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Tom Rini authored
The default format for arm64 Linux kernels is the "Image" format, described in Documentation/arm64/booting.txt. This, along with an optional gzip compression on top is all that is generated by default. The Image format has a magic number within the header for verification, a text_offset where the Image must be run from, an image_size that includes the BSS and reserved fields. This does not support automatic detection of a gzip compressed image. Signed-off-by:
Tom Rini <trini@ti.com>
Tom Rini authoredThe default format for arm64 Linux kernels is the "Image" format, described in Documentation/arm64/booting.txt. This, along with an optional gzip compression on top is all that is generated by default. The Image format has a magic number within the header for verification, a text_offset where the Image must be run from, an image_size that includes the BSS and reserved fields. This does not support automatic detection of a gzip compressed image. Signed-off-by:
Tom Rini <trini@ti.com>