: Icceab99fa266cdf441847627087eaa5de9b88ecc
Signed-off-by: Shawn Nematbakhsh <shawnn@chromium.org>
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/169209
(cherry picked from commit 9e55204e92adca0476d273565683f211d6803e7a)
Signed-off-by: Isaac Christensen <isaac.christensen@se-eng.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.coreboot.org/6647
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins)
Reviewed-by: Ronald G. Minnich <rminnich@gmail.com>
2014-08-14 21:17:30 +02:00
..
2014-08-10 22:25:07 +02:00
2012-04-04 00:40:31 +02:00
2014-08-09 17:30:33 +02:00

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
libpayload README
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

libpayload is a minimal library to support standalone payloads
that can be booted with firmware like coreboot. It handles the setup
code, and provides common C library symbols such as malloc() and printf().

Note: This is _not_ a standard library for use with an operating system,
rather it's only useful for coreboot payload development!
See http://coreboot.org for details on coreboot.


Installation
------------

 $ git clone http://review.coreboot.org/p/coreboot.git

 $ cd coreboot/payloads/libpayload

 $ make menuconfig

 $ make

 $ sudo make install (optional, will install into /opt per default)

As libpayload is for 32bit x86 systems only, you might have to install the
32bit libgcc version, otherwise your payloads will fail to compile.
On Debian systems you'd do 'apt-get install gcc-multilib' for example.


Usage
-----

Here's an example of a very simple payload (hello.c) and how to build it:

 #include <libpayload.h>

 int main(void)
 {
     printf("Hello, world!\n");
     return 0;
 }

Building the payload using the 'lpgcc' compiler wrapper:

 $ lpgcc -o hello.elf hello.c

Please see the sample/ directory for details.


Website and Mailing List
------------------------

The main website is http://www.coreboot.org/Libpayload.

For additional information, patches, and discussions, please join the
coreboot mailing list at http://coreboot.org/Mailinglist, where most
libpayload developers are subscribed.


Copyright and License
---------------------

See LICENSES.