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)
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
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
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
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)
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.
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
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().
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
Add poweroff command to make life a bit easier.
Reviewed by: imp, allanjude
Approved by: re (kib)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17535
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
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
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
Create loader_{4th,lua,simp}{,.efi}. All of these are installed by
default. Create LOADER_DEFAULT_INTERP to specify the default
interpreter when no other is specified. LOADER_INTERP is the current
interpreter language building. Turn building of lua on by default to
match 4th. simploader is a simplified loader build w/o any interpreter
language (but with a simple loader). This is the historic behavir you
got with WITHOUT_FORTH. Make a hard link to the default loader. This
has to be a hard link rather than the more desirable soft link because
older zfsboot blocks don't support symlinks.
RelNotes: Yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16705
efi-autoresizecons is currently executed for every boot. If it fails, we
risk failing the boot, and we really shouldn't do that unless we absolutely
must.
Not being able to locate GOP or UGA is not a significant enough failure to
kill the boot. We always have the option to fall back to resizing ConOut to
a higher text mode resolution (if available), so do that.
This was detected by Doug [1] while attempting a bhyve + UEFI + PXE boot.
This patch was effectively also submitted by Doug, but I expanded the
comment he had originally sent me a little bit to indicate why this is an OK
idea.
Reported by: Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.com> [1]
If there are no block devices, there is no need to printout
error (ENOENT).
In case of netboot, our image path has no block device, no need to make
noise about it.
Note when we've found a 8250 PNP node. Only try to set hw.uart.console
if we see one (otherwise ignore serial hints). The 8250 is the only
one known to have I/O ports, so limit the guessing to when we've
positively seen one. And limit this to x86 since that's the only
platform where we have I/O ports. Otherwise, we'd set the serial port
to something crazy for the platform and fall off the cliff early in
boot.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16463
Add some verbose debugging information to the loader's new
choices. I'll remove these / put them behind a DEBUG define at a later
time. This is to give additional information if there's any dangling
edge cases not contemplated by the code. r336789 had most of this
change, but had the wrong commit message. This refines it slightly.
nodes. These show up in default entries on SuperMicro motherboards and
elsewhere. Before, we couldn't find a block device associated with the
device path and return BAD_CHOICE which was an instant
failure. However, a VendHw node isn't specifc, so when we don't find a
media path, return NOT_SPECIFIC so that the rest of the algorithms
work.
Sponsored by: Netflix.
loading.
If we are booting in a conforming UEFI Boot Manager Environment, then
use the BootCurrent variable to find the BootXXXX we're using. Once we
find that, then if it contains more than one EFI_DEVICE_PATH in its
what to boot section, try to use the last one as the kernel to
load. This will also set the default root partition as well. If
there's only one path, or if there's an error along the way, assume
that nothing specific was specified and revert to the old
algorithm. If something was specified, but not found, then fail the
boot. Otherwise you that, specific thing. On FreeBSD, this can be set
using efibootmgr -l <loader> -k <kernel>. We try a few variations of
kernel to cope with the fact that UEFI comes from a DOS world where
paths might be upper case and/or contain back-slashes.
Note: In an ideal world, we'd work out where we are in chain loading
by looking at the passed-in image handle and doing name
matching. However, that's unreliable since at least boot1.efi booted
images don't have that, hence the assumption that loader.efi needs to
load the last thing on the list, if possible.
The reason we fail for something specific is so that we can fully
participate in the UEFI Boot Manager Protocol and fail over to the
next item in the list of BootOrder choices when something goes wrong
at this stage.
This implements was was talked about in freebsd-arch@ last year
https://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/getmsg.cgi?fetch=3576+0+archive/2017/freebsd-arch/20171022.freebsd-arch
and documented in full (after changed resulting from the discussion) in
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aK9IqF-60JPEbUeSAUAkYjF2W_8EnmczFs6RqCT90Jg/edit#
although one or two minor details may have been modified in this
implementation to make it work, and the ZFS MEDIA PATH extension isn't
implemented. This does not yet move things to ESP:\efi\freebsd\loader.efi.
RelNotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16403
Lookup a block device by it's device path. We use a 'loose' lookup
whereby we scan forward to the first Media Path portion of the device
path, then look at all our handles for one whose first Media Path
matches. This will also work if the device path pointed to has a
following file path (or paths) as that's ignored. It assumes that
there's only one media path node that describes the entire device,
which is true as of the latest UEFI spec (2.7 Errata A) as far as I've
been able to determine.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Returns true if the first node pointed to by devpath1 is identical to
the first node pointed to by devpath2, with care taken to not read
past the end of the valid parts of either devpath1 or
devpath2. Otherwise, returns false.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Takes a generic device path as its input. Scans through it to find the
first media_path node in it and returns a pointer to it. If none is
found, NULL is returned.
Sponsored by: Netflix
line args. I had thought console would be NULL, but it's efi. Set it
to efi (as a clue) before we initialize the console, then test it to
see if it changed on the command line to do the automatic
override. This gets my serial console back.
Setting rootdev in the enviornment should specify things
completely. If it is set, then have it override everything else.
PR: 229770
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16322
up serial output. Setting the cursor position after every character is
inefficient, and causes all lines to be over-printed in the serial
console for the boot loader. Allow the terminal to do the emulation.
This isn't completely perfect when the size of the terminal attached
to the serial port isn't the same as 80x25 to match the viedoe console
(or whatever the video console is). While imperfect still, these
changes make it much better.
This makes the serial port useful with UEFI.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16309
o Fix the parsing of the device path. a last minute change terminated
it too soon.
o Kill setting LINES. We don't need to do it, and even if we did hard
coding it to 24 is wrong.
o Now that the console is working again for the loader, adjust the
printfs to be more in line with other platforms.
note that r336270's commit message was slightly incorrect. It changed
the default setting of the console to honor the ConOut
variable. Overrides via the command line are still possible, and we
use the devices in ConOut to set the proper console. If, for example,
serial cosnole is specified, we'll set console to "efi" if ConOut has
a serial port list and to either "efi comconsole" or "comconsole efi"
if not depending on whether -D or -D -h was specified.
RelNotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Netflix
For server machines, ComOut is set to the set of devices that the efi
console suppots. Parse it to see if we have serial, video or both.
Make that take precidence over the command line args. boot1.efi parses
them, but loader.efi doesn't. It's not clear where to read boot.conf
from, so we don't do that. The command line args can still be set via
efibootmgr, which is more inline with the UEFI boot manager to replace
that. These args are typically used only to set serial vs video and
the com speed line. We can infer that from ComOut, so do so.
Remember the com speed and hw.uart.console to match.
RelNotes: yes
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15917
This moves the bulk of the geli support from lib386/biosdisk.c into a new
geli/gelidev.c which implements a devsw-type device whose dv_strategy()
function handles geli decryption. Support for all arches comes from moving
the taste-and-attach code to the devopen() function in libsa.
After opening any DEVT_DISK device, devopen() calls the new function
geli_probe_and_attach(), which will "attach" the geli code to the open_file
struct by creating a geli_devdesc instance to replace the disk_devdesc
instance in the open_file. That routes all IO for the device through the
geli code.
A new public geli_add_key() function is added, to allow arch/vendor-specific
code to add keys obtained from custom hardware or other sources.
With these changes, geli support will be compiled into all variations of
loader(8) on all arches because the default is WITH_LOADER_GELI.
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Microchip Technology Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15743
Eliminate 4 of the copies of the arg parsing in /boot/laoder
by using boot_parse_cmdline.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16205
Move the libzfs stuff into libsa. There's no need for it to be a
separate library. The separate library adds to the issues of build
ordering that we see from time to time. Move the filesystem support
into libsa, like all the other filesystem support rather than making
zfs the odd-duck out.
Discussed with: allanjude@
While in base we use it as a boolean (of the wrong spelling), there's
at least one out of tree user that needs it to be int since priorirty
is a small int, not a 0/1. In deference to the time it's wasted me and
my team, push this up into FreeBSD for whatever short life boot1 may
have in the tree.
table if we're just going to ignore it on arm, so expand, slightly,
the reach of the ifdef. Move the buffer to the inner block so we
don't have a separate #ifdef far away from these lines.
The issue on arm is that smbios_detect does unaligned accesses, which
in the u-boot implementing EFI context causes a crash.
is. We tell the ZFS code now, and it checks rather than having a
callback to do the checks.
This will allow us to have a more graceful fallback code. In the
future, it's anticipated that we may fallback to a more global search
(or implement a command to do so) when reqeusted by the user, or we
detect a violation of the UEFI Boot Manager protocol severe enough to
warrant this backstop. For now, it just allows us to get rid of img as
a global.
Sponsored by: Netflix
e.g. boot_mute, boot_single, boot_verbose, and friends; we checked for these
in multiple places, consolidate into common/ and allow a setting of "NO" for
any of these to turn them off. This allows systems with multiple
loader.conf(5) or loader.conf(5) overlay systems to easily turn off
variables in later processed files by setting it to NO.
Reported by: Nick Wolff @ iXsystems
Reviewed by: imp
If the check for a UFS partition at offset 0 on the disk fails, check
to see if there's a BSD disklabel at block 1 (standard) or at offset
512 (install images assume 512 sector size). If found, probe for UFS
on the 'a' partition.
This fixes UEFI booting images from a BSD labeled MBR slice when the
'a' partiton isn't at offset 0. This is a stop-gap fix since we plan
on removing boot1.efi in FreeBSD 12. We can't easily do that for 11.2,
however, hence the short MFC window.
Tested by: emaste@
MFC After: 3 days
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15598
- We should be setting a known graphics mode on conout, but we aren't.
- We shouldn't be setting gop mode if we didn't find a good resolution to
set, but we were. This made efi_max_resolution=1x1 effectively worthless,
since it would always set gop mode 0 if nothing else.
Harry Schmalzbauer reports that some firmware, in his experience, trips
over the ESP we install due to the volume label. It has been theorized that
this is due to some confusion with the label and the path on the ESP to
boot1.efi.
Regardless, Harry found that renaming the label seems to fix it.
PR: 214282
MFC after: 3 days
Refactor the currdev setting to find the device we booted from. Limit
searching when we don't already have a reasonable currdev from that to
the same device only. Search a little harder for ZFS volumes as that's
needed for loader.efi to live on an ESP.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13784
If the network interface or the uefi implementation do not support the
ReceiveFilter interface do not return only and just print a message.
U-Boot doesn't support is and likely never will. Also even if this fails
it doesn't mean that network in EFI isn't supported.
UGA does not have the same kind of mode enumeration that GOP does. Implement
it instead as a call to text_autoresize so that firmwares with only UGA
present still get some kind of autoresizing behavior.
While here, rename a typo'd "gop" to "uga", although it will remain unused
for the time being.
Not all systems use efifb; pull hw.vga.textmode and choose a good console
mode instead if it's set to something non-zero. This is basically a revival
of the code that used to live in boot1, but instead rebased onto this
different way of doing mode selection in loader.efi.
Interestingly enough, the regression that was previously introduced where
GOP would not reflect the console setting does not seem to exist when
console mode selection is done here. I've not done any investigation as to
why this is the case. Nevertheless, boot1.efi is still not the best place to
do mode selection.
Default the max resolution to 1080p, we'll accept Width x Height
specifications along with the following presets:
- 480p
- 720p
- 1080p
- 2160p or 4k
- 5k
PR: 224825
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14801
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
This fixes a problem encountered on the Lenovo Thinkpad X220/Yoga 11e where
runtime services would try to inexplicably jump to other parts of memory
where it shouldn't be when attempting to enumerate EFI vars, causing a
panic.
The virtual mapping is enabled by default and can be disabled by setting
efi_disable_vmap in loader.conf(5).
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14677
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by
little statesmen and philosophers and divines. With consistency a
great soul has simply nothing to do. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
The current system is fragile and requires very careful layout of all
*_devdesc structures. It also makes it hard to change the base
devdesc. Take a page from CAM and put the 'header' in all the derived
classes and adjust the code to match.
For OFW, move the iHandle h_handle out of a slot conflicting with
d_opendata. Due to quirks in the alignment rules, this worked.
However changing the code to use d_opendata storage now that it's a
pointer is hard, so just have a separate field for it.
All other cleanups were to make the *_devdesc structures match where
they'd taken some liberties that were none-the-less compatible enough
to work.
open_disk uses d_opendata for it's own purpse. We can't store blkio
there. Fortunately, blkio is stored elsewhere and we never actually
retrieve blkio from d_opendata. Eliminate it as a source of confusion.
Eliminate all stores of d_opendata in efi since this layer doesn't own
that field.
One does not simply convert to SUBDIR.yes in stand without making everything
else in the affected files SUBDIR.yes -- there are better ways to do this.
Use SUBDIR.${MK_*} where appropriate. r330248 eliminated most of the
offenders, sweep the rest under the rug.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14545
For directories that don't many anything, add NO_OBJ=t just before we
include bsd.init.mk. This prevents them from creating an OBJ
directory. In addition, prevent defs.mk from creating the machine
related links in these cases. They aren't needed and break, at least
on stable, the read-only src tree build.
There's no reason to have multiple copies of lszfs and
reloadbe. Consolidate them into one location. Also ldi_get_size is the
same everywhere (except sparc64). Make it the same everywhere as the
common definition is more general and will work on spar64.
This solve problem when booting with efi on armv7
Reviewed by: imp, tsoome
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14415
Scan only the BLOCK IO MEDIA once instead of each time for each type of
device (fd, cd and hdd).
Leave the mechanism to free and reprobe all devices if one day we want
to implement a "dev rescan" thing.
Reviewed by: imp, tsoome
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14334
preference to LIBFICL{,32}. LIBFICL{,32} are now always defined, but
LDR_INTERP{,32} is defined empty when building w/o forth (aka the
simple interpreter) and defined to LIBFICL{,32} when we are building
forth.
loader scripts. However, that path won't be taken after all it
seems. Remove this code before it decays into uselessness. Also remove
build dependencies on forth no longer needed.
MK_CTF, MK_SSP, MK_PROFILE, NO_PIC, and INTERNALLIB are always the
same, so set them in defs.mk. MAN= is common, so set it here too.
This removes a lot of boring repetition from the Makefiles that added
almost no value.
This should have been done as part of r327350, but due to lack of foresight
it came later. In the different places we apply overlays, we duplicate the
bits that check for fdt_overlays in the environment and supplement that with
any other places we need to check for overlays to load. These "other places"
will be loader specific and are not candidates for consolidation.
Provide an fdt_load_dtb_overlays to capture the common logic, allow passing
in an additional list of overlays to be loaded. This additional list of
overlays is used in practice for ubldr to pull in any fdt_overlays passed to
it from U-Boot environment, but it can be used for any other source of
overlays.
These additional overlays supplement loader.conf(5) fdt_overlays, rather
than replace, so that we're not restricted to specifying overlays in only
one place. This is a change from previous behavior where loader.conf(5)
supplied fdt_overlays would cause us to ignore U-Boot environment, and this
seems nonsensical- user should have sufficient control over both of these
aspects, or lack of control for good reasons.
A knob could be considered in the future to ignore U-Boot supplied overlays,
but the supplemental treatment seems like a good start.
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), gonzo (earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13993
These were found during bring-up on a new arm64 platform and in an
amd64 VM.
Submitted by: Arshan Khanifar <arshankhanifar_gmail.com>
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14036
When building loader bits, lld fails with the following error:
"ld: error: section: .dynamic is not contiguous with other relro sections"
on both ubldr and EFI loader.
Move .dynamic up to make ld.lld happy, adjust .got as necessary for ubldr.
Tested on: OrangePi One (ld.lld, ubldr)
Tested on: Banana Pi-M3 (ld.lld, ubldr)
Tested on: qemu-armv7 (ld.lld, EFI)
Tested on: qemu-armv7 (ld.bfd, EFI)
Tested on: Raspberry Pi 2 (ld.bfd, ubldr) [manu]
Tested on: Banana Pi-M2 (ld.bfd, ubldr) [manu]
Reviewed by: andrew, emaste, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13942
is NULL. That's more correct and doesn't depend on the error behavior
of utf8_to_ucs2. In practice, we'll never see this though since we
pass utf8_to_ucs2 a well formed string.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13918
and utf8_to_ucs2, be sure to NULL out the return pointer too, rather
than return a pointer to free memory.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13917
utf8_to_ucs2 in boot1.efi. We need to initialise the ucs2 output string
so it will allocate space, and use the return value to determine if the
call was successful.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13915
Use simple "foo" rather than "${.CURDIR}/foo" to include Makefile.fat
since the former works when including this Makefile from else
where. Also, use full path from ${BOOTSRC} to the FAT templates for
similar reasons. It doesn't change anything in base FreeBSD, but
allows us to have a custom boot1.efi more easily (though that will be
short-lived for us, it may also be helpful for others).
Sponsored by: Netflix
Overlays were previously not applied when U-Boot provides FDT or EFI
provides FDT, only when we load FDT from /boot/dtb given name from U-Boot.
Make all three paths lead to loading fdt_overlays and applying them, so that
fdt_overlays can be expected to Just Work.
Reviewed by: gonzo, imp, manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13664
This patch allows to scan all display modes in boot1 as loader does.
Before system tried to select optimal display mode by sequential scan of
modes and if error then stop scanning. This way is not good, because
if mode N is not present, mode N+1 may exist.
In loader we use conout->Mode->MaxMode to identify maximum number of modes.
This commit is to use same way in boot1 as in loader.
Reported by: Andrey Pustovetov <andrey.pustovetov@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: tsoome
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13541
removing this argument, and expanding when rc is NULL. This
effectively completes the back out of custom scripts for tftp booted
loaders from r269153 that was started in r292344 with the new path
tricks that obsoleted it.
Submitted by: Netflix
HELP_FILES is a loader only thing, so move it to loader.mk. Only
generate the help file if HELP_FILES is defined. Adjust Makefiles to
new convention. Fix a few cases where ${.CURDIR}/ was missing
resulting in missing bits from the help files.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Use _STANDALONE for guard expression in efichar.[ch] and add efi_char typedef.
clean up boot1.c, and replace for loop in efipart.c with ucs2len().
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13488
Don't print when we can't find a file. Copy it instead to the error
buffer. Higher level routines determine if it's appropriate to print
the error message.
Also, remove dead code (labeled bogusly lost functionality) since we
never used that functionality. Remove unused arg from interact() too.
Sponsored by: Netflix
latter aren't used. Prefer sys/link_elf.h to link.h so we're only
dependent on the kernel tree. The default installation of link.h just
includes this file, and any benefit from that is outweighed by the
hassle it causes. This reduces the footprint of files needed from the
system includes (or sysroot in buildworld).
Sponsored by: Netflix
Remove the now-useless dependency on ufsread.c. In some cases, it was
on the wrong file. But in all cases, we now automatically generate
.depend files, so we don't need it explicitly.
Sponsored by: Netflix
iPXE does insert stub BLOCK IO protocol handle to rework other issues,
this handle is not usable as it does not provide actual implementation.
We can detect this situation by checking and validating the BlockSize
property, so this update does make sure we have BlockSize at least 512B
and its value is power of 2.
PR: 223969
Reported by: Jeff Pieper
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13297
Rework the block device handle check to allow more robust device
classification. This is mostly usability issue - it can be quite confusing
for user when no disks are listed with lsdev.
Add more comments about what and why is done.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13026
simd / no float stuff is centeralized here. Also centralise
-ffreestanding since it is specified everywhere.
This, along with a change to share/mk/bsd.cpu.mk to include -mno-avx2
in CFLAGS_NO_SIMD should fix building for newer machines (eg with
CPUTYPE=haswell) where clang was generating avx2 instructions.
Sponsored by: Netflix