# Building and using MCUboot with Zephyr MCUboot began its life as the bootloader for Mynewt. It has since acquired the ability to be used as a bootloader for Zephyr as well. There are some pretty significant differences in how apps are built for Zephyr, and these are documented here. Please see the [design document](design.md) for documentation on the design and operation of the bootloader itself. This functionality should be the same on all supported RTOSs. The first step required for Zephyr is making sure your board has flash partitions defined in its device tree. These partitions are: - `boot_partition`: for MCUboot itself - `slot0_partition`: the primary slot of Image 0 - `slot1_partition`: the secondary slot of Image 0 It is not recommended to use the swap-using-scratch algorithm of MCUboot, but if this operating mode is desired then the following flash partition is also needed (see end of this help file for details on creating a scratch partition and how to use the swap-using-scratch algorithm): - `scratch_partition`: the scratch slot Currently, the two image slots must be contiguous. If you are running MCUboot as your stage 1 bootloader, `boot_partition` must be configured so your SoC runs it out of reset. If there are multiple updateable images then the corresponding primary and secondary partitions must be defined for the rest of the images too (for example, `slot2_partition` and `slot3_partition` for Image 1). The flash partitions are typically defined in the Zephyr boards folder, in a file named `boards///.dts`. An example `.dts` file with flash partitions defined is the frdm_k64f's in `boards/arm/frdm_k64f/frdm_k64f.dts`. Make sure the DT node labels in your board's `.dts` file match the ones used there. ## Installing requirements and dependencies Install additional packages required for development with MCUboot: ``` cd ~/mcuboot # or to your directory where MCUboot is cloned pip3 install --user -r scripts/requirements.txt ``` ## Building the bootloader itself The bootloader is an ordinary Zephyr application, at least from Zephyr's point of view. There is a bit of configuration that needs to be made before building it. Most of this can be done as documented in the `CMakeLists.txt` file in boot/zephyr. There are comments there for guidance. It is important to select a signature algorithm, and decide if the primary slot should be validated on every boot. To build MCUboot, create a build directory in boot/zephyr, and build it as usual: ``` cd boot/zephyr west build -b ``` In addition to the partitions defined in DTS, some additional information about the flash layout is currently required to build MCUboot itself. All the needed configuration is collected in `boot/zephyr/include/target.h`. Depending on the board, this information may come from board-specific headers, Device Tree, or be configured by MCUboot on a per-SoC family basis. After building the bootloader, the binaries should reside in `build/zephyr/zephyr.{bin,hex,elf}`, where `build` is the build directory you chose when running `west build`. Use `west flash` to flash these binaries from the build directory. Depending on the target and flash tool used, this might erase the whole of the flash memory (mass erase) or only the sectors where the bootloader resides prior to programming the bootloader image itself. ## Building applications for the bootloader In addition to flash partitions in DTS, some additional configuration is required to build applications for MCUboot. This is handled internally by the Zephyr configuration system and is wrapped in the `CONFIG_BOOTLOADER_MCUBOOT` Kconfig variable, which must be enabled in the application's `prj.conf` file. The directory `samples/zephyr/hello-world` in the MCUboot tree contains a simple application with everything you need. You can try it on your board and then just make a copy of it to get started on your own application; see samples/zephyr/README.md for a tutorial. The Zephyr `CONFIG_BOOTLOADER_MCUBOOT` configuration option [documentation](http://docs.zephyrproject.org/reference/kconfig/CONFIG_BOOTLOADER_MCUBOOT.html) provides additional details regarding the changes it makes to the image placement and generation in order for an application to be bootable by MCUboot. With this, build the application as your normally would. ### Signing the application In order to upgrade to an image (or even boot it, if `MCUBOOT_VALIDATE_PRIMARY_SLOT` is enabled), the images must be signed. To make development easier, MCUboot is distributed with some example keys. It is important to stress that these should never be used for production, since the private key is publicly available in this repository. See below on how to make your own signatures. Images can be signed with the `scripts/imgtool.py` script. It is best to look at `samples/zephyr/Makefile` for examples on how to use this. ### Flashing the application The application itself can flashed with regular flash tools, but will need to be programmed at the offset of the primary slot for this particular target. Depending on the platform and flash tool you might need to manually specify a flash offset corresponding to the primary slot starting address. This is usually not relevant for flash tools that use Intel Hex images (.hex) instead of raw binary images (.bin) since the former include destination address information. Additionally you will need to make sure that the flash tool does not perform a mass erase (erasing the whole of the flash) or else you would be deleting MCUboot. These images can also be marked for upgrade, and loaded into the secondary slot, at which point the bootloader should perform an upgrade. It is up to the image to mark the primary slot as "image ok" before the next reboot, otherwise the bootloader will revert the application. ## Managing signing keys The signing keys used by MCUboot are represented in standard formats, and can be generated and processed using conventional tools. However, `scripts/imgtool.py` is able to generate key pairs in all of the supported formats. See [the docs](imgtool.md) for more details on this tool. ### Generating a new keypair Generating a keypair with imgtool is a matter of running the keygen subcommand: ``` $ ./scripts/imgtool.py keygen -k mykey.pem -t rsa-2048 ``` The argument to `-t` should be the desired key type. See the [the docs](imgtool.md) for more details on the possible key types. ### Extracting the public key The generated keypair above contains both the public and the private key. It is necessary to extract the public key and insert it into the bootloader. Use the ``CONFIG_BOOT_SIGNATURE_KEY_FILE`` Kconfig option to provide the path to the key file so the build system can extract the public key in a format usable by the C compiler. The generated public key is saved in `build/zephyr/autogen-pubkey.h`, which is included by the `boot/zephyr/keys.c`. Currently, the Zephyr RTOS port limits its support to one keypair at the time, although MCUboot's key management infrastructure supports multiple keypairs. Once MCUboot is built, this new keypair file (`mykey.pem` in this example) can be used to sign images. ## Using swap-using-scratch flash algorithm To use the swap-using-scratch flash algorithm, a scratch partition needs to be present for the target board which is used for holding the data being swapped from both slots, this section must be at least as big as the largest sector size of the 2 partitions (e.g. if a device has a primary slot in main flash with a sector size of 512 bytes and secondar slot in external off-chip flash with a sector size of 4KB then the scratch area must be at least 4KB in size). The number of sectors must also be evenly divisable by this sector size, e.g. 4KB, 8KB, 12KB, 16KB are allowed, 7KB, 7.5KB are not. This scratch partition needs adding to the .dts file for the board, e.g. for the nrf52dk_nrf52832 board thus would involve updating `/boards/arm/nrf52dk_nrf52832/nrf52dk_nrf52832.dts` with: ``` boot_partition: partition@0 { label = "mcuboot"; reg = <0x00000000 0xc000>; }; slot0_partition: partition@c000 { label = "image-0"; reg = <0x0000C000 0x37000>; }; slot1_partition: partition@43000 { label = "image-1"; reg = <0x00043000 0x37000>; }; storage_partition: partition@7a000 { label = "storage"; reg = <0x0007a000 0x00006000>; }; ``` Which would make the application size 220KB and scratch size 24KB (the nRF52832 has a 4KB sector size so the size of the scratch partition can be reduced at the cost of vastly reducing flash lifespan, e.g. for a 32KB firmware update with an 8KB scratch area, the scratch area would be erased and programmed 8 times per image upgrade/revert). To configure MCUboot to work in swap-using-scratch mode, the Kconfig value must be set when building it: `CONFIG_BOOT_SWAP_USING_SCRATCH=y`. Note that it is possible for an application to get into a stuck state when swap-using-scratch is used whereby an application has loaded a firmware update and marked it as test/confirmed but MCUboot will not swap the images and erasing the secondary slot from the zephyr application returns an error because the slot is marked for upgrade.