Kernel XIP Specification R2

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VERSION 0.2

Introduction

This specification is for Kernel Execute-In-Place (XIP). XIP refers to the capability for a Linux kernel to be executed directly from a persistent, read-only memory or media type (usually ROM or FLASH). When the kernel is executed in this fashion, the bootloader can avoid loading the kernel from persistent storage, decompressing it, and saving it into system RAM.

Rationale

The process of loading, decompressing, and writing a kernel to RAM is dependent on the size of the kernel and the speed of the processor and the associated memory devices. An observed time in practice is about 500 milliseconds. (For examples of observed time, please see the page referred to in the References section below.) This time can be saved by avoiding these steps and instead executing the kernel directly from its location in persistent storage.

Specifications

  1. The Linux kernel SHALL support an option for executing the kernel directly from a persistent memory-mapped storage location.
    • The configuration option for kernel XIP MUST be called CONFIG_XIP_KERNEL
  2. When the option CONFIG_XIP_KERNEL is enabled, compilation of the kernel SHALL produce a kernel image that can be directly executed from ROM or FLASH.

Notes (informational and non-normative)

  1. It is possible that FLASH memory being used for kernel XIP may not be available for other uses by the kernel which is being executed from it. Whether this is the case or not depends on the implementation details for the code which supports this specification. This specification does not currently require that the kernel be able to use the flash from which it executes for other uses (like filesystems.)

References

See the page Kernel XIP for information about this feature, and for examples of time reductions that have been demonstrated with its use.

Remaining Issues

  • decide if we should address performance side effect of kernel XIP
  • Figure out difference in usage or intent (if any) between use of CONFIG_XIP_ROM and CONFIG_XIP_KERNEL. Determine if the difference in feature set for execution from ROM vs. execution from FLASH (when flash is also used for filesystem operations) means that we should specify these separately.
  • Decide if we should standardize use of CONFIG_XIP_PHYS_ADDR vs. CONFIG_XIP_KERNEL_TXTBASE