iQUIK is an effort to maintain the old QUIK bootloader, and is the only way to boot a recent Linux kernel on an OldWorld, at least known to me.
OldWorld PowerMacs are all PCI-based macs with OpenFirmware, but without built-in on-board USB. The OpenFirmware versions are < 3.0.
[ As a proud owner of a '97 PB 3400c. iQUIK has been my painful journey towards running first 2.4 with initrd, and then 2.6, 3.x and now 4.x kernels ]
iQUIK differs from the plain-jane unmaintained QUIK in a number of important ways:
- Up to date.
- Boots all kernels from 2.2 up.
- Initrd support from config file and CLI.
- Easier to use, harder to break.
- Doesn't use block maps or the first stage loader, which would break if you moved anything around on FS
- Can boot from floppy (i.e. rescue disk).
- Can boot from anything via partition zero (i.e. :0/%BOOT).
- Can boot as \:TBXI or ELF on NewWorlds.
- Symlink support, listing files, etc.
- Preboot script support for rescue disks, install media.
- Better firmware support.
- Works around OF 1.0.5 bugs
- Works around OF 2.0(.X) setprop bugs (i.e. the initrd not found bug)
- Works around 3400c hangs with media bay without CDROM.
- SMP support.
- NewWorld disk access support
- More maintainable
- Doesn't need libext2fs
- Builds with a recent toolchain (gcc version 8.3.0 (Debian 8.3.0-2)
- Cross compile support (on any endianness).
Meant for OldWorlds in general, it has only been tested (by me) on:
- PowerBook 3400c (OF 2.0.1, 603e)
- PowerBook Wallstreet II (PDQ) (OF 2.0.1, G3)
- UMAX StormSurge (OF 1.0.5, 604e), including SMP.
- Performa 6400 (OF 2.0, 603ev)
- QEMU (OpenBIOS 1.1 r1272+).
- PowerBook 12'' 1.5GHz (OF 3, G4)
- iBook 12" (OF 3, G4)
It would be nice to test with 1.1.2 and 2.4. See distrib/ for docs on getting to run on certain hardware (including qemu and NewWorlds, although iQUIK is not meant for NewWorlds).
Tested with 4.7 kernels and older.
- Sarge (yep! 2.4 kernel only).
- Etch (yep!)
- Lenny (yep!)
- Squeeze (yep!)
- Wheezy (yep! but not on my UMAX, and probably a few other machines :-/)
- Jessie (yep! but kernel has no MACE eth, using custom kernel)
Documentation under distrib/ is only for machines tested on. Apple NVRAMRC patches under distrib/Apple_nvramrc may be necessary for other machines. The patches are a direct mirror from http://www.opensource.apple.com/source/system_cmds/system_cmds-175/nvram.tproj/nvram/
Documentation and functionality patches welcome!
I've checked-in the current prebuilts for iQUIK under distrib/.
- 'iquik.b' is the iQUIK boot code
- 'iquik.x64' is the installer, built on x64 Debian 10.6
- 'iquik.conf' is pretty self-explanatory. It doesn't try to be exhaustive.
- 'floppy.img' can be written out to a 1.44MB and booted via 'boot fd:0'.
[ The 'floppy-cfg.img' is an example image with a config file. It can be booted with 'boot fd:0 fd:3/iquik.conf'. If you're wondering how to create partitions either use loopback or a USB floppy, which appears as a SCSI device ]
After fetching the sources.
$ make && make install
If building on non-PowerPC hosts:
$ CROSS=powerpc-linux-gnu- make
You can also build with any of these options: $ make CONFIG_TINY=1 ...will create a smaller executable, for systems where booting via partition zero seems to fail. $ make CONFIG_MEMTEST=1 ...will add a !memtest command for simple testing.
OF will boot the device listed under the 'boot-device' environment variable. In our case it has to be the "partition zero" of whatever device you installed iQUIK onto.
iQUIK will then try to locate the iquik.conf file using the path in 'boot-file'. It will also, on failure, try /etc/iquik.conf, /boot/iquik.conf and /iquik.conf, as well as the quik.conf variants.
For me: boot-device ata0/ata-disk@0:0 boot-file ata0/ata-disk@0:4
...the later corresponds to /etc/quik.conf on /dev/hda4 on PB 3400c.
Another example: boot-device upper/pccard45,401@0:0 boot-file upper/pccard45,401@0:3/installer/iquik.conf
iQUIK will then parse quik.conf similar to Yaboot, the old QUIK, MILO, LILO, etc.
You get the typical 'boot:' prompt. Tab shows the list of images defined in your quik.conf, if any.
You can also type in custom image locations, thus booting any arbitrary kernel with any initrd and any parameters, e.g.: [device:partno]/vmlinux [device:partno]/vmlinux -- kernel arguments [device:partno]/vmlinux [device:partno]/initrd kernel arguments
NOTE: These instructions do not apply to a NewWorld. See distrib/NewWorld.
Whatever medium you want to install iQUIK on, it has to:
- Be mac partitioned
- Contain an Apple_Bootstrap partition.
NOTE: iQUIK does not support any other way of booting on OldWorlds.
Example (for floppy): root@3400c:~# mac-fdisk /dev/fd0 /dev/fd0 Command (? for help): p /dev/fd0 # type name length base ( size ) system /dev/fd01 Apple_partition_map Apple 63 @ 1 ( 31.5k) Partition map /dev/fd02 Apple_Bootstrap bootstrap 1600 @ 64 (800.0k) NewWorld bootblock /dev/fd03 Apple_Free Extra 1216 @ 1664 (608.0k) Free space
Block size=512, Number of Blocks=2880 DeviceType=0x0, DeviceId=0x0
To do this I've used the 'i' command to initialize the partition table, and the 'b' command to create the new 800K bootstrap partition.
NOTE: It's possible to run into OF problems booting large disks. It's probably better to create a /boot partition to contain vmlinux, initrd, and iquik.conf right after the bootstrap partition.
Assuming the physical disk you've prepared as above contains your root partition (with /boot), running
$ iquik
...should be sufficient. 'iquik -v' for verbosity. 'iquik -T -v' if you just want to see what iquik would have done. The tool will not do anything if you don't have an Apple_Bootstrap partition.
If you want to install on some other media, use the '-d' flag:
$ iquik -d /dev/fd0
If you want to use an alternate iquik.b (instead of the one in /boot), use the '-b' flag:
$ iquik -b /my/hacked/iquik.b
If you want iquik to evaluate a forth script before looking for the boot-file:
$ iquik -p /my/special/preboot/script.of
NOTE: the 'iquik' tool doesn't set the NVRAM variables itself. You need to do that yourself.
Example:
[ I installed to /dev/hda ]
root@3400c:~# nvsetenv boot-device "ata0/ata-disk@0:0"
[ Configuration is on /etc/quik.conf on /dev/hda4 ]
root@3400c:~# nvsetenv boot-file "ata0/ata-disk@0:4"
From OF prompt, you can boot it several ways.
0 > boot
[ assuming boot-device and boot-file was correctly set ]
0 > boot fd:0
[ assuming boot-file was correctly set ]
0 > boot fd:0 -- Linux26
[ assuming boot-file was correctly set, iQUIK will immediately boot the image specified by the label Linux26 ]
0 > boot fd:0 ata0/ata-disk@0:4 Linux24
[ tells iQUIK to load image Linux24 using the quik.conf file at ata0/ata-disk@0:4/etc/quik.conf ]
0 > boot upper/pccard45,401@0:0 upper/pccard45,401@0:4/installer/quik.conf
[ tells iQUIK to boot from a CF card in top PCMCIA slot with a custom quik.conf location on /dev/hdc4 ]
Once you're at the boot prompt:
boot: !dev device:part
[ change the default device/partition - the default device/partition are the ones used to load quik.conf ]
boot: !ls
[ list files on the default device/partition ]
boot: !ls /boot
[ list files under /boot on default device/partition ]
boot: !ls upper/pccard45,401@0:4/installer
[ list files under /install on partition 4 of CF card in top PCMCIA slot ]
boot: ata0/ata-disk@0:4/boot/vmlinux /boot/initrd.img root=/dev/sda4
[ boot kernel with initrd and boot options ]
boot: ata0/ata-disk@0:4/boot/vmlinux ata0/ata-disk@0:4/boot/initrd.img root=/dev/sda4
[ boot kernel with initrd and boot options ]
boot: ata0/ata-disk@0:4/boot/vmlinux -- root=/dev/sda4
[ boot kernel with boot options ]
boot: !cat /quik.conf
[ show contents of /quik.conf on default device ]
boot: !of 1 1 + .
[ interpret Forth via OF ]
boot: !halt
[ enters OF... type 'go' to get back ]
boot: !debug
[ will pause at important places during boot-up so you can track progress ]
boot: !prom_flags
[ will list current prom.c behavior flags, advanced debugging ]
boot: !prom_flags 0xf00f
[ will change the current prom.c behavior flags, advanced debugging ]
boot: !memtest base size
[ a rudimentary memory test, assuming iquik is built with support for it ]
boot: !old
[ switch to allow booting pre-2.4 kernels, akin to old-kernel conf file flag ]
- Symlinks are supported
- initrd-size argument is unnecessary and unused.
- initrd can contain OF device:part
- forth eval image names via $ not supported (it was broken anyway).
The next items I'll probably look at, are (in no order):
- FAT and ISO9660 support.
- More uncruftification.
- Allow specifying a whole disk file system (need partitions today).
- Build an XCOFF variant for loading from iso9660, enet, etc.
- Check model and apply nvramrc patches
- BSD kernel support.
Andrei Warkentin ([email protected])