Talk:Advanced booting

(suasweta: new section)
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As for pre-caching initfs before flashing - this may not be strictly needed, maybe everything important is already cached, it is added just in case. We want to prevent situation where we are erasing/flashing /dev/mtd3 and bme or dsme causes some (both read or write) I/O and jffs2 driver becomes confused since we just erased mtd3 or completely rewrote it with different data.
As for pre-caching initfs before flashing - this may not be strictly needed, maybe everything important is already cached, it is added just in case. We want to prevent situation where we are erasing/flashing /dev/mtd3 and bme or dsme causes some (both read or write) I/O and jffs2 driver becomes confused since we just erased mtd3 or completely rewrote it with different data.
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Revision as of 15:42, 6 August 2012

Great someone is documenting this, thanks :-) Few random comments:

cp -a /mnt/initfs initfs is not best idea, you will copy also unneeded stuff in proc, sys, dev, tmp ... and you may also miss hidden stuff under some such mount point (/dev), safer is

 mount -t jffs2 /dev/mtdblock3 initfs.orig
 cp -a initfs.orig initfs

As for inplace editing, this is somewhat safe with Diablo. With older 2MB big initfs the danger was real. With just few (5-10?) edits of linuxrc file one may end with partially written (truncated) linuxrc and no way to fix it.

As for pre-caching initfs before flashing - this may not be strictly needed, maybe everything important is already cached, it is added just in case. We want to prevent situation where we are erasing/flashing /dev/mtd3 and bme or dsme causes some (both read or write) I/O and jffs2 driver becomes confused since we just erased mtd3 or completely rewrote it with different data.