ref: fcccaf74c54ecd44b7e8bf45a7b0c99572f6a949
dir: /os/cerf250/README/
Booting Inferno on a Cerfboard 250 This is a preliminary version (work in progress) of Inferno on an Intrinsyc Cerfboard 250 (without daughterboard[s]). It and ../pxa were initially the results of a fairly idle `afternoon and an evening' port. A little work has been done on it since then. Updates will be available shortly to complete peripheral support (at least for the Cerfboard 250), and provide suspend mode. It allows Inferno to boot up and take resources from the net, chatting on the console. I2C to the PCF8563 clock and EEPROMs is also supported. Substitute appropriate your own directory's name for /usr/inferno in the following. Build the /usr/inferno/os/cerf250 kernel into /usr/inferno/os/cerf250/icerf: mk It uses common PXA25x code in ../pxa, as well as ../port etc. Make that icerf file available to the cerf cube by tftp. How you do that depends on your host system. It should then be easy: 1. Reset the cerf cube (power off/on), and quickly, during `hit a key ...' hit a key. 2. type network.start() download 10.0.0.1 "/usr/inferno/os/cerf250/icerf" 0xa0020000 with appropriate substitution for boot server and file name. 3. on success jump 0xa0020020 it should run. once you're happy with it, the kernel image can replace the Linux one in flash. i plan, however, to use my sqz code to compress it by about 50% with fast decompression. forsyth@vitanuova.com Fri Mar 19 16:42:07 GMT 2004