xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/dtc/dtc.1 (revision f5463265955b829775bbb32e1fd0bc11dafc36ce)
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31.Dd February 26, 2022
32.Dt DTC 1
33.Os
34.Sh NAME
35.Nm dtc
36.Nd device tree compiler
37.Sh SYNOPSIS
38.Nm
39.Op Fl @fhsv
40.Op Fl b Ar boot_cpu_id
41.Op Fl d Ar dependency_file
42.Op Fl i Ar include_path
43.Op Fl E Ar [no-]checker_name
44.Op Fl H Ar phandle_format
45.Op Fl I Ar input_format
46.Op Fl O Ar output_format
47.Op Fl o Ar output_file
48.Op Fl R Ar entries
49.Op Fl S Ar bytes
50.Op Fl p Ar bytes
51.Op Fl V Ar blob_version
52.Op Fl W Ar [no-]checker_name
53.Op Fl P Ar predefined_properties
54.Ar input_file
55.Sh DESCRIPTION
56The
57.Nm
58utility converts between flattened device tree (FDT) representations.
59It is most commonly used to generate device tree blobs (DTB), the binary
60representation of an FDT, from device tree sources (DTS), the ASCII text source
61representation.
62.Pp
63The binary can be written in two formats, binary and assembly.
64The binary is identical to the in-memory representation and can be used
65directly by firmware, loaders, and so on.
66The assembly format, documented in
67.Sx "ASM FORMAT" ,
68will produce the same binary format when assembled, but also includes some
69global variables that refer to parts of the table.
70This format is most commonly used to produce a kernel specific to a device,
71with the device tree blob compiled in.
72.Pp
73The options are as follows:
74.Bl -tag -width indent
75.It Fl d Ar dependency_file
76Writes a dependency file understandable by make to the specified file.
77This file can be included in a Makefile and will ensure that the output file
78depends on the input file and any files that it includes.
79This argument is only useful when the input is DTS, as only the source format
80has a notion of inclusions.
81.It Fl i Ar include_path
82Adds a path to search for include files.
83.It Fl E Ar [no-]checker_name
84Enable or disable a specified checker.
85The argument is the name of the checker.
86The full list of checkers is given in
87.Sx CHECKERS .
88.It Fl @
89Emit a __symbols__ node to allow plugins to be loaded.
90.It Fl f
91Force the tool to attempt to generate the output, even if the input had errors.
92.It Fl h
93Display the help text and exit.
94.It Fl H Ar phandle_format
95Specifies the type of phandle nodes to generate in the output.
96Valid values are:
97.Pp
98.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
99.It Ar linux
100Generate the legacy linux,phandle nodes expected by older systems.
101.It Ar epapr
102Generate the phandle nodes, as described in the ePAPR specification.
103This is the most sensible option for device trees being used with
104.Fx .
105.It Ar both
106Generate both, for maximum compatibility.
107.El
108.It Fl I Ar input_format
109Specifies the input format.
110Valid values are:
111.Pp
112.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
113.It Ar dtb
114Device tree blob.
115The binary representation of the FDT.
116.It Ar dts
117Device tree source.
118The ASCII representation of the FDT.
119This is the default if the input format is not explicitly stated.
120.El
121.It Fl O Ar output_format
122Specifies the output format.
123Valid values are:
124.Pp
125.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
126.It Ar asm
127Assembler source for generating a device tree blob, as described in
128.Sx "ASM FORMAT" .
129.It Ar dtb
130Device tree blob.
131The binary representation of the FDT.
132This is the default if the output format is not explicitly stated.
133.It Ar dts
134Device tree source.
135The ASCII representation of the FDT.
136.El
137.It Fl o Ar output_file
138The file to which to write the output.
139.It Fl P Ar predefined_macro
140Defines a macro, in the form
141.Ar name=value
142or
143.Ar name
144to be used for device tree source files that contain conditional components.
145This tool supports two extensions to the standard to support conditional
146compilation of device trees.
147The first is an
148.Ar /include/if [property]/ "file.dts"
149directive that is allowed at the start of a file and which will only include
150the specified file if it the specified property is passed with this flag.
151The second is the
152.Ar $NAME
153format for property values.
154These allow property value to be specified on the command line.
155.It Fl R Ar entries
156The number of empty reservation table entries to pad the table with.
157This is useful if you are generating a device tree blob for bootloader or
158similar that needs to reserve some memory before passing control to the
159operating system.
160.It Fl S Ar bytes
161The minimum size in bytes of the blob.
162The blob will be padded after the strings table to ensure that it is the
163correct size.
164This is useful for environments where the device tree blob must be modified in
165place.
166.It Fl p Ar bytes
167The number of bytes of padding to add to the blob.
168The blob will be padded after the strings table to ensure that it is the
169correct size.
170This is useful for environments where the device tree blob must be modified in
171place.
172.It Fl W Ar [no-]checker_name
173Enable or disable a specified checker.
174This is an alias for
175.Fl E .
176.It Fl s
177Sorts the properties and nodes in the tree.
178This is mainly useful when using tools like
179.Xr diff 1
180to compare two device tree sources.
181.It Fl V Ar output_version
182The version of the format to output.
183This is only relevant for binary outputs, and only a value of 17 is currently
184supported.
185.It Fl v
186Display the tool version and exit.
187.It Ar input_file
188The source file.
189.El
190.Sh "ASM FORMAT"
191The assembly format defines several globals that can be referred to from other
192compilation units, in addition to any labels specified in the source.
193These are:
194.Pp
195.Bl -tag -width "dt_strings_start" -compact -offset indent
196.It dt_blob_start
197start of the device tree blob.
198.It dt_header
199start of the header, usually identical to the start of the blob.
200.It dt_reserve_map
201start of the reservation map.
202.It dt_struct_start
203start of the structure table.
204.It dt_struct_end
205end of the structure table.
206.It dt_strings_start
207start of the strings table.
208.It dt_strings_end
209end of the strings table.
210.It dt_blob_end
211end of the device tree blob.
212.El
213.Sh CHECKERS
214The utility provides a number of semantic checks on the correctness of the
215tree.
216These can be disabled with the
217.Fl W
218flag.
219For example,
220.Fl W Ar no-type-phandle
221will disable the phandle type check.
222The supported checks are:
223.Pp
224.Bl -tag -width "no-type-phandle" -compact -offset indent
225.It type-compatible
226Checks the type of the
227.Va compatible
228property.
229.It type-model
230Checks the type of the
231.Va model
232property.
233.It type-compatible
234Checks the type of the
235.Va compatible
236property.
237.It cells-attributes
238Checks that all nodes with children have both
239.Va #address-cells
240and
241.Va #size-cells
242properties.
243.It deleted-nodes
244Checks that all
245.Va /delete-node/
246statements refer to nodes that are merged.
247.El
248.Sh OVERLAYS
249The utility provides support for generating overlays, also known as plugins.
250Overlays are a method of patching a base device tree that has been compiled with
251the
252.Fl @
253flag, with some limited support for patching device trees that were not compiled
254with the
255.Fl @
256flag.
257.Pp
258To denote that a DTS is intended to be used as an overlay,
259.Va /plugin/\&;
260should be included in the header, following any applicable
261.Va /dts-v1/\&;
262tag.
263.Pp
264Conventional overlays are crafted by creating
265.Va fragment
266nodes in a root.
267Each fragment node must have either a
268.Va target
269property set to a label reference, or a
270.Va target-path
271string property set to a path.
272It must then have an
273.Va __overlay__
274child node, whose properties and child nodes are merged into the base device
275tree when the overlay is applied.
276.Pp
277Much simpler syntactic sugar was later invented to simplify generating overlays.
278Instead of creating targeted fragments manually, one can instead create a root
279node that targets a label in the base FDT using the
280.Va &label
281syntax supported in conventional DTS.
282This will indicate that a fragment should be generated for the node, with the
283given
284.Va label
285being the target, and the properties and child nodes will be used as the
286__overlay__.
287.Pp
288Additionally, a path-based version of this syntactic sugar is supported.
289A root node may target a path in the base FDT using a name of the form
290.Va &{/path} .
291A fragment will be generated for the node as it is in the
292.Va &label
293case, except the
294.Va target-path
295property will be set to
296.Va /path
297and no
298.Va target
299will be set.
300.Pp
301Both conventional overlays and the later-added syntactic sugar are supported.
302.Pp
303Overlay blobs can be applied at boot time by setting
304.Va fdt_overlays
305in
306.Xr loader.conf 5 .
307Multiple overlays may be specified, and they will be applied in the order given.
308.Sh NODE OMISSION
309This utility supports the
310.Va /omit-if-no-ref/
311statement to mark nodes for omission if they are ultimately not referenced
312elsewhere in the device tree.
313This may be used in more space-constrained environments to remove nodes that may
314not be applicable to the specific device the tree is being compiled for.
315.Pp
316When the
317.Fl @
318flag is used to write symbols, nodes with labels will be considered referenced
319and will not be removed from the tree.
320.Sh EXAMPLES
321The command:
322.Pp
323.Dl "dtc -o blob.S -O asm device.dts"
324.Pp
325will generate a
326.Pa blob.S
327file from the device tree source
328.Pa device.dts
329and print errors if any occur during parsing or property checking.
330The resulting file can be assembled and linked into a binary.
331.Pp
332The command:
333.Pp
334.Dl "dtc -o - -O dts -I dtb device.dtb"
335.Pp
336will write the device tree source for the device tree blob
337.Pa device.dtb
338to the standard output.
339This is useful when debugging device trees.
340.Pp
341The command:
342.Pp
343.Dl "dtc -@ -O dtb -I dts -o device.dtb device.dts"
344.Pp
345will generate a
346.Pa device.dtb
347file from the device tree source
348.Pa device.dts
349with a __symbols__ node included so that overlays may be applied to it.
350.Pp
351The command:
352.Pp
353.Dl "dtc -@ -O dtb -I dts -o device_overlay.dtbo device_overlay.dts"
354.Pp
355will generate a
356.Pa device_overlay.dtbo
357file, using the standard extension for a device tree overlay, from the device
358tree source
359.Pa device_overlay.dts .
360A __symbols__ node will be included so that overlays may be applied to it.
361The presence of a
362.Va /plugin/\&;
363directive in
364.Pa device_overlay.dts
365will indicate to the utility that it should also generate the underlying
366metadata required in overlays.
367.Sh COMPATIBILITY
368This utility is intended to be compatible with the device tree compiler
369provided by elinux.org.
370Currently, it implements the subset of features
371required to build
372.Fx
373and others that have been requested by
374.Fx
375developers.
376.Pp
377The
378.Ar fs
379input format is not supported.
380This builds a tree from a Linux
381.Pa  /proc/device-tree ,
382a file system hierarchy not found in
383.Fx ,
384which instead exposes the DTB directly via a sysctl.
385.Pp
386The warnings and errors supported by the elinux.org tool are not documented.
387This tool supports the warnings described in the
388.Sx CHECKERS
389section.
390.Sh SEE ALSO
391.Xr fdt 4
392.Sh STANDARDS
393The device tree formats understood by this tool conform to the Power.org
394Standard for Embedded Power Architecture Platform Requirements
395.Pq Vt ePAPR ,
396except as noted in the
397.Sx BUGS
398section and with the following exceptions for compatibility with the elinux.org
399tool:
400.Pp
401.Bl -bullet -compact
402.It
403The target of cross references is defined to be a node name in the
404specification, but is in fact a label.
405.El
406.Pp
407The /include/ directive is not part of the standard, however it is implemented
408with the semantics compatible with the elinux.org tool.
409It must appear in the top level of a file, and imports a new root definition.
410If a file, plus all of its inclusions, contains multiple roots then they are
411merged.
412All nodes that are present in the second but not the first are imported.
413Any that appear in both are recursively merged, with properties from the second
414replacing those from the first and properties child nodes being recursively
415merged.
416.Sh HISTORY
417A dtc tool first appeared in
418.Fx 9.0 .
419This version of the tool first appeared in
420.Fx 10.0 .
421.Sh AUTHORS
422.Nm
423was written by
424.An David T. Chisnall .
425Some features were added later by
426.An Kyle Evans .
427.Pp
428Note: The fact that the tool and the author share the same initials is entirely
429coincidental.
430.Sh BUGS
431The device tree compiler does not yet support the following features:
432.Pp
433.Bl -bullet -compact
434.It
435Labels in the middle of property values.
436This is only useful in the assembly output, and only vaguely useful there, so
437is unlikely to be added soon.
438.It
439Full paths, rather than labels, as the targets for phandles.
440This is not very hard to add, but will probably not be added until something
441actually needs it.
442.El
443.Pp
444The current version performs a very limited set of semantic checks on the tree.
445This will be improved in future versions.
446