DFU using USB file system (not serial emulation)?

My project has a nrf5340+external flash, and an external USB-C connector. The device exposes a USB file system (FAT) which is hosted on the external flash partition, and appears as an external disk when connected to a host. This all works well and is used to update config, image files etc for the device to use.

I would like to be able to do application / network firmware updates by simply copying the new image (hex or bin) to this file system and rebooting. Has anyone done this? I'm guessing it involves using MCUBoot bootloader and copying the image into the secondary image slot somehow? I also want to put the secondard image slot on my external flash as won't have space on the internal flash - even better would be if MCUBoot could take the image directly from the file in the FS....

by the way, to be clear, I do NOT want to use the 'DFU over USB serial emulation' method, as this requires the user to install the specific tool to the host machine, which may not be available for their host or may not be allowed by IT policy (or by their level of expertise...). 

thanks for any pointers!

  • Hi Brian, 
    I haven't got the time to look into this yet. 
    But having to erase 2nd slot doesn't sound like a best option. 

    I would suggest to check the code where the logic for deciding reverting in MCUBoot to see why it revert. Also try to do a normal DFU with BLE or UART for example, and see how the image _magic and image _ok are written on first boot and on the second boot. 
    Will try to find time to look into this next week. 

  • But having to erase 2nd slot doesn't sound like a best option. 

    Totally agree.

    I would suggest to check the code where the logic for deciding reverting in MCUBoot to see why it revert.

    Well, I was hoping to avoid debugging mcuboot... especially as I am using the standard high level api calls to do the DFU (dfu_target) and mark the image as ok...

    MCUBoot  logic is convoluted, to say the least. I have gone through it at least twice, and my understand is that is image_ok is SET and the magic is GOOD, then it should NOT revert....

    Hopefully fresh eyes will let you see what the corner case is that stops it doing what is expected... 

  • Did you have any idea about why the FPROTECT doesnt like my flash layout above?? 

    thanks!

  • Hopefully fresh eyes will let you see what the corner case is that stops it doing what is expected..

    Anything on why mcuboot feels the need to revert?

    Did you have any idea about why the FPROTECT doesnt like my flash layout above??

    Or why FPROTECT complains now that the partition sizes are (normally) aligned as required?

  • Hi Brian, 

    Sorry for the late response. 
    I took a look at your result again. It seems that what you have: 
    I: Primary image: magic=good, swap_type=0x2, copy_done=0x1, image_ok=0x1
    I: Secondary image: magic=good, swap_type=0x2, copy_done=0x3, image_ok=0x3

    Matched with this scenario: 
    {
    .magic_primary_slot = BOOT_MAGIC_ANY,
    .magic_secondary_slot = BOOT_MAGIC_GOOD,
    .image_ok_primary_slot = BOOT_FLAG_ANY,
    .image_ok_secondary_slot = BOOT_FLAG_UNSET,
    .copy_done_primary_slot = BOOT_FLAG_ANY,
    .swap_type = BOOT_SWAP_TYPE_TEST,
    },

    You have magic_secondary_slot = good,  image_ok_secondary =0x3 (UNSET)  the rest is just any so it match and it explains why the swap type is test instead of non and it will be swapped. 

    Here is what I have in my test, first when I send the test image: 

    It matched with the scenario above => swap test.

    Then if I don't do anything, it will revert: 

    {
            .magic_primary_slot =       BOOT_MAGIC_GOOD,
            .magic_secondary_slot =     BOOT_MAGIC_UNSET,
            .image_ok_primary_slot =    BOOT_FLAG_UNSET,
            .image_ok_secondary_slot =  BOOT_FLAG_ANY,
            .copy_done_primary_slot =   BOOT_FLAG_SET,
            .swap_type =                BOOT_SWAP_TYPE_REVERT,
        },

    If I confirm the image instead, next boot is like this: 

    So it's very important that the secondary image's magic should be unset and the primary image_ok is set. 
    What I noticed in my case is that at the beginning before the first test swap, the primary image's magic is unset. This is very important. The primary image magic will be come the secondary image magic after the swap (it follows the image). So if at the beginning you already set the primary image magic to set, it may result in what you observed. 
    The only difference in my no swap booting is the secondary magic is unset (and swaptype =0x01 but  that's not important in my opinion). 
    Please take a look and check why you have both image magic = good. 

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