mirror of
https://github.com/AsahiLinux/u-boot
synced 2024-11-15 01:17:39 +00:00
d992daf99d
Patch by Murray Jensen, 01 Jul 2005 |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
badsubmit.php | ||
bddb.css | ||
brlog.php | ||
browse.php | ||
config.php | ||
create_tables.sql | ||
defs.php | ||
dodelete.php | ||
dodellog.php | ||
doedit.php | ||
doedlog.php | ||
donew.php | ||
donewlog.php | ||
edit.php | ||
edlog.php | ||
execute.php | ||
index.php | ||
new.php | ||
newlog.php | ||
README |
Hymod Board Database (C) Copyright 2001 Murray Jensen <Murray.Jensen@csiro.au> CSIRO Manufacturing Science and Technology, Preston Lab 25-Jun-01 This stuff is a set of PHP/MySQL scripts to implement a custom board database. It will need *extensive* hacking to modify it to keep the information about your custom boards that you want, however it is a good starting point. How it is used: 1. a board has gone through all the hardware testing etc and is ready to have the flash programmed for the first time - first you go to a web page and fill in information about the board in a form to register it in a database 2. the web stuff allocates a (unique) serial number and (optionally) a (locally administered) ethernet address and stores the information in a database using the serial number as the key (can do whole batches of boards in one go and/or use a previously registered board as defaults for the new board(s)) 3. it then creates a file in the tftp area of a server somewhere containing the board information in a simple text format (one per serial number) 4. all hymod boards have an i2c eeprom, and when U-Boot sees that the eeprom is unitialised, it prompts for a serial number and ethernet address (if not set), then transfers the file created in step 3 from the server and initialises the eeprom from its contents What this means is you can't boot the board until you have allocated a serial number, but you don't have to type it all twice - you do it once on the web and the board then finds the info it needs to initialise its eeprom. The other side of the coin is the reading of the eeprom and how it gets passed to Linux (or another O/S). To see how this is all done for the hymod boards look at the code in the "board/hymod" directory and in the file "include/asm/hymod.h". Hymod boards can have a mezzanine card which also have an eeprom that needs allocating, the same process is used for these as well - just a different i2c address. Other forms provide the following functions: - browsing the board database - editing board information (one at a time) - maintaining/browsing a (simple) per board event log You will need: MySQL (I use version 3.23.7-alpha), PHP4 (with MySQL support enabled) and a web server (I use Apache 1.3.x). I originally started by using phpMyBuilder (http://kyber.dk/phpMyBuilder) but it soon got far more complicated than that could handle (but I left the copyright messages in there anyway). Most of the code resides in the common defs.php file, which shouldn't need much alteration - all the work will be in shaping the front-end php files to your liking. Here's a quick summary of what needs doing to use it for your boards: 1. get phpMyAdmin (http://phpwizard.net/projects/phpMyAdmin/) - it's an invaluable tool for this sort of stuff (this step is optional of course) 2. edit "bddb.css" to your taste, if you could be bothered - I have no idea what is in there or what it does - I copied it from somewhere else ("user.css" from the phpMyEdit (http://phpmyedit.sourcerforge.net) package, I think) - I figure one day I'll see what sort of things I can change in there. 3. create a mysql database - call it whatever you like 4. edit "create_tables.sql" and modify the "boards" table schema to reflect the information you want to keep about your boards. It may or may not be easier to do this and the next step in phpMyAdmin. Check out the MySQL documentation at http://www.mysql.com/doc/ in particular the column types at http://www.mysql.com/doc/C/o/Column_types.html - Note there is only support for a few data types: int - presented as an html text input char/text - presented as an html text input date - presented as an html text input enum - presented as an html radio input I also have what I call "enum_multi" which is a set of enums with the same name, but suffixed with a number e.g. fred0, fred1, fred2. These are presented as a number of html select's with a single label "fred" this is useful for board characteristics that have multiple items of the same type e.g. multiple banks of sdram. 5. use the "create_tables.sql" file to create the "boards" table in the database e.g. mysql dbname < create_tables.sql 6. create a user and password for the web server to log into the MySQL database with; give this user select, insert and update privileges to the database created in 3 (and delete, if you want the "delete" functions in the edit forms to work- I have this turned off). phpMyAdmin helps in this step. 7. edit "config.php" and set the variables: $mysql_user, $mysql_pw, $mysql_db, $bddb_cfgdir and $bddb_label - keep the contents of this file secret - it contains the web servers username and password (the three $mysql_* vars are set from the previous step) 8. edit "defs.php" and a. adjust the various enum value arrays and b. edit the function "pg_foot()" to remove my email address :-) 9. do major hacking on the following files: browse.php, doedit.php, donew.php, edit.php and new.php to reflect your database schema - fortunately the hacking is fairly straight-forward, but it is boring and time-consuming. These notes were written rather hastily - if you find any obvious problems please let me know.