diff mbox series

[RFC] docs/booting.rst: start documenting the boot process

Message ID 20190308211557.22589-1-alex.bennee@linaro.org
State New
Headers show
Series [RFC] docs/booting.rst: start documenting the boot process | expand

Commit Message

Alex Bennée March 8, 2019, 9:15 p.m. UTC
While working on some test cases I realised there was quite a lot of
assumed knowledge about how things boot up. I thought it would be
worth gathering this together in a user facing document where we could
pour in the details and background to the boot process. As it's quite
wordy I thought it should be a separate document to the manual (which
can obviously reference this). So far I've managed almost a thousand
words and haven't actually related anything to QEMU's options yet.

So going forward:

  - is this a useful document to have in docs?
  - are there any other areas to mention?
    - out auto-magic -bios selection seems like something worth covering
  - should we have some worked examples of command lines?
    - I was thinking for example of read-only and pflash examples
  - we should also describe why direct kernel boots exits
    - and also the fact they are not that direct (some code executes
      before a kernel - even if it's less than a full firmware)

Submitted for comment....

Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>

---
 docs/booting.rst | 127 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 127 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 docs/booting.rst

-- 
2.20.1

Comments

Peter Maydell March 9, 2019, 2:10 p.m. UTC | #1
On Fri, 8 Mar 2019 at 21:16, Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org> wrote:
>

> While working on some test cases I realised there was quite a lot of

> assumed knowledge about how things boot up. I thought it would be

> worth gathering this together in a user facing document where we could

> pour in the details and background to the boot process. As it's quite

> wordy I thought it should be a separate document to the manual (which

> can obviously reference this). So far I've managed almost a thousand

> words and haven't actually related anything to QEMU's options yet.

>

> So going forward:

>

>   - is this a useful document to have in docs?

>   - are there any other areas to mention?

>     - out auto-magic -bios selection seems like something worth covering

>   - should we have some worked examples of command lines?

>     - I was thinking for example of read-only and pflash examples

>   - we should also describe why direct kernel boots exits

>     - and also the fact they are not that direct (some code executes

>       before a kernel - even if it's less than a full firmware)

>

> Submitted for comment....

>

> Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>

> ---

>  docs/booting.rst | 127 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

>  1 file changed, 127 insertions(+)

>  create mode 100644 docs/booting.rst


We're trying to move towards having no documents in
the root docs/ directory, but instead having them all
in one of the various subdirectories that will each
be one of our five manuals:
https://wiki.qemu.org/Features/Documentation

thanks
-- PMM
Paolo Bonzini March 11, 2019, 1:32 p.m. UTC | #2
On 08/03/19 22:15, Alex Bennée wrote:
> While working on some test cases I realised there was quite a lot of

> assumed knowledge about how things boot up. I thought it would be

> worth gathering this together in a user facing document where we could

> pour in the details and background to the boot process. As it's quite

> wordy I thought it should be a separate document to the manual (which

> can obviously reference this). So far I've managed almost a thousand

> words and haven't actually related anything to QEMU's options yet.


This might be more blog material, but it's certainly good stuff!

Paolo

> So going forward:

> 

>   - is this a useful document to have in docs?

>   - are there any other areas to mention?

>     - out auto-magic -bios selection seems like something worth covering

>   - should we have some worked examples of command lines?

>     - I was thinking for example of read-only and pflash examples

>   - we should also describe why direct kernel boots exits

>     - and also the fact they are not that direct (some code executes

>       before a kernel - even if it's less than a full firmware)

> 

> Submitted for comment....

> 

> Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>

> ---

>  docs/booting.rst | 127 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

>  1 file changed, 127 insertions(+)

>  create mode 100644 docs/booting.rst

> 

> diff --git a/docs/booting.rst b/docs/booting.rst

> new file mode 100644

> index 0000000000..a8a644ff9a

> --- /dev/null

> +++ b/docs/booting.rst

> @@ -0,0 +1,127 @@

> +=====================================

> +Anatomy of a Boot, a QEMU perspective

> +=====================================

> +

> +This document attempts to give an overview of how machines boot-up and

> +how this matters to QEMU. We will discuss firmware and BIOSes and the

> +things they do before the OS kernel is loaded and your usable system

> +is finally ready.

> +

> +Firmware

> +========

> +

> +When a CPU is powered up it knows nothing about it's environment. It's

> +internal state, including the program counter (PC), will be reset to a

> +defined set of values and it will attempt to fetch it's first

> +instruction and execute it. It is the job of the firmware to bring a

> +CPU up from it's first few instructions to running in a relatively

> +sane execution environment. Firmware tends to be specific to the

> +hardware in question and is stored on non-volatile memory (memory that

> +survives a power off) usually a ROM or flash device on the computers

> +main board.

> +

> +Some examples of what firmware does include:

> +

> +Early Hardware Setup

> +--------------------

> +

> +Modern hardware often requires configuring before it is usable. For

> +example most modern systems won't have working RAM until the memory

> +controller has been programmed with the correct timings for whatever

> +memory is installed on the system. Processors may boot with a very

> +restricted view of the memory map until RAM and other key peripherals

> +have been configured to appear in it's address space. Some hardware

> +may not even appear until some sort of blob has been loaded into it so

> +it can start responding to the CPU.

> +

> +Fortunately for QEMU we don't have to worry too much about this very

> +low level configuration. The device model we present to the CPU at

> +start-up will generally respond to IO access from processor straight

> +away.

> +

> +BIOS or Firmware Services

> +-------------------------

> +

> +In the early days of the PC era the BIOS or Basic Input/Output System

> +provided an abstraction interface to the operating system which

> +allowed them to do basic IO operations without having to directly

> +drive the hardware. Since then the scope of these firmware services

> +have grown as systems become more and more complex.

> +

> +Modern firmware often follows the Unified Extensible Firmware

> +Interface (UEFI) which provides services like secure boot, persistent

> +variables and external time-keeping.

> +

> +There can often be multiple levels of firmware service functions. For

> +example systems which support secure execution enclaves generally have

> +a firmware component that executes in this secure mode which the

> +operating system can call in a defined secure manner to undertake

> +security sensitive tasks on it's behalf.

> +

> +Hardware Enumeration

> +--------------------

> +

> +It's easy to assume that modern hardware is built to be discover-able

> +and all the operating system needs to do is enumerate the various

> +buses on the system to find out what hardware exists. While buses like

> +PCI and USB do support discovery there is usually much more on a

> +modern system than just these two things.

> +

> +In the embedded world it used to be acceptable to have a custom

> +compiled kernel which knew where everything is meant to be. However

> +this was a brittle approach and not very flexible - most obviously if

> +you try and use a kernel compiled for one piece of hardware on another

> +piece of hardware that might nominally have the same processor.

> +

> +The more modern approach is to have a "generic" kernel that has a

> +number of different drivers compiled in which are then enabled based

> +on a hardware description provided by the firmware. This allows

> +flexibility on both sides. The software distribution is less concerned

> +about managing lots of different kernels for different pieces of

> +hardware. The hardware manufacturer is also able to make small changes

> +to the board over time to fix bugs or change minor components.

> +

> +The two main methods for this are the Advanced Configuration and Power

> +Interface (ACPI) and Device Trees. ACPI originated from the PC world

> +although is becoming increasingly common for "enterprise" hardware

> +like servers. Device Trees of various forms have existed for a while

> +with perhaps the most common being Flattened Device Trees (FDT).

> +

> +Boot Code

> +=========

> +

> +The line between firmware and boot code is a very blurry one. However

> +from a functionality point of view we have moved from ensuring the

> +hardware is usable as a computing device to finding and loading a

> +kernel which is then going to take over control of the system. Modern

> +firmware often has the ability to boot a kernel directly and in some

> +systems you might chain through several boot loaders before the final

> +kernel takes control.

> +

> +The boot loader needs to do 3 things:

> +

> +  - find a kernel and load it into RAM

> +  - ensure the CPU is in the correct mode for the kernel to boot

> +  - pass any information the kernel may need to boot and can't find itself

> +

> +Once it has done these things it can jump to the kernel and let it get

> +on with things.

> +

> +Kernel

> +======

> +

> +The Kernel now takes over and will be in charge of the system from now

> +on. It will enumerate all the devices on the system (again) and load

> +drivers that can control them. It will then locate some sort of

> +file-system and eventually start running programs that actually do

> +work.

> +

> +------------------------

> +How this relates to QEMU

> +------------------------

> +

> +TODO:

> +

> +  - -bios and -drive flash

> +  - dynamic and fixed hardware definitions

> +  - direct kernel boots

>
Eric Blake March 11, 2019, 2:17 p.m. UTC | #3
On 3/8/19 3:15 PM, Alex Bennée wrote:
> While working on some test cases I realised there was quite a lot of

> assumed knowledge about how things boot up. I thought it would be

> worth gathering this together in a user facing document where we could

> pour in the details and background to the boot process. As it's quite

> wordy I thought it should be a separate document to the manual (which

> can obviously reference this). So far I've managed almost a thousand

> words and haven't actually related anything to QEMU's options yet.

> 

> So going forward:

> 

>   - is this a useful document to have in docs?

>   - are there any other areas to mention?

>     - out auto-magic -bios selection seems like something worth covering

>   - should we have some worked examples of command lines?

>     - I was thinking for example of read-only and pflash examples

>   - we should also describe why direct kernel boots exits

>     - and also the fact they are not that direct (some code executes

>       before a kernel - even if it's less than a full firmware)

> 

> Submitted for comment....


I'm not sure where to put it, but it does look useful. Some suggestions:


> +This document attempts to give an overview of how machines boot-up and


s/boot-up/boot/

> +how this matters to QEMU. We will discuss firmware and BIOSes and the

> +things they do before the OS kernel is loaded and your usable system

> +is finally ready.

> +

> +Firmware

> +========

> +

> +When a CPU is powered up it knows nothing about it's environment. It's


s/it's/its/2 ("it's" is only appropriate where "it is" can also be used,
which does not fit either of these uses)

> +internal state, including the program counter (PC), will be reset to a

> +defined set of values and it will attempt to fetch it's first


again

> +instruction and execute it. It is the job of the firmware to bring a

> +CPU up from it's first few instructions to running in a relatively


again

> +sane execution environment. Firmware tends to be specific to the

> +hardware in question and is stored on non-volatile memory (memory that

> +survives a power off) usually a ROM or flash device on the computers

> +main board.

> +

> +Some examples of what firmware does include:

> +

> +Early Hardware Setup

> +--------------------

> +

> +Modern hardware often requires configuring before it is usable. For

> +example most modern systems won't have working RAM until the memory

> +controller has been programmed with the correct timings for whatever

> +memory is installed on the system. Processors may boot with a very

> +restricted view of the memory map until RAM and other key peripherals

> +have been configured to appear in it's address space. Some hardware


again

> +may not even appear until some sort of blob has been loaded into it so

> +it can start responding to the CPU.

> +

> +Fortunately for QEMU we don't have to worry too much about this very

> +low level configuration. The device model we present to the CPU at

> +start-up will generally respond to IO access from processor straight

> +away.

> +

> +BIOS or Firmware Services

> +-------------------------

> +

> +In the early days of the PC era the BIOS or Basic Input/Output System

> +provided an abstraction interface to the operating system which

> +allowed them to do basic IO operations without having to directly

> +drive the hardware. Since then the scope of these firmware services

> +have grown as systems become more and more complex.

> +

> +Modern firmware often follows the Unified Extensible Firmware

> +Interface (UEFI) which provides services like secure boot, persistent

> +variables and external time-keeping.

> +

> +There can often be multiple levels of firmware service functions. For

> +example systems which support secure execution enclaves generally have

> +a firmware component that executes in this secure mode which the

> +operating system can call in a defined secure manner to undertake

> +security sensitive tasks on it's behalf.


again

> +

> +Hardware Enumeration

> +--------------------

> +

> +It's easy to assume that modern hardware is built to be discover-able


Finally, a correct use.

> +and all the operating system needs to do is enumerate the various

> +buses on the system to find out what hardware exists. While buses like

> +PCI and USB do support discovery there is usually much more on a

> +modern system than just these two things.


Is it also worth mentioning that discovery can take time, which is in
contrast to virtual environments that want to boot quickly?

> +

> +In the embedded world it used to be acceptable to have a custom

> +compiled kernel which knew where everything is meant to be. However

> +this was a brittle approach and not very flexible - most obviously if

> +you try and use a kernel compiled for one piece of hardware on another

> +piece of hardware that might nominally have the same processor.

> +

> +The more modern approach is to have a "generic" kernel that has a

> +number of different drivers compiled in which are then enabled based

> +on a hardware description provided by the firmware. This allows

> +flexibility on both sides. The software distribution is less concerned

> +about managing lots of different kernels for different pieces of

> +hardware. The hardware manufacturer is also able to make small changes

> +to the board over time to fix bugs or change minor components.

> +

> +The two main methods for this are the Advanced Configuration and Power

> +Interface (ACPI) and Device Trees. ACPI originated from the PC world

> +although is becoming increasingly common for "enterprise" hardware


s/is/it is/

> +like servers. Device Trees of various forms have existed for a while

> +with perhaps the most common being Flattened Device Trees (FDT).

> +

> +Boot Code

> +=========

> +

> +The line between firmware and boot code is a very blurry one. However

> +from a functionality point of view we have moved from ensuring the

> +hardware is usable as a computing device to finding and loading a

> +kernel which is then going to take over control of the system. Modern

> +firmware often has the ability to boot a kernel directly and in some

> +systems you might chain through several boot loaders before the final

> +kernel takes control.

> +

> +The boot loader needs to do 3 things:

> +

> +  - find a kernel and load it into RAM

> +  - ensure the CPU is in the correct mode for the kernel to boot

> +  - pass any information the kernel may need to boot and can't find itself

> +

> +Once it has done these things it can jump to the kernel and let it get

> +on with things.

> +

> +Kernel

> +======

> +

> +The Kernel now takes over and will be in charge of the system from now

> +on. It will enumerate all the devices on the system (again) and load

> +drivers that can control them. It will then locate some sort of

> +file-system and eventually start running programs that actually do

> +work.

> +

> +------------------------

> +How this relates to QEMU

> +------------------------

> +

> +TODO:

> +

> +  - -bios and -drive flash

> +  - dynamic and fixed hardware definitions

> +  - direct kernel boots

> 


-- 
Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer
Red Hat, Inc.           +1-919-301-3226
Virtualization:  qemu.org | libvirt.org
John Snow March 13, 2019, 5:37 p.m. UTC | #4
On 3/11/19 9:32 AM, Paolo Bonzini wrote:
> On 08/03/19 22:15, Alex Bennée wrote:

>> While working on some test cases I realised there was quite a lot of

>> assumed knowledge about how things boot up. I thought it would be

>> worth gathering this together in a user facing document where we could

>> pour in the details and background to the boot process. As it's quite

>> wordy I thought it should be a separate document to the manual (which

>> can obviously reference this). So far I've managed almost a thousand

>> words and haven't actually related anything to QEMU's options yet.

> 

> This might be more blog material, but it's certainly good stuff!

> 


I don't think anyone's ever accused us of being too easy to understand
and having too many docs, so I think the source tree is fine even for
high-level descriptions because they can help onboard people looking to
make quick adjustments/hacks rapidly.

Certainly if this is refined and included, it should ALSO show up as a
blog post, though.

> Paolo

> 

>> So going forward:

>>

>>   - is this a useful document to have in docs?

>>   - are there any other areas to mention?

>>     - out auto-magic -bios selection seems like something worth covering

>>   - should we have some worked examples of command lines?

>>     - I was thinking for example of read-only and pflash examples

>>   - we should also describe why direct kernel boots exits

>>     - and also the fact they are not that direct (some code executes

>>       before a kernel - even if it's less than a full firmware)

>>

>> Submitted for comment....

>>

>> Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>

>> ---

>>  docs/booting.rst | 127 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

>>  1 file changed, 127 insertions(+)

>>  create mode 100644 docs/booting.rst

>>

>> diff --git a/docs/booting.rst b/docs/booting.rst

>> new file mode 100644

>> index 0000000000..a8a644ff9a

>> --- /dev/null

>> +++ b/docs/booting.rst

>> @@ -0,0 +1,127 @@

>> +=====================================

>> +Anatomy of a Boot, a QEMU perspective

>> +=====================================

>> +

>> +This document attempts to give an overview of how machines boot-up and

>> +how this matters to QEMU. We will discuss firmware and BIOSes and the

>> +things they do before the OS kernel is loaded and your usable system

>> +is finally ready.

>> +

>> +Firmware

>> +========

>> +

>> +When a CPU is powered up it knows nothing about it's environment. It's

>> +internal state, including the program counter (PC), will be reset to a

>> +defined set of values and it will attempt to fetch it's first

>> +instruction and execute it. It is the job of the firmware to bring a

>> +CPU up from it's first few instructions to running in a relatively

>> +sane execution environment. Firmware tends to be specific to the

>> +hardware in question and is stored on non-volatile memory (memory that

>> +survives a power off) usually a ROM or flash device on the computers

>> +main board.

>> +

>> +Some examples of what firmware does include:

>> +

>> +Early Hardware Setup

>> +--------------------

>> +

>> +Modern hardware often requires configuring before it is usable. For

>> +example most modern systems won't have working RAM until the memory

>> +controller has been programmed with the correct timings for whatever

>> +memory is installed on the system. Processors may boot with a very

>> +restricted view of the memory map until RAM and other key peripherals

>> +have been configured to appear in it's address space. Some hardware

>> +may not even appear until some sort of blob has been loaded into it so

>> +it can start responding to the CPU.

>> +

>> +Fortunately for QEMU we don't have to worry too much about this very

>> +low level configuration. The device model we present to the CPU at

>> +start-up will generally respond to IO access from processor straight

>> +away.

>> +

>> +BIOS or Firmware Services

>> +-------------------------

>> +

>> +In the early days of the PC era the BIOS or Basic Input/Output System

>> +provided an abstraction interface to the operating system which

>> +allowed them to do basic IO operations without having to directly

>> +drive the hardware. Since then the scope of these firmware services

>> +have grown as systems become more and more complex.

>> +

>> +Modern firmware often follows the Unified Extensible Firmware

>> +Interface (UEFI) which provides services like secure boot, persistent

>> +variables and external time-keeping.

>> +

>> +There can often be multiple levels of firmware service functions. For

>> +example systems which support secure execution enclaves generally have

>> +a firmware component that executes in this secure mode which the

>> +operating system can call in a defined secure manner to undertake

>> +security sensitive tasks on it's behalf.

>> +

>> +Hardware Enumeration

>> +--------------------

>> +

>> +It's easy to assume that modern hardware is built to be discover-able

>> +and all the operating system needs to do is enumerate the various

>> +buses on the system to find out what hardware exists. While buses like

>> +PCI and USB do support discovery there is usually much more on a

>> +modern system than just these two things.

>> +

>> +In the embedded world it used to be acceptable to have a custom

>> +compiled kernel which knew where everything is meant to be. However

>> +this was a brittle approach and not very flexible - most obviously if

>> +you try and use a kernel compiled for one piece of hardware on another

>> +piece of hardware that might nominally have the same processor.

>> +

>> +The more modern approach is to have a "generic" kernel that has a

>> +number of different drivers compiled in which are then enabled based

>> +on a hardware description provided by the firmware. This allows

>> +flexibility on both sides. The software distribution is less concerned

>> +about managing lots of different kernels for different pieces of

>> +hardware. The hardware manufacturer is also able to make small changes

>> +to the board over time to fix bugs or change minor components.

>> +

>> +The two main methods for this are the Advanced Configuration and Power

>> +Interface (ACPI) and Device Trees. ACPI originated from the PC world

>> +although is becoming increasingly common for "enterprise" hardware

>> +like servers. Device Trees of various forms have existed for a while

>> +with perhaps the most common being Flattened Device Trees (FDT).

>> +

>> +Boot Code

>> +=========

>> +

>> +The line between firmware and boot code is a very blurry one. However

>> +from a functionality point of view we have moved from ensuring the

>> +hardware is usable as a computing device to finding and loading a

>> +kernel which is then going to take over control of the system. Modern

>> +firmware often has the ability to boot a kernel directly and in some

>> +systems you might chain through several boot loaders before the final

>> +kernel takes control.

>> +

>> +The boot loader needs to do 3 things:

>> +

>> +  - find a kernel and load it into RAM

>> +  - ensure the CPU is in the correct mode for the kernel to boot

>> +  - pass any information the kernel may need to boot and can't find itself

>> +

>> +Once it has done these things it can jump to the kernel and let it get

>> +on with things.

>> +

>> +Kernel

>> +======

>> +

>> +The Kernel now takes over and will be in charge of the system from now

>> +on. It will enumerate all the devices on the system (again) and load

>> +drivers that can control them. It will then locate some sort of

>> +file-system and eventually start running programs that actually do

>> +work.

>> +

>> +------------------------

>> +How this relates to QEMU

>> +------------------------

>> +

>> +TODO:

>> +

>> +  - -bios and -drive flash

>> +  - dynamic and fixed hardware definitions

>> +  - direct kernel boots

>>

> 

>
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/docs/booting.rst b/docs/booting.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a8a644ff9a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/booting.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,127 @@ 
+=====================================
+Anatomy of a Boot, a QEMU perspective
+=====================================
+
+This document attempts to give an overview of how machines boot-up and
+how this matters to QEMU. We will discuss firmware and BIOSes and the
+things they do before the OS kernel is loaded and your usable system
+is finally ready.
+
+Firmware
+========
+
+When a CPU is powered up it knows nothing about it's environment. It's
+internal state, including the program counter (PC), will be reset to a
+defined set of values and it will attempt to fetch it's first
+instruction and execute it. It is the job of the firmware to bring a
+CPU up from it's first few instructions to running in a relatively
+sane execution environment. Firmware tends to be specific to the
+hardware in question and is stored on non-volatile memory (memory that
+survives a power off) usually a ROM or flash device on the computers
+main board.
+
+Some examples of what firmware does include:
+
+Early Hardware Setup
+--------------------
+
+Modern hardware often requires configuring before it is usable. For
+example most modern systems won't have working RAM until the memory
+controller has been programmed with the correct timings for whatever
+memory is installed on the system. Processors may boot with a very
+restricted view of the memory map until RAM and other key peripherals
+have been configured to appear in it's address space. Some hardware
+may not even appear until some sort of blob has been loaded into it so
+it can start responding to the CPU.
+
+Fortunately for QEMU we don't have to worry too much about this very
+low level configuration. The device model we present to the CPU at
+start-up will generally respond to IO access from processor straight
+away.
+
+BIOS or Firmware Services
+-------------------------
+
+In the early days of the PC era the BIOS or Basic Input/Output System
+provided an abstraction interface to the operating system which
+allowed them to do basic IO operations without having to directly
+drive the hardware. Since then the scope of these firmware services
+have grown as systems become more and more complex.
+
+Modern firmware often follows the Unified Extensible Firmware
+Interface (UEFI) which provides services like secure boot, persistent
+variables and external time-keeping.
+
+There can often be multiple levels of firmware service functions. For
+example systems which support secure execution enclaves generally have
+a firmware component that executes in this secure mode which the
+operating system can call in a defined secure manner to undertake
+security sensitive tasks on it's behalf.
+
+Hardware Enumeration
+--------------------
+
+It's easy to assume that modern hardware is built to be discover-able
+and all the operating system needs to do is enumerate the various
+buses on the system to find out what hardware exists. While buses like
+PCI and USB do support discovery there is usually much more on a
+modern system than just these two things.
+
+In the embedded world it used to be acceptable to have a custom
+compiled kernel which knew where everything is meant to be. However
+this was a brittle approach and not very flexible - most obviously if
+you try and use a kernel compiled for one piece of hardware on another
+piece of hardware that might nominally have the same processor.
+
+The more modern approach is to have a "generic" kernel that has a
+number of different drivers compiled in which are then enabled based
+on a hardware description provided by the firmware. This allows
+flexibility on both sides. The software distribution is less concerned
+about managing lots of different kernels for different pieces of
+hardware. The hardware manufacturer is also able to make small changes
+to the board over time to fix bugs or change minor components.
+
+The two main methods for this are the Advanced Configuration and Power
+Interface (ACPI) and Device Trees. ACPI originated from the PC world
+although is becoming increasingly common for "enterprise" hardware
+like servers. Device Trees of various forms have existed for a while
+with perhaps the most common being Flattened Device Trees (FDT).
+
+Boot Code
+=========
+
+The line between firmware and boot code is a very blurry one. However
+from a functionality point of view we have moved from ensuring the
+hardware is usable as a computing device to finding and loading a
+kernel which is then going to take over control of the system. Modern
+firmware often has the ability to boot a kernel directly and in some
+systems you might chain through several boot loaders before the final
+kernel takes control.
+
+The boot loader needs to do 3 things:
+
+  - find a kernel and load it into RAM
+  - ensure the CPU is in the correct mode for the kernel to boot
+  - pass any information the kernel may need to boot and can't find itself
+
+Once it has done these things it can jump to the kernel and let it get
+on with things.
+
+Kernel
+======
+
+The Kernel now takes over and will be in charge of the system from now
+on. It will enumerate all the devices on the system (again) and load
+drivers that can control them. It will then locate some sort of
+file-system and eventually start running programs that actually do
+work.
+
+------------------------
+How this relates to QEMU
+------------------------
+
+TODO:
+
+  - -bios and -drive flash
+  - dynamic and fixed hardware definitions
+  - direct kernel boots