Some systems may provide multiple GOP instances and not all are
bound to hardware. The current loader is picking up the first GOP,
which may not be usable. Instead we load the GOP handle array,
and test every handle to have registered ConOut protocol. If ConOut is
present, we can use this GOP handle to open GOP protocol.
We do select font based on desired terminal size, we do query
UEFI terminal size with conout->QueryMode(), but by mistake, the fallback
values are used.
Pass gfx_state to efi_find_framebuffer(), so we can pick between
GOP and UGA in efi_find_framebuffer(), also we can then
set up struct gen_fb in gfx_state from efifb and isolate efi fb data
processing into framebuffer.c.
This change does allow us to clean up efi_cons_init() and reduce
BS->LocateProtocol() calls.
A little downside is that we now need to translate gen_fb back to
efifb in bootinfo.c (for passing to kernel), and we need to add few
-I options to CFLAGS.
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
buildworld already runs the stand build in parallel[1], so make it easier to
identify ordering issues by properly establishing dependencies or adding
.WAIT where needed.
Everything in stand/ relies on libsa, either directly or indirectly, because
libsa build is where the stand headers get installed and it gets linked in
most places.
Interpreters depend on their libs, machine dirs usually depend on top-level
libs that are getting built and at least one of the interpreter flavors.
For i386, order btx/libi386/libfirewire before everything else using a
big-ol-.WAIT hammer. btx is the most common dependency, but the others are
used sporadically. This seems to be where the race reporting on the mailing
list is- AFAICT, the following sequence is happening:
1.) One of the loaders gets built based on stale btx/btxldr
2.) btx/btxldr gets rebuilt
3.) installworld triggers loader rebuild because btx was rebuilt after
This seems like the most plausible explanation, as they've verified system
time and timestamps.
While we're here, let's switch stand/ over to a completely parallel build so
we can work out these kinds of issues in isolation rather than in the middle
of a larger build.
Reviewed by: bdragon, sjg, tsoome
Tested by: bdragon (-j1024, no failures, significant speed improvement)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23411
Without this we risk having the .interp section be placed earlier in the
file and mess with section offsets; in particular it has been seen to be
placed at the start of the file and cause the PE/COFF header to not be
at address 0. This is the same fix as was done for arm64 in r365578.
Reviewed by: mhorne, imp
Approved by: mhorne, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27603
i386 and the rest of supported architectures by defining KERNLOAD in the
vmparam.h and getting rid of magic constant in the linker script, which albeit
documented via comment but isn't programmatically accessible at a compile time.
Use KERNLOAD to eliminate another (matching) magic constant 100 lines down
inside unremarkable TU "copy.c" 3 levels deep in the EFI loader tree.
Reviewed by: markj
Approved by: markj
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27355
In some environments is difficult to access bootp/dhcp
configuration as "standard user". Add a command that allows to set
or display the URI of the network server used as "net:" device.
Currently only tftp and nfs protocols are supported.
Typical usage pattern is:
netserver tftp://192.168.168.1/path_to_obj_dir/arm.armv7/sys/GENERIC/
boot net:kernel
Reviewed by: imp, kevans
MFC after: 4 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26736
On startup the arm64 efi loaders need to know PC-relative addresses.
Previously we used the adr instruction to find this address, however this
instruction is limited to +/- 1MiB.
Switch to adrp to find the 4k page the address is within and an add to
set the bottom 12 bits. This lets us address +/- 4GiB which should be
large enough for now.
Reported by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Add support to the _STANDALONE environment enough bits of the kernel
that we can compile it. We still have a small zstd_shim.c since there
were 3 items that were a bit hard to nail down and may be cleaned up
in the future. These go hand in hand with a number of commits to
sys/sys in the past weeks, should this need be MFCd.
Discussed with: mmacy (in review and on IRC/Slack)
Reviewed by: freqlabs (on openzfs repo)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26218
This was causing build failures in CheriBSD where we were passing -pie
already by default.
Reviewed By: andrew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24787
The video on PCI heuristic was broken. It was supposed to infer a
video device when the last element of the path was a PCI DEVICE PATH
node. However, the last node in the device path is an END node, so
this heuristic never fired.
This leads, among other things, to bhyve only producing output in the
serial connection once we leave the boot loader. This restores the
dual headed boot on bhyve + UEFI (as we did in 11.2), but will favor
serial in the absence of other config which may be a change from 11.2.
MFC After: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26572
During devswitch probe, we pick boot pool based on boot disk, if the boot
disk happens to have multiple pools in freebsd-zfs partitions, the current
code does pick last pool from boot disk as boot pool. While there is no
way at that stage to test, the more logical approach would be to pick
first matching pool.
This patch is assuming we do pass pool guid pointer with guid value 0,
this will help us to determine, if the guid value is already set or not.
The general suggestion would be not to share disk between different pools.
Reported by: Alexander Leidinger
bootonce feature is temporary, one time boot, activated by
"bectl activate -t BE", "bectl activate -T BE" will reset the bootonce flag.
By default, the bootonce setting is reset on attempt to boot and the next
boot will use previously active BE.
By setting zfs_bootonce_activate="YES" in rc.conf, the bootonce BE will
be set permanently active.
bootonce dataset name is recorded in boot pool labels, bootenv area.
in case of nextboot, the nextboot_enable boolean variable is recorded in
freebsd:nvstore nvlist, also stored in boot pool label bootenv area.
On boot, the loader will process /boot/nextboot.conf if nextboot_enable
is "YES", and will set nextboot_enable to "NO", preventing /boot/nextboot.conf
processing on next boot.
bootonce and nextboot features are usable in both UEFI and BIOS boot.
To use bootonce/nextboot features, the boot loader needs to be updated on disk;
if loader.efi is stored on ESP, then ESP needs to be updated and
for BIOS boot, stage2 (zfsboot or gptzfsboot) needs to be updated
(gpart or other tools).
At this time, only lua loader is updated.
Sponsored by: Netflix, Klara Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25512
This would allow interested parties to do experimental runs with an
environment set appropriately to raise all the warnings throughout the
build; e.g. env WARNS=6 NO_WERROR=yes buildworld.
Not currently touching the numerous instances in ^/tools.
MFC after: 1 week
When building the loader an unneeded .interp section may be added. Move
this to the unused section region so offsets of used sections don't
change.
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
A bug in the EFI HTTP driver of TianoCore EDK2 causes memory
corruption when an http instance that uses tls is reconfigured,
leading to a crash.
Work around this by forcing a new http instance for each request
instead of reconfiguring the existing one.
The upstream bug report is https://bugzilla.tianocore.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1917
Submitted by: bcran
Reviewed By: imp, kevans, tsoome
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21281
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
On RISC-V, Clang warns with:
cast to smaller integer type 'unsigned int' from 'void (*)(void *)'
Instead, use %p as the standard format specifier for printing pointers.
Whilst Arm's pointer size is the same as unsigned, it's still cleaner to
use the right thing there too.
Reviewed by: brooks (mentor), emaste
Approved by: brooks (mentor), emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25718
This implementation doesn't have any major deviations from the other EFI
ports. I've copied the boilerplate from arm and arm64.
I've tested this with the following boot flows:
OpenSBI (M-mode) -> u-boot (S-mode) -> loader.efi -> FreeBSD
OpenSBI (M-mode) -> u-boot (S-mode) -> boot1.efi -> loader.efi -> FreeBSD
Due to the way that u-boot handles secondary CPUs, OpenSBI >= v0.7 is required,
as the HSM extension is needed to bring them up explicitly. Because of this,
using BBL as the SBI implementation will not be possible. Additionally, there
are a few recent u-boot changes that are required as well, all of which will be
present in the upcoming v2020.07 release.
Looks good: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25135
The zfs reader development did reach to the point where linking boot1,
we will get errors about duplicate symbols Malloc, Free, Calloc.
We can just use libsa version, just as loader.efi does. The only concern is,
libsa zalloc is using fixed size heap region, I did pick 64MB as other
stage instances are using, but this size is likely not optimal. In any case,
with limited memory setups, we should boot loader.efi directly.
Sponsored by: Netflix, Klara Inc.
These are picked out by the amd64-gcc6 build; time() is declared in <time.h>
and delay() is declared in <bootstrap.h>. These are the correct places for
these in stand/, so remove the duplicate declarations and make sure the
delay() consumer in libefi that depended on the extra delay() declaration
includes <bootstrap.h>.
MFC after: 1 week
We should have nextboot feature implemented in libsa zfs code.
To get there, I have created zfs_nextboot() implementation based on
two sources, our current simple textual string based approach with added
structured boot label PAD structure from OpenZFS.
Secondly, all nvlist details are moved to separate source file and
restructured a bit. This is done to provide base support to add nvlist
add/update feature in followup updates.
And finally, the zfsboot/gptzfsboot disk access functions are swapped to use
libi386 and libsa.
Sponsored by: Netflix, Klara Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25324
On some UEFI implementations the ConsOut EFI variable is not a device
path end type so we never move to the next node. Fix this by always
incrementing the device path node pointer, with a sanity check that
the node length is large enough so no two nodes overlap.
While here return failure on malloc failure rather than a NULL pointer
dereference.
Reviewed by: tsoome, imp (previous version)
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25202
The u-boot EFI implementation of the ReadBlocks and WriteBlocks methods
requires that the provided buffer meet the IO alignment requirements of
the underlying disk. Unlike loader.efi, gptboot.efi doesn't check this
requirement, and therefore fails to perform a successful read. Adjust
secbuf's alignment to 4K in hopes that we will always meet this
requirement.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25111
Assume gcc is at least 6.4, the oldest xtoolchain in the ports tree.
Assume clang is at least 6, which was in 11.2-RELEASE. Drop conditions
for older compilers.
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), emaste, jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24802
We need to ensure the buffers are aligned before passing them to ReadBlocks.
Assume 512 bytes is enough for now.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
These mappings are never visible to userspace as they get replaced when
the amd64 pmap is bootstrapped, but there is no need to set PG_U in the
first place.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24547
The efi console init is avoided since conin setup was moved to probe.
In case the console is re-initialized, we need to pick up colors
from environment.
we have crc32(const void *, size_t) in libsa. Unfortunately zlib has
crc32(long, const unigned char *, unsigned) and we have conflict.
Since we do build libsa with zlib, we can use zlib version instead.
Reviewed by: allanjude
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24068
The vectx API, computes the hash for verifying a file as it is read.
This avoids the overhead of reading files twice - once to verify, then
again to load.
For doing an install via loader, avoiding the need to rewind
large files is critical.
This API is only used for modules, kernel and mdimage as these are the
biggest files read by the loader.
The reduction in boot time depends on how expensive the I/O is
on any given platform. On a fast VM we see 6% improvement.
For install via loader the first file to be verified is likely to be the
kernel, so some of the prep work (finding manifest etc) done by
verify_file() needs to be factored so it can be reused for
vectx_open().
For missing or unrecognized fingerprint entries, we fail
in vectx_open() unless verifying is disabled.
Otherwise fingerprint check happens in vectx_close() and
since this API is only used for files which must be verified
(VE_MUST) we panic if we get an incorrect hash.
Reviewed by: imp,tsoome
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org//D23827