Spell coreboot all lowercase

[coreboot](https://www.coreboot.org/) is officially spelled all
lowercase.
This commit is contained in:
Paul Menzel 2016-12-13 18:02:35 +01:00
parent a6520772dc
commit aa3375f5ef
2 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -240,7 +240,7 @@ $(build)/$(coreboot_dir)/bzImage: $(call outputs,linux)
$(call outputs,coreboot): $(build)/$(coreboot_dir)/bzImage $(call outputs,coreboot): $(build)/$(coreboot_dir)/bzImage
# The CoreBoot gcc won't work for us since it doesn't have libc # The coreboot gcc won't work for us since it doesn't have libc
#XGCC := $(build)/$(coreboot_dir)/util/crossgcc/xgcc/ #XGCC := $(build)/$(coreboot_dir)/util/crossgcc/xgcc/
#export CC := $(XGCC)/bin/x86_64-elf-gcc #export CC := $(XGCC)/bin/x86_64-elf-gcc
#export LDFLAGS := -L/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu #export LDFLAGS := -L/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu

View File

@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ Building heads
Components: Components:
* CoreBoot * coreboot
* Linux * Linux
* busybox * busybox
* kexec * kexec
@ -240,9 +240,9 @@ algorithm. You could store the hashes in the ROM, but that would
not allow upgrades without rewriting the ROM. not allow upgrades without rewriting the ROM.
CoreBoot console messages coreboot console messages
--- ---
The CoreBoot console messages are stored in the CBMEM region The coreboot console messages are stored in the CBMEM region
and can be read by the Linux payload with the `cbmem --console | less` and can be read by the Linux payload with the `cbmem --console | less`
command. There is lots of interesting data about the state of the command. There is lots of interesting data about the state of the
system. system.