fdt: Make sure there is no stale initrd left

Although if we don't setup an initrd, there could be a stale initrd
setting from the previous boot firmware in the live device tree. So,
make sure there is no setting left if we don't want an initrd.

This can happen when booting on a Raspberry Pi. The boot firmware can
happily load an initrd before us and configuring the addresses in the
live device tree we get handed over.

Especially the setting `auto_initramfs` in config.txt is dangerous.
When enabled (default), the firmware tries to be smart and looks for
initramfs files.

Signed-off-by: Richard Weinberger <richard@nod.at>
This commit is contained in:
Richard Weinberger
2025-05-29 17:02:13 +02:00
committed by Tom Rini
parent 53cc4332b3
commit 9fe2e4b464

View File

@@ -224,15 +224,24 @@ int fdt_initrd(void *fdt, ulong initrd_start, ulong initrd_end)
int is_u64;
uint64_t addr, size;
/* just return if the size of initrd is zero */
if (initrd_start == initrd_end)
return 0;
/* find or create "/chosen" node. */
nodeoffset = fdt_find_or_add_subnode(fdt, 0, "chosen");
if (nodeoffset < 0)
return nodeoffset;
/*
* Although we didn't setup an initrd, there could be a stale
* initrd setting from the previous boot firmware in the live
* device tree. So, make sure there is no setting left if we
* don't want an initrd.
*/
if (initrd_start == initrd_end) {
fdt_delprop(fdt, nodeoffset, "linux,initrd-start");
fdt_delprop(fdt, nodeoffset, "linux,initrd-end");
return 0;
}
total = fdt_num_mem_rsv(fdt);
/*