From dbd824c1cd41a1fd5ae9338a012ed5eaf02dc75b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Darren Hart Date: Wed, 11 Apr 2012 10:51:13 -0700 Subject: bootimg: Do not force FAT32 on all images, it violates the FAT specification Fixes [YOCTO #1940] do_bootimg was performing the FAT overhead calculations assuming FAT32 and then forcing the use of FAT32 with "-F 32" to mkdosfs. The FAT specification is clear on cluster count being the determining factor for FAT size (even if the fs string is set to FAT32, go figure). Syslinux follows this spec, and rightly so, resulting in a failure on core-image-minimal: syslinux: zero FAT sectors (FAT12/16) Drop the "-F 32" from mkdosfs to allow it to select the appropriate FAT size based on cluster count. Leave the FAT overhead calculation in FAT32. This will result in a little extra padding for really small images, but not enough extra to justify recalculating for FAT12 and FAT16. Tested with a core-image-minimal build for atom-pc. do_bootimg completed successfully, and the resulting image was FAT16. (From OE-Core rev: 634137704dd1a205e377a1131ef708f1c981f6b2) Signed-off-by: Darren Hart Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie Backported to edison by Darren Hart. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie --- meta/classes/bootimg.bbclass | 5 ++++- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/meta/classes/bootimg.bbclass b/meta/classes/bootimg.bbclass index 489819b815..09f5b67c94 100644 --- a/meta/classes/bootimg.bbclass +++ b/meta/classes/bootimg.bbclass @@ -73,6 +73,9 @@ build_boot_bin() { # Account for the filesystem overhead. This includes directory # entries in the clusters as well as the FAT itself. # Assumptions: + # FAT32 (12 or 16 may be selected by mkdosfs, but the extra + # padding will be minimal on those smaller images and not + # worth the logic here to caclulate the smaller FAT sizes) # < 16 entries per directory # 8.3 filenames only @@ -102,7 +105,7 @@ build_boot_bin() { BLOCKS=$(expr $BLOCKS + $(expr 16 - $(expr $BLOCKS % 16))) IMG=${DEPLOY_DIR_IMAGE}/${IMAGE_NAME}.hddimg - mkdosfs -F 32 -n ${BOOTIMG_VOLUME_ID} -S 512 -C ${IMG} ${BLOCKS} + mkdosfs -n ${BOOTIMG_VOLUME_ID} -S 512 -C ${IMG} ${BLOCKS} # Copy HDDDIR recursively into the image file directly mcopy -i ${IMG} -s ${HDDDIR}/* ::/ -- cgit 1.2.3-korg