Effectively disabling the mode changing bits in the loader. No matter which
way we go with it, it seems to be wrong- either the firmware doesn't change
the resolution and reports the resolution we requested, or the firmware
changes the resolution and doesn't report the resolution we requested. It
some cases, it does the right thing, but the bad cases outweight those.
Interested individuals can still set efi_max_resolution to 1080p or whatnot
in loader.conf(5) to restore the new behavior, but the new behavior does not
work out well for many cases.
Discussed with: imp
This commit splits all of the logodefs/graphics out into their own own files
and provides a method for these files to register their logodefs with the
drawer. Graphics are now loaded on demand if they don't exist in the current
set of logodefs.
The drawer module becomes a little easier to navigate through without all of
the graphics mixed in. It's also easy to do one-off graphics like the
9.2 Die Hard tribute by dteske@ without adding even more to our memory
requirements.
- No need for a 'goto' when our entire loop body is then wrapped in a
conditional.
- No need to leave commented out prints laying around
- If an expression is clearly going to be either nil or an expression that
isn't likely to be a boolean, we might as well use `or` to specify a
default value for the expression. e.g. `loader.getenv(...) or "no"`
The previous iteration of this assumed that {module}_load was set. In the
old world order of default loader.conf(5), this was probably a safe
assumption given that we had almost every module explicitly not-loaded in
it.
In the new world order, this is no longer the case, so one could delete a
_load line inadvertently while leaving a _name, _type, _flags, _before,
_after, or _error. This would have caused a confusing Lua error and borked
module loading.
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.
hrs@ and kuriyama@ have found that on some HP BIOS, a system will fail to
boot immediately after installation with the claim that it can't work out
which disk they are booting from.
They tracked it down to a buffer overrun, and found that it could be
alleviated by doing a dummy read before-hand.
Submitted by: kuriyama
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14341
zfsloader(8) fails to probe a slice containing ZFS pool if its second sector
contains traces of BSD label (DISKMAGIC == 0x82564557).
Fix manual page to show working example erasing such traces.
PR: 226714
Approved by: avg (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
It was previously only printed, but we do actually want to raise it as a
full blown error so that things don't look OK when they've actually gone
wrong.
The second parameter to error, level, is set to 2 here so that the error
message reflects the position of the try_include caller, rather than the
try_include itself. Example:
LUA ERROR: /boot/lua/loader.lua:46: /boot/lua/local.lua:1: attempt to call a
nil value (global 'cxcint').
This provides a way to optionally include a module without having to wrap it
in filesystem checks. try_include is a little more robust, using the lua
search path instead of forcing us to explicitly consider all of the places
we could want to include a module. Errors are still generally raised from
trying to load the module, but ENOENT will not get raised unless we're doing
a verbose load.
This will also be used to split out logo/brand graphics into their own files
so that we can safely scale up the number of graphics included without
worrying about the extra memory consumption- opting to lazily load graphics
instead.
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14658
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.
This pertains exclusively to the set/restore functionality that we offer,
where any changes made by loader.conf previously will be effectively removed
upon reload of the configuration. We don't currently have a need to export
these, so don't bother.
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
I thought I tested this scenario, but clearly I failed to. =(
BIOS boots won't have efi-autoresizecons, so trying to use it as a forth
word fails during include. Use evaluate on "efi-autoresizecons" as a string
instead to move any potential errors to runtime- safely after we've already
checked that we're booting UEFI.
Pointy hat to: me
Reported by: cy
r331321 delegated autoresizing to an efi-autoresizecons command that
currently is expected to be done in forth/lua prior to drawing anything
useful.
Add the Forth version of the lua addition in r331321, hook efi.4th up to be
installed.
efiboot? was written by dteske@; anything outside of that may be blamed on
me.
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
In the original lualoader project, 'escapef' and 'escapeb' were chosen for
'escape fg' and 'escape bg'. We've carried on this naming convention, and as
our use of attributes grow the likeliness of 'escapeb'/'resetb' being
confused upon glance for 'escape bold'/'reset bold' increases.
Fix this by renaming these four functions to {escape,reset}{fg,bg} rather
than {escape,reset}{f,b} for clarity.
Reported by: dteske
See: comments in the hook module about intended usage, as well as the
introduced use for config.reloaded.
Use the newly introduced hook module to define a "config.reloaded" hook.
This is currently used to register core's clearKernelCache as a reload hook
to avoid a circular dependency and fix this functionality- it didn't
actually work out, and it isn't immediately obvious how it slipped into src.
Other hook types will be introduced into the core lualoader as useful hook
points are identified.
Previously, we sent a CSI 0m sequence to reset attributes, which also reset
the color scheme if the terminal defaults didn't match what we're expecting.
Go all-in and reset the color scheme, too, just in case.
Reported by: emaste
The former is fairly vague; these are FDT overlays to be applied to the
running system, so /boot/dtb is a sensible location to put it without
cluttering up /boot/dtb even further if desired.
The console may have been set for different colors before lualoader kicks
in; notably, a black-on-white color scheme is not necessarily what we're
expecting.
While here, make color.default() a composition of color.escape() instead of
rewriting the escape sequence to make it more obvious what it's achieving: a
white-on-black color scheme with no attributes set.
Reported by: emaste, whose eyes may rest easily
Followup to r313780. Also prefix ext2's and nandfs's versions with
EXT2_ and NANDFS_.
Reported by: kib
Reviewed by: kib, mckusick
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9623
lualoader in itself only uses another ~200K, but there seems to be no reason
not to bump it a little higher to give us some more wiggle room.
With this, I can boot using a menu-enabled lualoader, no problem and
reasonably fast. Some heap usage datapoints from the review:
forthloader, no menus, kernel loaded:
heap base at 0x1203d5b0, top at 0x1208e000, used 330320
lualoader, no menus, kernel loaded:
heap base at 0x42050028, top at 0x420ab000, used 372696
lualoader, menus, kernel loaded:
heap base at 0x42050028, top at 0x420d5000, used 544728
Since then, the no menu case for lualoader should have decreased slightly as
I've made some changes to make sure that it no longer loads any of th emenu
bits with beastie disabled.
While here, split heap size out into a HEAP_SIZE macro.
Reviewed by: ian, imp
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14471
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