The chain command can be used to chain load another binary.
If veriexec is enabled we should verify it first.
Note that on EFI systems the verification was already done
through firmware, assuming that Secure Boot was enabled there.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: sjg
MFC after: 1 week
Obtained from: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20952
The HandleProtocol() is deprecated interface and we should use OpenProtocol()
instead. Moreover, in some firmware implementation(s), the HandleProtocol()
does return device path using static storage, so we can not keep the value
returned there. With same firmware, the OpenProtocol() does return data we
do not need to clone.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21162
Guest PPC OSs running under a hypervisor may communicate the features they
support, in order for the hypervisor to expose a virtualized machine in the way
the client (guest OS) expects (see LoPAPR 1.1 - B.6.2.3).
This is done by calling the "/ibm,client-architecture-support" (CAS) method,
informing supported features in option vectors. Until now, FreeBSD wasn't
using CAS, but instead relied on hypervisor/QEMU's defaults.
The problem is that, without CAS, it is very inconvenient to run POWER9 VMs on
a POWER9 host running with radix enabled. This happens because, in this case,
the QEMU default is to present the guest OS a dual MMU (HPT/RPT), instead of
presenting a regular HPT MMU, as FreeBSD expects, resulting in an early panic.
The known workarounds required either changing the host to disable radix or
passing a flag to QEMU to run in a POWER8 compatible mode.
With CAS, FreeBSD is now able to communicate that it wants an HPT MMU,
independent of the host setup, which now makes FreeBSD work on POWER9/pseries,
with KVM enabled and without hugepages (support added in a previous commit).
As CAS is invoked through OpenFirmware's call-method interface, it needs to be
performed early, when OpenFirmware is still operational. Besides, now that FDT
is the default way to inspect the device tree on PPC, OFW call-method feature
will be unavailable by default, when control is passed to the kernel. Because
of this, the call to CAS is being performed at the loader, instead of at the
kernel.
To avoid regressions with old platforms, this change uses CAS only on
POWER8/POWER9.
Reviewed by: jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20827
libsecureboot can tell us if the most recent file opened was
verfied or not.
If it's state is VE_UNVERIFIED_OK, skip if variable
matches one of the restricted prefixes.
Reviewed by: stevek
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org//D20909
Summary:
efi loader does not work with static network parameters. It always uses
BOOTP/DHCP and also uses RARP as a fallback. Problems with DHCP servers can
cause the loader to fail to populate network parameters.
Submitted by: Siddharth Tuli <siddharthtuli_gmail.com>
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20811
To avoid failures when the large 18MB nvidia.ko module is being loaded,
increase EFI_STAGING_SIZE from 64MB to 100MB on x64 systems.
Leave the other platforms at 64MB.
The code in efihttp.c was assuming that dv_open wouldn't be called if
dv_init failed. But the dv_init return value is currently ignored.
Add a new variable, `efihttp_init_done` and only proceed in dv_open if
it's true. This fixes the loader on systems without efi http support.
NANDFS has been broken for years. Remove it. The NAND drivers that
remain are for ancient parts that are no longer relevant. They are
polled, have terrible performance and just for ancient arm
hardware. NAND parts have evolved significantly from this early work
and little to none of it would be relevant should someone need to
update to support raw nand. This code has been off by default for
years and has violated the vnode protocol leading to panics since it
was committed.
Numerous posts to arch@ and other locations have found no actual users
for this software.
Relnotes: Yes
No Objection From: arch@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20745
Add support for an HTTP "network filesystem" using the UEFI's HTTP
stack.
This also supports HTTPS, but TianoCore EDK2 implementations currently
crash while fetching loader files.
Only IPv4 is supported at the moment. IPv6 support is planned for a
follow-up changeset.
Note that we include some headers from the TianoCore EDK II project in
stand/efi/include/Protocol verbatim, including links to the license instead
of including the full text because that's their preferred way of
communicating it, despite not being normal FreeBSD project practice.
Submitted by: scottph
Reviewed by: imp, bcran
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20643
There are many new features in ZoF. Most, if not all, do not effect read only usage.
Encryption in particular is enabled at the pool level but used at the dataset level.
The loader obviously will not be able to boot if the boot dataset is encrypted, but
should not care if some other dataset in the root pool is encrypted.
Reviewed by: allanjude
MFC after: 1 week
Don't commit to exclusive access to the network device handle by
efinet until the loader has decided to load something through the
network. This allows for the possibility of other users of the
network device.
Submitted by: scottph
Reviewed by: tsoome, emaste
Tested by: tsoome, bcran
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20642
At least since version 4.0.0, QEMU became bug-compatible with PowerVM's
vty, by inserting a \0 after every \r. As this confuses loader's
interpreter and as a \0 coming from the console doesn't seem reasonable,
it's now being filtered at OFW console input.
Reviewed by: jhibbits
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20676
rename the source to gsb_crc32.c.
This is a prerequisite of unifying kernel zlib instances.
PR: 229763
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota at j.email.ne.jp>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20193
Add the customary warnings to disable format checking on armv7. Code
move to new files, and the unconditional setting of WARNS to 6
provoked it on tinerbox...
This is a primary boot loader that is intended to implement the
gptboot partition selection algorithm just like we did for BIOS
booting. While the preferred method for UEFI is to use the UEFI Boot
Manager protocol, there are situations where that can't be done: some
BIOS makers interfere with the protocol in unhelpful ways, there's a
new standard for a zero variable write from the client OS, and finally
for USB drives that might be mobile between systems with multiple
partitions there needs to be a media stable way to select.
Reviewed by: tsoome, bcran
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20547
Segregate the disk probing and selection protocol from the rest of the
boot loader.
Reviewed by: tsoome, bcran
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20547
Simplify the code a bit and rework how we report the results
of the probing.
Reviewed by: tsoome@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20537
BootServices AllocatePool/FreePool calls. They are simpler to use and
result in the same thing happening.
Reviewed by: tsoome@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20540
The D_PARTNONE is documented to make it possible to open raw MBR
partition, but the current disk_open() does not really implement this
statement.
The current code is checking partition against -1 (D_PARTNONE) but does
attempt to open partition table in case we do have FreeBSD MBR partition type.
Instead, we should check -2 (D_PARTWILD).
In case we do have MBR + BSD label, this code is only working because
by default, the first BSD partiton is created starting with relative sector
0, and we can still access the BSD table from that MBR slice.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20501
This is like efi_devpath_match, but allows differing device media
paths. Those just specify the partition information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20513
* Fix boot env back compat
zfsboot must try zfsloader before loader in order to remain compatible
with boot environments created prior to zfs functionality being rolled
into loader proper.
* Improve comments in zfsboot
Explain the significance of the load path order, and put the comment
about looping through the paths in the appropriate scope.
Obtained From: TrueNAS commit 4c60c62fcf0b6b6eac98ee8d46e7bbea64bc86f5
Submitted by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@freqlabs.com>
loader.rc has comment lines without a trailing space, which get
interpreted as commands. Avoid this by only matching against the
backslash character.
Reviewed by: imp, tsoome
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20491
If the file is verified - do not allow write
otherwise do not allow read.
Add O_ACCMODE to stand.h
Reviewed by: stevek, mindal_semihalf.com
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20387
This adds some new commands to loader :
- pnpmatch
This takes a pnpinfo string as argument and tries to find a kernel module
associated with it. -v and -d option are available and are the same as in
devmatch (v is verbose, d dumps the hints).
- pnpload
This takes a pnpinfo string as argument and tries to load a kernel module
associated with it.
- pnpautoload
This will attempt to load every kernel module for each buses. Each buses are
probed, the probe function will generate pnpinfo string and load kernel module
associated with it if it exists.
Only simplebus for FDT system is implemented for now.
Since we need the dtb and overlays to be applied before searching the tree
fdt_devmatch_next will load and apply the dtb + overlays.
All the pnp parsing code comes from devmatch and is the same at 99%.
Reviewed by: imp, kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19498
This change properly terminates the formatting string quote modification done
in r348005, which is triggered when `ELF_VERBOSE` is defined.
MFC with: r348005
Reported by: ci (amd64, gcc)
file_loadraw():
check for file_alloc() and strdup() results.
we leak 'name'.
mod_load() does leak 'filename'.
mod_loadkld() does not need to check fp, file_discard() does check.
Since the partition/slice names do vary in length, check the length
of the fixed part of the line against 3 * 8, if the lenth is less than
3 tab stops, print out extra tab.
use snprintf() instead of sprintf.
This is a prerequisite of unifying kernel zlib instances.
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota at j.email.ne.jp>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20191
looping over the filesystem modules rather than doing a malloc + free
each time through the loop. In addition, nothing changes from loop to
loop, so setup the new devinfo outside the loop as well.
The bug and patch is reported against 11.2, but it is good idea to have
the check in place for all versions.
PR: 236585
Submitted by: john@feith.com
Reported by: john@feith.com
MFC after: 1 day
We're storing an EFI_HANDLE, not an pointer to a handle. Since
EFI_HANDLE is a void * anyway, this has little practical effect since
the conversion to / from void * and void ** is silent.
Small mis-merge from multiple WIP resulted in block io media handles getting
double-initialized. This resulted in some installations oddly landing at the
mountroot prompt.
Reported by: ler
Reviewed by: imp
These three cases dovetail with other places in the code where we use
or set D_PARTISGPT when we mean that the partitioning scheme is
GPT. Use this #define to make the code easier to undertand.
Reviewed by: tsoome@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20122
If we do have GPT on disk, read the disk size from it and do not
call int13.
Since int13 does report bogus informatiopn too often, rather trust the
partition table. We are using the same strategy with loader.
MFC after: 1 month
When set, we ignore all the hints that the UEFI boot manager has set
for us. We also always fail back to the OK prompt when we can't find
the right thing to boot rather than failing back to the UEFI boot
manager. This has the side effect of also expanding the cases where we
fail back to the OK prompt to include when we're booted under UEFI,
but UEFI::BootCurrent isn't set in the environment and we can't find a
proper place to boot from.
Reviewed by: bcran
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20016
If uefi_rootdev is set in the environment, then treat it like a device
path. Convert the string to a device path and see if we can find a
device that matches. If so, use that device at our root dev no matter
what. If it's bad in any way, the boot will fail.
Reviewed by: bcran
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20016
partition as if it were on the command line.
Fetch FreeBSD-LoaderEnv UEFI enviornment variable. If set, read in
loader environment variables from it. Otherwise read in
/efi/freebsd/loader.env. Both are read relative to the device
loader.efi loaded from (they aren't full UEFI device paths)
Next fetch FreeBSD-NextLoaderEnv UEFI environment variable. If
present, read the file it points to in as above and delete the UEFI
environment variable so it only happens once.
This lets one set environment variables in the bootloader.
Unfortunately, we don't have all the mechanisms in place to parse the
file, nor do we have the magic pattern matching in place that
loader.conf has. Variables are of the form foo=bar. No quotes are
supported, so spaces aren't allowed, for example. Also, variables like
foo_load=yes are intercepted when we parse the loader.conf file and
things are done based on that. Since those aren't done here, variables
that cause an action to happen won't work.
Reviewed by: bcran
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20016
illumos update: https://www.illumos.org/issues/10598
Add map-vdisk and unmap-vdisk commands to create virtual disk interface on top of file. This will allow to use disk image from file system to load and start the kernel.
By mapping file, we create vdiskX device, the device will be listed by lsdev [-v] and can be accessed directly as ls vdisk0p1:/path or can be used as value for currdev variable.
vdisk strategy function does not use bcache as we have bcache used with backing file. vdisk can be unmapped when all consumers have closed the open files.
In first iteration we do not support the zfs images because zfs pools do keep the device open (there is no "zpool export" mechanism). Adding zfs support is relatively simple, we just need to run zfs disk probe after mapping is done.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19733
snagging them from UEFI BIOS). Call the device type init routines
earlier as well, as they don't depend on how the console is
setup. This will allow us to read files earlier in boot, so any rare
error messages that this might move only to the EFI console will be an
acceptable price to pay. Also tweak the order of has_kbd so it resides
next to the rest of the console code. It needs to be after we initialize
the buffer cache.
When efi_autoload is called it will call fdt_setup_fdtp which setup the
dtb and overlays. If a user already loaded at dtb or overlays or just
printed the efi provided dtb, this will re-setup everything and also
re-applying the overlays.
Test that everything is setup before doing it again.
Reviewed by: kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20059
The disk_open() function searches for "the best partition" when slice and
partition information is not provided as part of the device name. As of
r345477 the slice and partition fields of a disk_devdesc are initialized to
D_SLICEWILD and D_PARTWILD; in the past they were initialized to -1, which
was sometimes interpreted as meaning 'wildcard' and sometimes as 'open the
raw partition' depending on the context. So as an unintended side effect of
r345477 it became basically impossible to ever open a disk or partition
without doing the 'best partition' search. One visible effect of that was
the inability to open the raw disk to read the partition table correctly in
zfs_probe_dev(), leading to failures to find the zfs pool unless it was on
the first partition.
Now instead of always initializing slice and partition to wildcards, the
disk_parsedev() function initializes them based on the presence of a
path/file name following the device. If there is any path or filename
following the ':' that ends the device name, then slice and partition are
initialized to D_SLICEWILD and D_PARTWILD. If there is nothing after the
':' then it is considered to be a request to open the raw device or
partition itself (not a file stored within it), and the fields are
initialized to D_SLICENONE and D_PARTNONE.
With this change in place, all the tests in src/tools/boot are succesful
again, including the recently-added cases of booting from a zfs pool on
a partition other than slice 1 of the device.
PR: 236981
Get the information from the image that we're booting and store it in
a global variable. Prefer using this to passing it around. Remove the
special case for zfs that set the preferred boot handle by having it
uses this global variable diretly.
Reviewed by: kevans@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20015
There's no reason we can't setup the console first thing after the
arch flags are setup. We set it undconditionally to efi. This is a
good default, and will get us error messages to at least the efi
console no matter what. This will also prime the pump so that as other
variables are set, they will take effect and the console will be
correct as soon as those env vars are set. Also remove the redundant
setting of the console to efi when we know the console is efi.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20014
There's a number of EFI_ZFS_BOOT #ifdefs that aren't needed, or can be
eliminated with some trivial #defines. Remove the EFI_ZFS_BOOT ifdefs
that aren't needed. Replace libzfs.h include which is not safe to
include without EFI_ZFS_BOOT with efizfs.h which is and now
conditionally included libzfs.h. Define efizfs_set_preferred away
and define efi_zfs_probe to NULL when ZFS is compiled out.
In anticipation of new functionality, create routines to convert char *
and a CHAR16 * to a EFI_DEVICE_PATH
EFI_DEVICE_PATH *efi_name_to_devpath(const char *path);
EFI_DEVICE_PATH *efi_name_to_devpath16(CHAR16 *path);
void efi_devpath_free(EFI_DEVICE_PATH *dp);
The first two return an EFI_DEVICE_PATH for the passed in paths. The
third frees up the storage the first two return when the caller is
done with it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19971
Add definitions from UEFI 2.7 Errata B standards doc for converting a
text string to a device path. Added clearly missing 'e' at the end of
Device to resolve mismatch in that document in
EFI_DEVICE_PATH_FROM_TEXT_PROTOCOL element names.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19971
Newer interfaces take CONST parameters, so define CONST to minimize
differences between our headers and the standards docs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19971
It was pointed out that manually loading a .dtb to be used rather than
relying on platform-specific method for loading .dtb will result in overlays
not being applied. This was true because overlay loading was hacked into
fdt_platform_load_dtb, rather than done in a way more independent from how
the .dtb is loaded.
Instead, push overlay loading (for now) out into an
fdt_platform_load_overlays. This method easily allows ubldr to pull in any
fdt_overlays specified in the ub env, and omits overlay-checking on
platforms where they're not tested and/or not desired (e.g. powerpc). If we
eventually stop caring about fdt_overlays from ubenv (if we ever cared),
this method should get chopped out in favor of just calling
fdt_load_dtb_overlays() directly.
Reported by: Manuel Stühn (freebsdnewbie freenet de)
346002 did miss the fact that we do not only undo the loadaddr, but also
we need to remove the inserted module. Implement file_remove() to do the job.
MFC after: 1w
The last_file variable is used to reset the loadaddr variable back to original
value; however, it is possible the last_file is NULL, so we can not blindly
trust it. But then again, we can just save the original loadaddr and use
the saved value for recovery.
MFC after: 1w
The current approach of injecting manifest into mac_veriexec is to
verify the integrity of it in userspace (veriexec (8)) and pass its
entries into kernel using a char device (/dev/veriexec).
This requires verifying root partition integrity in loader,
for example by using memory disk and checking its hash.
Otherwise if rootfs is compromised an attacker could inject their own data.
This patch introduces an option to parse manifest in kernel based on envs.
The loader sets manifest path and digest.
EVENTHANDLER is used to launch the module right after the rootfs is mounted.
It has to be done this way, since one might want to verify integrity of the init file.
This means that manifest is required to be present on the root partition.
Note that the envs have to be set right before boot to make sure that no one can spoof them.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: sjg
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Stormshield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19281
Many components under stand/ had CLANG_NO_IAS added when Clang's
Integrated Assembler (IAS) did not handle .codeNN directives. Clang
gained support quite some time ago, and we can now build stand/ with
IAS.
Note that in some cases there are small differences in the generated
output, so CLANG_NO_IAS should be removed only after testing (or after
finding no differences in the output). For zfsldr I compared objdump
output between GNU as- and Clang IAS-built zfsldr and .text was
identical (changes were limited to the object's ELF headers and debug
info).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Assuming that the autoboot sequence was interrupted, we've done enough
cursor manipulation that the prompt for the password will be sufficiently
obscured a couple of lines up. Clear the screen and reset the cursor
position here, too.
MFC after: 1 week
The values of the d_slice and d_partition fields of a disk_devdesc have a
few values with special meanings in the disk_open() routine. Through various
evolutions of the loader code over time, a d_partition value of -1 has
meant both "use the first ufs partition found in the bsd label" and "don't
open a bsd partition at all, open the raw slice."
This defines a new special value of -2 to mean open the raw slice, and it
gives symbolic names to all the special values used in d_slice and
d_partition, and adjusts all existing uses of those fields to use the new
constants.
The phab review for this timed out without being accepted, but I'm still
citing it below because there is useful commentary there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19262
The loader indended to search the kernel file name (only) for . but
instead searched the entire path, so paths like
"boot/test.elfv2/kernel" would not work.
Submitted by: alfredo.junior_eldorado.org.br
Reviewed by: kevans
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19658
During initialization of the forth interpreter
the loader looks for "/boot/boot.4th"
and executes any code found there.
That file was loaded bypassing verification.
Add a call to verify_file to change that.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: sjg
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Stormshield
Some of these files using <FOO>_DEBUG defined a DEBUG() macro to serve as a
debug-printf. -DDEBUG is useful to enable some debugging output across
multiple ELF/common parts, so switch the DEBUG-as-printf macros over to
something more like DPRINTF that is more commonly used for this kind of
thing and less likely to conflict.
userboot/elf64_freebsd debugging also assumed %llx for uint64; use PRIx64
instead.
MFC after: 1 week
UEFI related headers were copied from edk2.
A new build option "MK_LOADER_EFI_SECUREBOOT" was added to allow
loading of trusted anchors from UEFI.
Certificate revocation support is also introduced.
The forbidden certificates are loaded from dbx variable.
Verification fails in two cases:
There is a direct match between cert in dbx and the one in the chain.
The CA used to sign the chain is found in dbx.
One can also insert a hash of TBS section of a certificate into dbx.
In this case verifications fails only if a direct match with a
certificate in chain is found.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: sjg
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Stormshield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19093
The call to BS->AllocatePages can cause the memory map to become framented,
causing BS->GetMemoryMap to return EFI_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL more than once. For
example this can happen on the MinnowBoard Turbot, causing the boot to stop
with an error. Avoid this by calling GetMemoryMap in a loop.
Reviewed by: imp, tsoome, kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19341
ExitBootServices terminates all boot services including console access.
Attempting to call printf afterwards can result in a crash, depending on the
implementation.
Move any printf statements to before we call bi_load, and remove any that
depend on calling bi_load first.
Reviewed by: imp, tsoome
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19374
This relies on libbearssl and libsecureboot
to verify files read by loader in a maner equivalent
to how mac_veriexec
Note: disabled by default.
Use is initially expected to be by embeded vendors
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Differential Revision: D16336
r328169 removed the copy of bootinfo that would've made this somewhat
functional. However, this is irrelevant- earlier work in r292338 was done to
exit boot services in the MI bi_load() rather than having N copies of the
GetMemoryMap/ExitBootServices dance.
i386 never quite caught up to that; ldr_enter was still being called but
the prereq for that, ldr_bootinfo, was no longer. As a consequence, this
ExitBootServices() was being called with a mapkey=0, clearly bogus, and
reportedly breaking the boot in some instances.
Reported by: bcran
MFC after: 1 week
The cd9660_open() does pass whole path to dirmatch() and we need to
compare only the current path component, not full path.
Additinally, skip over duplicate / (if any) and check if the last component
in the path was meant to be directory (having trailing /). If it is in fact
a file, error out.
When I added support for the standard loader(8) disk0s2a: type formats,
the parsing of legacy format was broken because it also contains a colon,
but it comes before the slice and partition. That would cause disk_parsedev()
to return success with the slice and partition set to wildcard values.
This change examines the string first, and if it contains spaces, dots, or
a colon at any position other than the end, it must be a legacy-format
string and we don't even try to use disk_parsedev() on it.
Reported by: Manuel Stuhn
way: device<unit>[s|p]<slice><partition>. E.g., disk0s2a or disk3p12.
The code first tries to parse the variable in this format using the
standard disk_parsedev(). If that fails, it falls back to parsing the
legacy format that has been supported by ubldr for years.
In addition to 'disk', all the valid uboot device names can also be used:
mmc, sata, usb, ide, scsi. The 'disk' device serves as an alias for all
those types and will match the Nth storage-type device found (where N is
the unit number).
Loader does fail to properly match the file name in directory record and
does open file based on prefix match.
For fix, we check the name lengths first.
Reviewed by: allanjude
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19213
loaderdev variable works correctly.
The uboot_devdesc struct is variously cast back and forth between
uboot_devdesc and disk_devdesc as pointers are handed off through various
opaque interfaces. uboot_devdesc attempted to mimic the layout of
disk_devdesc by having a devdesc struct, followed by a union of some
device-specific stuff that included a struct that contains the same fields
as a disk_devdesc. However, one of those fields inside the struct is 64-bit
which causes the entire union to be 64-bit aligned -- 32 bits of padding
is added between the struct devdesc and the union, so the whole mess ends
up NOT properly mimicking a disk_devdesc after all. (In disk_devdesc there
is also 32 bits of padding, but it shows up immediately before the d_offset
field, rather than before the whole collection of d_* fields.)
This fixes the problem by using an anonymous union to overlay the devdesc
field uboot network devices need with the disk_devdesc that uboot storage
devices need. This is a different solution than the one contributed with
the PR (so if anything goes wrong, the blame goes to me), but 95% of the
credit for this fix goes to Pawel Worach and Manuel Stuhn who analyzed the
problem and proposed a fix.
PR: 233097
This was previously an unconditional screen clear, regardless of whether or
not we would be prompting for any passwords. This is pointless, given that
the screen clear is only there to put our screen into a consistent state
before we draw the prompts and do cursor manipulation.
This is also the only screen clear besides that to draw the menu. One can
now see early pre-loader and loader output with the menu disabled, which may
be useful for diagnostics.
Reported by: ian
MFC after: 3 days
Summary:
Now that mpc85xx can boot via ubldr, move ubldr to a separate
filesystem, mounted on /boot/uboot, so that a fresh install can boot correctly.
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18709
the size field and a tab between the partition type and the size.
Changes this
disk devices:
disk0 (MMC)
disk0s1: DOS/Windows 49MB
disk0s2: FreeBSD 14GB
disk0s2a: FreeBSD UFS 14GB
disk0s2b: Unknown 2048KB
disk0s2d: FreeBSD UFS 2040KB
to this
disk devices:
disk0 (MMC)
disk0s1: DOS/Windows 49MB
disk0s2: FreeBSD 14GB
disk0s2a: FreeBSD UFS 14GB
disk0s2b: Unknown 2048KB
disk0s2d: FreeBSD UFS 2040KB
I'm pretty sure this used to work at one time, perhaps long ago. It has
been failing recently because if you call disk_open() with dev->d_partition
set to -1 when d_slice refers to a bsd slice, it assumes you want it to
open the first partition within that slice. When you then pass that open
dev instance to ptable_open(), it tries to read the start of the 'a'
partition and decides there is no recognizable partition type there.
This restores the old functionality by resetting d_offset to the start
of the raw slice after disk_open() returns. For good measure, d_partition
is also set back to -1, although that doesn't currently affect anything.
I would have preferred to make disk_open() avoid such rude assumptions and
if you ask for partition -1 you get the raw slice. But the commit history
shows that someone already did that once (r239058), and had to revert it
(r239232), so I didn't even try to go down that road.
This commit fixes a remaining output buffer overrun in the
single-sector case when there is a non-zero tail.
Reviewed by: allanjude, tsoome
MFC after: 3 months
MFC with: r344226
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19220
This is consistent with the removal of whole-disk vdev support from
libsa/zfs/zfs.c in r342151, and is part way to having the LBAs read
during probe be fully constrained by partition tables when present.
Reviewed by: tsoome
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19142
The bug occurred when a bounce buffer was used and the requested read
size was greater than the size of the bounce buffer. This commit also
rewrites the read logic so that it is easier to systematically verify
all alignment and size cases.
Reviewed by: allanjude, tsoome
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19140
Building binaries as PIE allows the executable itself to be loaded at a
random address when ASLR is enabled (not just its shared libraries).
With this change PIE objects have a .pieo extension and INTERNALLIB
libraries libXXX_pie.a.
MK_PIE is disabled for some kerberos5 tools, Clang, and Subversion, as
they explicitly reference .a libraries in their Makefiles. These can
be addressed on an individual basis later. MK_PIE is also disabled for
rtld-elf because it is already position-independent using bespoke
Makefile rules.
Currently only dynamically linked binaries will be built as PIE.
Discussed with: dim
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18423
net_open previously casted the first vararg to a char * and this was
half-OK: at first, it is passed to netif_open, which would cast it back to
the struct devdesc * that it really is and use it properly. It is then
strdup()d and used as the netdev_name, which is objectively wrong.
Correct it so that the first vararg is properly casted to a struct devdesc *
and the netdev_name gets set properly to make it more clear at a glance that
it's not doing something horribly wrong.
Reported by: mmel
Reviewed by: imp, mmel, tsoome
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19206
When loading bigger variables form UEFI it is necessary to know their
size beforehand, so that an appropriate amount of memory can be
allocated. The easiest way to do this is to try to read the variable
with buffer size equal 0, expecting EFI_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL error to be
returned. Allow such possible approach in efi_getenv routine.
Extracted from a bigger patch as suggested by imp.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Stormshield
Use recent best practices for Copyright form at the top of
the license:
1. Remove all the All Rights Reserved clauses on our stuff. Where we
piggybacked others, use a separate line to make things clear.
2. Use "Netflix, Inc." everywhere.
3. Use a single line for the copyright for grep friendliness.
4. Use date ranges in all places for our stuff.
Approved by: Netflix Legal (who gave me the form), adrian@ (pmc files)
Since the loader zfs reader does not need to read the dump zvol, we can
just enable the feature.
illumos issue #9051https://www.illumos.org/issues/9051
MFC after: 2 weeks
An integrity check such as a check-hash or a cross-correlation failed.
The integrity error falls between EINVAL that identifies errors in
parameters to a system call and EIO that identifies errors with the
underlying storage media. EINTEGRITY is typically raised by intermediate
kernel layers such as a filesystem or an in-kernel GEOM subsystem when
they detect inconsistencies. Uses include allowing the mount(8) command
to return a different exit value to automate the running of fsck(8)
during a system boot.
These changes make no use of the new error, they just add it. Later
commits will be made for the use of the new error number and it will
be added to additional manual pages as appropriate.
Reviewed by: gnn, dim, brueffer, imp
Discussed with: kib, cem, emaste, ed, jilles
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18765
Just like for Acer C270 chromebook the E820 extmem workaround is required for
FreeBSD to boot on Dell chromebook.
PR: 204916
Submitted by: Keith White <kwhite@site.uottawa.ca>
MFC after: 1 week
biospci_write_config args swapped length and value to write. Some
hardware coped just fine, while other hardware had issues.
PR: 155441
Submitted by: longwitz at incore dot de
We have no option than trust INT13 ah=08 return code during the init phase.
PR: 234460
Reported by: Oleh Hushchenkov
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18723
This update does add diag and debug capabilities to interpret the efi
variables, configuration and protocols (lsefi).
The side effect is that we add/update bunch of related headers.
We do have 16KB buffer space defined in pxe.c, move it to bio.c and implement
bio_alloc()/bio_free() interface to make it possible to use this space for
other BIOS calls (notably, from biosdisk.c).
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17131
The reason for this change is that currently, a send/recv
takes many hours to time out.
This is suboptimal in the bootloader because it means for example
that NFS will take hours to fail before allowing subsequent access
methods such as gzip to be tried.
Setting MAXWAIT to 300 seconds (5 minutes) still allows slow
connections of 1Mb to be used to download a 30MB kernel file.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18544
With r342151 I did fix the BIOS version of zfs_probe_dev() from accessing
the whole disk, but the fix was not complete - we actually did not check
if the device name was really for whole disk. Since UEFI version
is only calling the zfs_probe_dev() with partitions and not with whole
disk, the UEFI loader was not able to find the zfs pools.
This update does correct the issue by calling archsw.arch_getdev() to
translate the device name back to dev_desc, and we have whole disk when both
partition and slice values are -1.
Reported by: alvisen_gmail.com
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18558
First of all, normal setups can not boot such pools as the tools
do not support installing boot programs.
Secondly, for proper pool configuration detection, we need to checks all
four label copies on disk, 2 from front and 2 from the end of the disk,
but zfs label does not contain the size of the disk - so we depend on
firmware to report the correct disk size or use information from the
partition table.
Without partition table, we only can rely on firmware to report and support
disk IO properly.
There is a specific case: 8TB disks are reported by BIOS to have 4294967295
sectors (0x00000000ffffffff), the sectors reported by OS is 15628053168
(0x00000003a3812ab0), so the reported size is less than actual but is hitting
32-bit max. Unfortuantely the real limit must be even lower because probing
this disk in this system will wnd up with hung system.
UEFI boot of this system seems not to be affected.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18558
With the default Qemu parameters, only 128MB RAM gets given to a VM. This causes
the loader to be unable to allocate the 64MB it needs for the heap. This change
makes the cause of the error more obvious.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17958
superblock has a check-hash error, an error message noting the
superblock check-hash failure is printed and the mount fails. The
administrator then runs fsck to repair the filesystem and when
successful, the filesystem can once again be mounted.
This approach fails if the filesystem in question is a root filesystem
from which you are trying to boot. Here, the loader fails when trying
to access the filesystem to get the kernel to boot. So it is necessary
to allow the loader to ignore the superblock check-hash error and make
a best effort to read the kernel. The filesystem may be suffiently
corrupted that the read attempt fails, but there is no harm in trying
since the loader makes no attempt to write to the filesystem.
Once the kernel is loaded and starts to run, it attempts to mount its
root filesystem. Once again, failure means that it breaks to its prompt
to ask where to get its root filesystem. Unless you have an alternate
root filesystem, you are stuck.
Since the root filesystem is initially mounted read-only, it is
safe to make an attempt to mount the root filesystem with the failed
superblock check-hash. Thus, when asked to mount a root filesystem
with a failed superblock check-hash, the kernel prints a warning
message that the root filesystem superblock check-hash needs repair,
but notes that it is ignoring the error and proceeding. It does
mark the filesystem as needing an fsck which prevents it from being
enabled for writing until fsck has been run on it. The net effect
is that the reboot fails to single user, but at least at that point
the administrator has the tools at hand to fix the problem.
Reported by: Rick Macklem (rmacklem@)
Discussed with: Warner Losh (imp@)
Sponsored by: Netflix
When loader(8) is built with zfs support enabled, it assumes that any extarg
data present is a zfs_boot_args struct, but if the first-stage loader was
gptboot(8) the extarg data is actually a geli_boot_args struct. Luckily,
zfsboot(8) and gptzfsboot(8) have always passed KARGS_FLAGS_ZFS along with
KARGS_FLAGS_EXTARG, so we can use KARGS_FLAGS_ZFS to decide whether the
extarg data is a zfs_boot_args struct.
To avoid similar problems in the future, gptboot(8) now passes a new
KARGS_FLAGS_GELI to indicate that extarg data is geli_boot_args. In
loader(8), if the neither KARGS_FLAGS_ZFS nor KARGS_FLAGS_GELI is set but
extarg data is present (which will be the case for gptboot compiled before
this change), we now check for the known size of the geli_boot_args struct
passed by the older versions of gptboot as a way of confirming what type of
extarg data is present.
In a semi-related tidying up, since loader's main() has already decided
what type of extarg data is present and set the global 'zargs' var
accordingly, don't repeat the check in extract_currdev, just check whether
zargs is NULL or not.
X-MFC after: a few days, along with prior related changes.
As part of the migration away from obsolete binutils we want to retire
GNU as. Most assembly files used on amd64 have a .S extension and
(via rules in share/mk/bsd.suffixes.mk) are assembled with Clang's
Integrated Assembler (IAS). Rename files in stand/i386 to .S to use
the integrated assembler.
Clang's IAS supports the defsym option (via -Wa,) but only with one
dash, not two. As both -defsym and --defsym are accepted by GNU as,
use the former.
PR: 233611
Reviewed by: tsoome
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18369
src.opts.mk includes bsd.own.mk. This in turn defines CTFCONVERT_CMD
depending on the MK_CTF value. We then set MK_CTF to no, which has no
real effect. The solution is to set all the MK_foo values before
including src.opts.mk.
This should stop the cdboot binary from exploding in size for releases
built WITH_CTF=yes in src.conf.
Sponsored by: Netflix
of args data between gptboot/zfsboot and loader(8).
Despite what seems like a lot of changes here, there are no actual
changes in behavior, or in the data layout in the structures involved.
This is just eliminating identical code pasted into multiple locations.
In detail, the changes are...
- Move struct zfs_boot_args definition from libsa/zfs/libzfs.h to
i386/common/bootargs.h because it is specific to x86 booting and the
handoff between zfsboot and loader, and has no relation to the zfs
library code in general.
- The geli_boot_args and zfs_boot_args structs both contain an identical
set of member variables containing geli information. Extract this out
to a new geli_boot_data struct, and embed it in the arg-passing structs.
- Provide new routines geli_import_boot_data() and geli_export_boot_data()
that can be shared between gptboot, zfsboot, and loader instead of
pasting identical code into several different .c files.
- Remove some checks for a NULL pointer that can never be true because the
pointer being tested was set using pointer math (kargs + 1) and that can
never result in NULL in this code.
This fix is ported from illumos (issue #9970), the analysis and initial
implementation was done by John Levon.
See also: https://www.illumos.org/issues/9970
Currently, efi_cons_getchar() will wait for a key. While this seems to make
sense, the implementation of getchar() in common/console.c will loop across
getchar() for all consoles without doing ischar() first.
This means that if we've configured multiple consoles, we can't input into
the serial, as getchar() will be sat waiting for input only from efi_console.c
This patch does implement a bit more generic key buffer to support
translation of input keys, and we use generic efi_readkey() to reduce
duplication from calls from getchar() and poll().
Create unified block IO implementation in BIOS version, like it is done in UEFI
side. Implement fd, disk and cd device lists, this will split floppy devices
from disks and will allow us to have consistent, predictable device naming
(modulo BIOS issues).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17888
-msoft-float seems to be insufficient for disabling the SPE on powerpcspe.
Force it off with -mno-spe as well. This prevents a crash in ubldr on
powerpcspe.
in gptboot.
When arch-independent geli support was added, a new static 'gdsk' struct
was added, but there was still a static 'dsk' struct, and when you typed
in an alternate disk/partition, the string was parsed into that struct,
which was then never used for anything. Now the string gets parsed into
gdsk.dsk, the struct that's actually used.
X-MFC after: 3 days
As part of the migration away from obsolete binutils we want to retire
GNU as. Most assembly files used on amd64 have a .S extension and are
assembled with Clang's Integrated Assembler (IAS); rename pxetram.s to
.S to use IAS as well.
The generated .text is identical (the entire .o file is not, as Clang
adds debug info.)
PR: 205250, 233094
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
As part of the migration away from obsolete binutils we want to retire
GNU as. Most assembly files used on amd64 have a .S extension and are
assembled with Clang's integrated assembler; rename two files in
stand/i386/btx/lib to .S to use IAS as well.
The generated .text is identical (the entire .o files are not, as Clang
adds debug info).
PR: 205250, 233094
Discussed with: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
the malloc()/free() as well as having potential of softening the handling
in case error is detected down to a mere warning as compared to hard panic
in free().
Submitted by: tsoome
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18299
A user may enable build-id for all builds by adding
LDFLAGS=-Wl,--build-id=sha1 to /etc/make.conf. In this case the build-id
note ends added up to mbr and pmbr's .text, which makes it too large (it
ends up being 532 bytes). To avoid this explicitly turn off build-id for
these components.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15470
Many components under stand/ had CLANG_NO_IAS added when Clang's
Integrated Assembler (IAS) did not handle .codeNN directives. Clang
gained support quite some time ago, and we can now build stand/ with
IAS.
Note that in some cases there are small differences in the generated
output, so CLANG_NO_IAS should be removed only after testing (or after
finding no differences in the output).
PR: 205250, 233094
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The ptable_*read() functions return NULL on read errors (and partition table
closed as an side effect). The ptable_open must check the return value and
act properly.
PR: 232483
Reported by: lev
Reviewed by: lev,cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17890
The disk access is validated by using partition table definitions, therefore
we have no need for if statements, just set the disk size.
Of course the partition table itself may be incorrect/inconsistent, but if
so, we are in trouble anyhow.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17822
The bd_print/bd_open/bd_strategy need to make sure the device does have
media, before getting into performing IO operations. Some systems can
hung if the device without a media is accessed.
Reported by: yuripv
while probing for drives, use int13 extended info before standard one and
provide workaround for case we are not getting needed information in case
of floppy drive.
In case of INT13 errors, there are (at least) 3 error codes appearing in case
of missin media - 20h, 31h and 80h. Flag the no media and do not print an
error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17667
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
If module_blacklist isn't specified, we have an empty blacklist; effectively
the same as if module_blacklist="" were specified in loader.conf(5).
This was reported when switching to a BE that predated the module_blacklist
introduction, but the problem is valid all the same and likely to be tripped
over in other scenarios.
Reported by: bwidawsk
MFC after: 3 days
Pointer math to find the size in bytes only works with char types.
Use correct pointer math to determine if we have enough of a header to
look at or not.
MFC After: 3 days
X-MFX-With: r339800
Noticed by: jhb@
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc
its length. Some BIOSes pad the length of the device path to an even
amount. When we had a device path that was somehow an odd length, we'd
wind up having 1 byte left that we were bogusly interpreting as a full
device path. We'd then dereference 2 bytes into that to get a length
of the node, which had undefined (and quite undesired) effects.
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc
MFC After: 3 days
Some fixes:
- Maintain historical behavior more accurately w.r.t verbose_loading;
verbose_loading strictly prints "${module_name...}" and later "failed!"
or "ok" based on load success
- With or without verbose_loading, dump command_errbuf on load failure.
This usually happens prior to ok/failed if we're verbose_loading
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17694
Currently, a timeout in the menu autoboot sequence would effectively do
nothing. We would return from the autoboot handling, then begin processing
the menu without redrawing it.
This change makes the behavior a little more friendly. Returning the user to
the menu can't have any good effects, so abort the autoboot sequence and
drop to the loader prompt.
MFC after: 3 days
In the majority of cases, a kernel is not loaded before we hit the menu.
However, if a password is set, we'll trigger autoboot and have loadelf'd
beforehand. We also need to take into account one dropping to the loader
prompt and twiddling with things manually; if they try to toggle through
kernels, we'll assume they mean it.
Reported by: trasz
MFC after: 3 days
ffs_subr.c requires calculate_crc32c() from libkern. Unfortunately we
cannot just add libkern/crc32.c to libstand because crc32.o is already
compiled from contrib/zlib/crc32.c. Use the include trick to rename
the source.
Note that libstand also provides crc32.c which seems to be unused.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17677
The 4kn support in current bios specific biosdisk.c is broken, as the code
is only implementing the support for the 512B sector size.
This work is building the support for custom size sectors, we still do assume
the requested data to be multiple of 512B blocks and we only do address the
biosdisk.c interface here.
For reference, see also:
https://www.illumos.org/issues/8303https://www.illumos.org/rb/r/547
As the GELI is moved above biosdisk "layer", the GELI should just work
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11174
In current tftp code we drop out-of-order packets; however, we should play
nice and re-send ACK for older data packets we are receiving. This will
hopefully stop server repeating those packets we already have received.
Note we do not answer duplicates from "previous" session (that is, session
with different port number), those will eventually time out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17087
without first entering the password stored in loader.conf(5).
PR: kern/207069
Reported by: david@dcrosstech.com
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Smule, Inc.
Clang's Integrated Assembler was previously disabled for i386 with the
note that it "doesn't grok .codeNN directives yet." This is no longer
the case (and hasn't been for some time), and the assembled output .text
is identical between gas and IAS.
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Add poweroff command to make life a bit easier.
Reviewed by: imp, allanjude
Approved by: re (kib)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17535
As documented in loader.conf(5), kernels_autodetect="YES" will cause the
Lua scripts to effectively scan /boot for directories with a "kernel" file
inside, to be listed in the loader menu.
Approved by: re (kib)
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)
This is a step in the process of easing migration into the new world order
of DRM drivers. Strongly encourage users towards loading DRM modules via
rc.conf(5) instead of loader.conf(5) by failing the load from loader(8).
Users so inclined may wipe out the blacklist via module_blacklist="" in
loader.conf(5), and it is expected that these modules will eventually be
removed from the blacklist. They may still be loaded as dependencies of
other modules or explicitly via the loader prompt, but this should not be a
major problem.
Approved by: re (rgrimes)
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16914
This was mostly a cosmetic issue. autoboot_delay=-1 is documented to bypass
the loader menu and immediately execute the boot command, but lualoader
would draw the menu and immediately execute the boot command. No interaction
was possible with the menu.
The fix lifts autoboot_delay processing out of menu.autoboot, which now
takes a delay and does nothing if no delay is specified. This lines up with
my expectations of menu.autoboot's usage from a third party, which may
want more control over the process than the default behavior.
PR: 231610
Approved by: re (gjb)
1. Be clear about which password is being requested
2. Remove extraneous whitespace between the prompt and the cursor
3. Move the twiddle to where the prompt is, instead of two characters to the right
4. Fix erasing the 'incorrect password' message when retrying; previously it was erased partially
5. Remove the unneeded exclamation mark
Reviewed by: kevans
Approved by: re (gjb)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17236
The name check referred in the comment is not the only possible error source,
we need to validate the result.
Reviewed by: allanjude
Approved by: re (kib)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17081
tftpfile is allocated just above and needs to be freed.
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: re (kib)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17058
Reports have come in that there's issue with powerpc and sparc64 since
we've switched to using -Oz / -Os. We don't strictly need them for
!x86, so be conservative about when we enable them.
Approved by: re@ (gjb)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17016
This was disabled recently due to lack of support in KDB disassembler
and DTrace FBT provider. Support for 'C'-extension to both of these was
added, so we can now enable 'C'-extension.
This reduces size of the kernel important for low-end embedded devices,
and saves cache footprint for high perfomance machines.
Approved by: re (kib)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
/etc/security/audit_event to provide a list of audit event-number <->
name mappings. However, this occurs too late for anonymous tracing.
With this change, adding 'audit_event_load="YES"' to /boot/loader.conf
will cause the boot loader to preload the file, and then the kernel
audit code will parse it to register an initial set of audit event-number
<-> name mappings. Those mappings can later be updated by auditd(8) if
the configuration file changes.
Reviewed by: gnn, asomers, markj, allanjude
Discussed with: jhb
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16589
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)
The switch to lualoader creates a problem with userboot: the host is
inclined to build userboot with Lua, but the host userboot's interpreter
must match what's available on the guest. For almost all FreeBSD guests in
the wild, Lua is not yet available and a Lua-based userboot will fail.
This revision updates userboot protocol to version 5, which adds a
swap_interpreter callback to request a different interpreter, and tries to
determine the proper interpreter to be used based on how the guest
/boot/loader is compiled. This is still a bit of a guess, but it's likely
the best possible guess we can make in order to get it right. The
interpreter is now embedded in the resulting executable, so we can open
/boot/loader on the guest and hunt that down to derive the interpreter it
was built with.
Using -l with bhyveload will not allow an intepreter swap, even if the
loader specified happens to be a userboot with the wrong interpreter. We'll
simply complain about the mismatch and bail out.
For legacy guests without the interpreter marker, we assume they're 4th.
For new guests with the interpreter marker, we'll read it and swap over
to the proper interpreter if it doesn't match what the userboot we're using
was compiled with.
Both flavors of userboot are installed by default, userboot_4th.so and
userboot_lua.so. This fixes the build WITHOUT_FORTH as a coincidence, which
was broken by userboot being forced to 4th.
Reviewed by: imp, jhb, araujo (earlier version)
Approved by: re (gjb)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16945
Previously lualoader would remain silent, rather than printing
command_errmsg or noting that a command had failed or was not found.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Resetting to the default color scheme was done prior to reading the config.
This is bogus; colors may only be declined by the user with the
loader.conf(5) variable "loader_color", so such a request for no color will
not be completely honored as we reset to the default color scheme
unconditionally.
Approved by: re (rgrimes)
Lua has a few places where it allocates a large buffer on the stack. This
is normally fine, except there are a few places where there can be multiple
frames with this buffer. This can cause a stack overflow on some arm64 SoCs.
Fix this by allocating our own stack in loader.efi large enough for these
objects. The required size has been found by tracing how the stack pointer
changes in a virtual machine and found to be no larger than 50kB. A
larger stack is allocated to reduce the likelihood of overflow from future
changes.
Reviewed by: kevans
Approved by: re (kib)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16886
Earlier changes setup a config.module_path variable that was populated upon
reading of loader.conf(5) and used for restoring module_path to pristine
condition if multiple kernels are attempted. This broke the ability to
override module_path at the loader prompt in case of emergency.
Approved by: re (rgrimes)
Generally straightforward enough; a copy of argv[1] was being made in
command_fdt_internal, solely used for a comparison within the
handler-search, then promptly leaked.
Reported by: ports gcc and clang's static analyzer
While loader.conf(5) suggests that all values should be quoted, reality is
that this was never strictly enforced and it is used. We already make some
concession to this in number values, which aren't strictly quoted either.
The compromise here is that multi-word values must be quoted. This lets
things like `foo_load=YES` work, while denying more complex expressions on
the right hand side. This likely catches the vast majority of current usage.
A bit of a kludge is needed to accomplish this since Lua regex doesn't
support branching. I had considered splitting up expressions and generating
the right-hand side of the expressions completely in config.parse, but
deemed this too large of an overhaul to take given the current timing. This
should be re-worked shortly after the thaw.
Reported by: royger
lualoader was not respecting the 'xen_kernel' environment variable, which
hints to the interpreter that it should load a Xen kernel prior to loading
any other kernel that might be specified. If a Xen kernel is specified and
we fail to load it, we should not proceed to boot.
Reported by: royger
Tested by: royger
manu found in the noted PR that overlays seemed to be clobbering the kenv
and killing the boot. Further inspection revealed that one can `fdt ls` at
the loader prompt for a successful boot, but autoboot breaks it.
In the autoboot case, first setup of FDT is happening in the middle of
bi_load, which triggers loading of the DTBO from /boot.
This is bad, bad, bad. Files in the loader are loaded somewhere in the
middle of the address space one after another. bi_load starts building the
needed kernel bootinfo immediately after the highest-addr loaded file. File
loads in the middle of bi_load suddenly clobber bootinfo and everything goes
off the rails.
The solution to this is to use take advantage of arch_autoload to setup FDT
in efiloader compiled with LOADER_FDT_SUPPORT. This matches how it works in
ubldr land, and is how it should have worked when overlay support was added
to efiloader since fdt_setup_fdtp now has the potential to load files
(courtesy of fdt_platform_load_dtb).
PR: 230804
Discussed with: imp
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16858
As indicated by the comment, any fixups applied (which might include
overlays) can invalidate the previously located node by adding nodes or
setting/adding properties. The later fdt_setprop of fixup-applied property
would then fail because of the bad/wrong node offset.
This would have generally been harmless, but potentially caused multiple
applications of fixups and caused a little bit of bloat.
MFC after: 1 week
operation of "loader". The dramatic increase in size of
SPA_MAXBLOCKSIZE in r304321 causes the heap space to be exhausted,
so malloc() fails, ultimately leading to a memcpy() with a
destination of 0x0.
MFC after: 3 days
The current chain command does accept only device, allow also a file to be used,
such as /boot/pmbr or /boot/mbr (or stored third party MBR/VBR block).
Also fix file descriptor leak.
This includes some light rework to simplify the line parsing, as well. If
we hit a line match, we'll always either use the line and move on to the
next line, or we'll spew out malformed line errors.
We had multiple spots to output the error and set the status based on
whether we had a non-nil first capture group or failed EOL validation, but
it was always the same error. Light rework entails a small label jump to
skip error handling and elimination of 'found' local.
A couple of issues addressed:
1.) Modules with - in the name were not recognized as modules
2.) The module regex was repeated for each place a module name may appear
3.) The 'strip leading space' bits were repeated for each expression
4.) The trailing 'comment validation' stuff was repeated every expression
#4 still has some more work to be done. exec lines, for instance, don't
capture a 'value' -- there's only one capture pattern. This throws off the
'c' value that we match, so the trailing bits aren't *actually* being
validated. This isn't a new issue, though, so a future comit will address
this.
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
Now that a complete set is written, save for one describing loader.lua,
install all of them. This was not previously done as they were written to
hopefully avoid confusion as bits and pieces of the overall system were
undocumented.
Uncovered while writing the documentation from this, we previously
explicitly fell back to orb or orbbw if an invalid or incompatible logodef
was selected -- in contrast to branddefs, which have an exported variable
that one can whip up a quick local.lua to override in a safe manner that
works regardless of whether or not loader.conf(5) successfully loads.
These are less controversial than the others, thus done in a separate
commit. These are all used internally and ways to override are provided via
soon-to-be-documented API or loader.conf(5) variables.
Ideally, all of the functionality to revamp the loader screen has associated
APIs that are flexible enough that third-party scripts wouldn't need to
override these.
Turns out there was a hidden dependency we hasn't counted upon. The
host load /boot/userboot.so to boot the VMs it runs. This means that
the change to lua meant suddently that nobody could run their older
VMs because LUA wasn't in 10.0, last month's HardenedBSD, 11.2 or
whatever. Even more than for the /boot/loader* binaries, we need a
good coexistance strategy for this. While that's being designed and
implemented, drop back to always 4th for userboot.so. This will fail
safe in all but the most extreme environments (but lua-only hacks
to .lua files won't be processes in VMs until we fix it).
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16805
After years in the making, lualoader is ready to make its debut. Both
flavors of loader are still built by default, and may be installed as
/boot/loader or /boot/loader.efi as appropriate either by manually creating
hard links or using LOADER_DEFAULT_INTERP as documented in build(7).
Discussed with: imp
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16795
Compiling FreeBSD/i386 with modern GCC triggers warnings for various
places that convert 64-bit EFI_ADDRs to pointers and vice versa.
- Cast pointers to uintptr_t rather than to uint64_t when assigning
to a 64-bit integer.
- Cast 64-bit integers to uintptr_t before a cast to a pointer.
Reviewed by: kevans
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16586