That method of emergency recovery with a USB stick has already been wiped out by installing coreboot.
-Matt
On Mon, Apr 29, 2019 at 4:09 PM Pablo Correa Gómez ablocorrea@hotmail.com wrote:
Hello and thank you in advance for your time.
I recently bought a KGPE-D16 motherboard with a single AMD Opeteron 8262SE and coreboot installed. I bought from another supplier 4 memory sticks Samsung 8GB (M393B1K70DH0-YK0) that per this thread[1] should work with coreboot. I am able to start the assembled system and to get serial output. According to the logs, coreboot first does the initialisation and training of the memory and then start working on the PCIs. At one point in the boot sequence, I get the following message:
Loaded segments BS: BS_PAYLOAD_LOAD times (us): entry 0 run 80561 exit 0 POST: 0x7b Jumping to boot code at 000ff06e(b7cc1000) POST: 0xf8 CPU0: stack: 00150000 - 00151000, lowest used address 001509e0, stack used: 1568 bytes entry = 0x000ff06e lb_start = 0x00100000 lb_size = 0x00116270 buffer = 0xbfdd3000
Then it stalls for like 20-30 seconds and the booting process restarts from the beginning. I had considered different options in order to boot and I would like to know if someone would have any recommendations. Right now my priority is to get the system up and working. I can worry about installing coreboot later, but having it now is for sure a plus:
- Buy a new chip with the original ASUS BIOS in order to boot the
system. 2) Externally flash the chip I have right now with a newer version of coreboot. I probably have enough things at home to flash it, but I have not found information from ASUS. In coreboot there is some information but very general and not enough for my knowledge. As far as I have read from flashrom, I should be able to flash it using a Raspberry Pi or a BeagleBone Black, but KGPE-D16 is not marked as supported and I don't know which model is the BIOS chip to check if it is supported. 3) The moderboard datasheet has a section called: "Force BIOS recovery setting", which says that in order to flash the proprietary BIOS, it is as simple as changing a jumper an inserting an USB stick. I would have already done it if I would not be reluctant to believe that it is that simple.
Which are your thoughts about this ideas? Any other one that would be simpler and would let me boot the full system?
Thank you very much, Pablo.
NOTE: I have tried with the 4 sticks in the orange slots, the 4 sticks in the 4 further DIMMs from the CPU (2 orange, 2 black) and those configurations both 1.35 and 1.5V. Logs are slightly different, in the training section, but the problem while booting remains. A USB stick with Debian Installer has been plugged-in during since boot process begins.
[1] https://mail.coreboot.org/pipermail/coreboot/2017-February/083151.h tml https://mail.coreboot.org/pipermail/coreboot/2017-February/083151.html _______________________________________________ coreboot mailing list -- coreboot@coreboot.org To unsubscribe send an email to coreboot-leave@coreboot.org