Binman has a few other options which you can see by running 'binman -h'.
+Enabling binman for a board
+---------------------------
+
+At present binman is invoked from a rule in the main Makefile. Typically you
+will have a rule like:
+
+ifneq ($(CONFIG_ARCH_<something>),)
+u-boot-<your_suffix>.bin: <input_file_1> <input_file_2> checkbinman FORCE
+ $(call if_changed,binman)
+endif
+
+This assumes that u-boot-<your_suffix>.bin is a target, and is the final file
+that you need to produce. You can make it a target by adding it to ALL-y
+either in the main Makefile or in a config.mk file in your arch subdirectory.
+
+Once binman is executed it will pick up its instructions from a device-tree
+file, typically <soc>-u-boot.dtsi, where <soc> is your CONFIG_SYS_SOC value.
+You can use other, more specific CONFIG options - see 'Automatic .dtsi
+inclusion' below.
+
+
Image description format
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