We use ascii box chars with serial console because we do not know
if terminal can draw unixode box chars. Same problem is about userboot
console.
MFC after: 5 days
This eliminates a lot of stat() calls that happen when lualoader renders the
menu with the default settings, and greatly speeds up rendering on my
laptop.
ftype is nil if loader/loader.efi hasn't been updated yet, falling back to
lfs.attributes() to test.
This is technically incompatible with lfs, but not in a particularly
terrible way.
Reviewed-by: cem
MFC-after: 4 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27542
Draw console on efi.
Add vbe framebuffer for BIOS loader (vbe off, vbe on, vbe list,
vbe set xxx).
autoload font (/boot/fonts) based on resolution and font size.
Add command loadfont (set font by file) and
variable screen.font (set font by size). Pass loaded font to kernel.
Export variables:
screen.height
screen.width
screen.depth
Add gfx primitives to draw the screen and put png image on the screen.
Rework menu draw to iterate list of consoles to enamble device specific
output.
Probably something else I forgot...
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27420
Report what console the boot loader is telling the kernel to use:
o Dual (Serial Primary)
o Dual (Video Primary)
o Serial
o Video
This allows the user to interrupt the boot and tweak the cosnole, if
needed, in a trivial way. Useful for installs where the default
selected may not be quite what you want, or when you are running a
dual setup and need to toggle over to the other console being primary.
The 'c'/'C' keys will do the cycling through the consoles. Note:
you'll still have to drop into the loader to set details about serial
consoles. And this doesn't change the console the loader is using.
Reviewed by: kevans@
MFC After: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26573
The checkpoints are another way of keeping the state of ZFS.
During the rewind, the pool has to be exported.
This makes checkpoints unusable when using ZFS as root.
Add the option to rewind the ZFS checkpoint at the boot time.
If checkpoint exists, a new option for rewinding a checkpoint will appear in
the bootloader menu.
We fully support boot environments.
If the rewind option is selected, the boot loader will show a list of
boot environments that existed before the checkpoint.
Reviewed by: tsoome, allanjude, kevans (ok with high-level overview)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24920
r354247 converted try_include to lfs + dofile with the loader.lua_path added
just before. Fortunately, there was a hardcoded /boot/lua fallback in case
loader.lua_path wasn't being set yet- I typo'd it as loader.lua_paths.
Fix the typo.
X-MFC-With: r354247
MFC after: 3 days
Actual modules get require()'d in, rather than try_include(). All instances
of try_include should be provided with proper hooks/API in the rest of
loader to do the work they need to do, since we can't rely on them to exist.
Convert this now to lfs + dofile since we won't really be treating them as
modules.
lfs is required because dofile will properly throw an error if the file
doesn't exist, which is not in the spirit of 'optionally included'.
Getting out of the pcall game allows us to provide a loader.exit() style
call that backs out to the common bits of loader (autoboot sequence unless
disabled with a loader.setenv("autoboot_delay", "NO")). The most ideal way
identified so far to implement loader.exit() is to throw a special
abort-style error that indicates to the caller in interp_lua that we've not
actually errored out, just continue execution. Otherwise, we have to hack in
logic to bubble up and return from loader.lua without continuing further,
which gets kind of ugly depending on the context in which we're aborting.
A compat shim is provided temporarily in case the executing loader doesn't
yet have loader.lua_path, which was just added in r354246.
The box drawing characters we use aren't necessarily safe with a serial
console; for instance, in the report by npn@, these were causing his xterm
to send back a sequence that lua picked up as input and halted the boot.
This is less than ideal.
Fallback to ASCII frames for console with 'comconsole' in it. This is a
partial revert r338108 by imp@ -- instead of removing the menu entirely and
disabling color/cursor sequences, just reverting the default frame to ASCII
is enough to not break in this setup.
Reported by: npn
Triaged and recommended by: tsoome
The previous iteration of try_include attempted to be 'friendly' and error()
out if we hit an error that wasn't ENOENT. This was semi-OK, but fragile as
it relied on pattern matching the error message.
Move the responsibility for handling failure to the caller. Following
a common lua pattern, we'll return the return value of the underlying
require() on success, or false and an error message.
Reported by: bcran
MFC after: 3 days
For non-UEFI systems, boot.config(5) may have -s or -v specified for
single-user and verbose boot respectively. These were not being properly
taken into account and reflected in the "Boot Options" submenu. When we
initialize core.lua, we'll record boot_single and boot_verbose as we do ACPI
and consider these the system defaults.
Reported by: David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org>
Approved by: re (kib)
The format for kernels is documented as being space-delimited, but
forthloader was more lenient on this and so people began to depend on it.
A later pass will be made to document all of the fun features that forthloader
allowed that may not be immediately obvious.
Reported by: mmacy
Approved by: re (kib)
Remove a bunch of special cases for UEFI and serial consoles. We do
want to do curses and menu things here. This makes us match what we do
in FORTH, with the possible exception of boxes around menus.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16816
It was previously only printed, but we do actually want to raise it as a
full blown error so that things don't look OK when they've actually gone
wrong.
The second parameter to error, level, is set to 2 here so that the error
message reflects the position of the try_include caller, rather than the
try_include itself. Example:
LUA ERROR: /boot/lua/loader.lua:46: /boot/lua/local.lua:1: attempt to call a
nil value (global 'cxcint').
This provides a way to optionally include a module without having to wrap it
in filesystem checks. try_include is a little more robust, using the lua
search path instead of forcing us to explicitly consider all of the places
we could want to include a module. Errors are still generally raised from
trying to load the module, but ENOENT will not get raised unless we're doing
a verbose load.
This will also be used to split out logo/brand graphics into their own files
so that we can safely scale up the number of graphics included without
worrying about the extra memory consumption- opting to lazily load graphics
instead.
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14658
boot1 is too early to be deciding a good resolution. Console modes don't map
cleanly/predictably to actual screen resolutions, and GOP does not reflect
the actual screen resolution after a console mode change. Rip it out.
Add an efi-autoresizecons command to loader to choose an optimal screen
resolution based on the current environment. We'll explicitly execute this
later, preferably before we draw anything of value but after we load config
and pick up any tunables we may need to decide where we're going.
This method also allows us to actually pass the correct framebuffer
information on to the kernel.
UGA autoresizing is not implemented because it doesn't have the kind of mode
enumeration that GOP does. If an interested person with relevant hardware
could get in contact, we can take a look at implementing UGA autoresize.
This effectively "fixes" the breakage caused by r327058, but doesn't
actually set the resolution correctly until the interpreter calls
efi-autoresizcons. The lualoader version of this has been included for
reference; the forth equivalent will follow.
Reviewed by: imp (with some hestitation), manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14788
See: comments in the hook module about intended usage, as well as the
introduced use for config.reloaded.
Use the newly introduced hook module to define a "config.reloaded" hook.
This is currently used to register core's clearKernelCache as a reload hook
to avoid a circular dependency and fix this functionality- it didn't
actually work out, and it isn't immediately obvious how it slipped into src.
Other hook types will be introduced into the core lualoader as useful hook
points are identified.
With autodetection turned on, hitting the filesystem everytime we need to
calculate choices for the kernel carousel is kind of slow. Cache once on the
first listing and reload it anytime the config is reloaded in case any of
the loader.conf(5) changes that affect this (kernel, kernels,
kernels_autodetect) have changed. This also picks up the case where we've
changed currdev and the autodetected kernels could change.
Back when I "fixed" the loading of kernel/modules to be deferred until
booting, I inadvertently broke the ability to manually load a set of kernels
and modules in case of something bad having happened. lualoader would
instead happily load whatever is specified in loader.conf(5) and go about
the boot, leading to a panic loop as you try to rediscover a way to stop the
panicky efirt module from loading and fail miserably.
Reported by: me, sadly
We've included an extra '0' in there (which might get removed later, but
it's maintained for the moment for legacy purposes) which oftentimes
indicate that the following number should be treated as octal. This is not
the case, so note that to prevent future confusion (of myself and others).
This is motivated by a want to reduce heap usage if the menu is being
skipped. Currently, the menu module must be loaded regardless of whether
it's being skipped or not, which adds a cool ~50-100KB worth of memory
usage.
Move the menu skip logic out to core (and remove a debug print), then check
in loader.lua if we should be skipping the menu and avoid loading the menu
module entirely if so. This keeps our memory usage below ~115KB for a boot
with the menu stripped.
Also worth noting: with this change, we no longer explicitly invoke autoboot
if we're skipping the menu. Instead, we let the standard loader behavior
apply: try to autoboot if we need to, then drop to a loader prompt if not or
if the autoboot sequence is interrupted. The only thing we still handle
before dropping to the loader autoboot sequence is loadelf(), so that we can
still apply any of our kernel loading behavior.
The latter is good, but the former is more elegant and clear about what 'x'
is. Adopt it, preferably only using the latter kind of notation where needed
as values for tables.
I've also made some not-insignificant changes/additions to this file, to
include the added constants, ACPI changes, boot environment listing, and
some utility functions.
luacheck pointed out an assortment of issues, ranging from non-standard
globals being created as well as unused parameters, variables, and redundant
assignments.
Using '_' as a placeholder for values unused (whether it be parameters
unused or return values unused, assuming multiple return values) feels clean
and gets the point across, so I've adopted it. It also helps flag candidates
for cleanup later in some of the lambdas I've created, giving me an easy way
to re-evaluate later if we're still not using some of these features.
This module will, in the not-so-distant future, grow functionality for
reducing boilerplate in functions that implement cli commands. It will
likely also house most in-tree cli commands.
Instead of based it off of whether 'kernels' was specified, base it off of a
new variable: kernels_autodetect. If set to yes, we'll run the autodetection
bits and add any detected kernels to the already existing list *after* both
'kernel' and 'kernels'.
This looks a little bit differently than the forth version for the time
being, just to get off the ground- rather than a paging system, it's
implemented as a simple carousel like the kernel selector.
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14436
This was also a convenience convention (for me) that is not very lua-tic.
Drop it.
I've maintained some parentheses where I'd prefer them, for example,
'if x or y or (z and w) then', but these situations are far and few between.
This was previously chosen out of convenience, as we had a mixed style and
needed to be consistent. I started learning Lua on Friday, so I switched
everything over. It is not a very lua-nic convention, though, so drop it.
Excessive parenthesizing around conditionals is next on the chopping block.
This should be functional and roughly equivalent to the Forth version.
Stop doing a loadelf() on menu exit now that we can DTRT with boot
invocations. autoboot interception will follow not long after.
core.boot and core.autoboot may both take arguments; add a helper to cleanly
append an argstring to the given loader command.
Also provide a popFrontTable() that we'll use pop the command name off of an
argv table. We don't have the table library included, and including it is
non-trivial, so we'll implement this one function that we need in lua for
the time being.
We follow pretty closely the following structure of a module:
1. Copyright notice
2. Module requires
3. Module local declarations
4. Module local definitions
5. Module exports
6. return
Re-organize the one-offs (config/drawer) and denote the start of module
exports with a comment.
[Enter] should be moved to the single user menu item when we swap them.
Define a non-standard menu entry function "alternate_name" to use for this
purpose for ultimate flexibility if we change our minds later. When we're
booting single user, make a shallow copy of the menu that we'd normally
display and swap the items and their name functions to use alternate_name
instead. Toggling single user in the options menu and going back to the main
menu will now correctly reflect the current boot setting with the first two
menu options and "[Enter]" will always be on the right one.
This shallow copy technique has the chance of being quite slow since it's
done on every redraw, but in my testing it does not seem to make any obvious
difference.
shallowCopyTable could likely belong better in a general-purpose utility
module, but this (and the key constnats) are the only candidates we have at
the moment so we'll drop it into our core stuff for the moment and consider
re-organization at a later date.
Loading the kernel and modules can be really slow. Loading before the menu
draws and every time one changes kernel/boot environment is even more
painful.
Defer loading until we either boot, auto-boot, or escape to loader prompt.
We still need to deal with configuration changes as the boot environment
changes, but this is generally much quicker.
This commit strips all ELF loading out of config.load/config.reload so that
these are purely for configuration. config.loadelf has been created to deal
with kernel/module loads. Unloading logic has been ripped out, as we won't
need to deal with it in the menu anymore.
Discussed in part with: allanjude