a1def3d1ff
Add code to decode the BootCurrent and BootXXXX variable it points at to deduce the ESP used to boot the system. By default, it prints the path to that device. With --unix-path (-p) it will instead print the current mount point for the ESP, if any (or an error). With --device-path (-d) it wil print the UEFI device path for the ESP. Note: This is the best guess based on the UEFI variables. If the ESP is part of a gmirror, etc, that won't be reported. If by some weird chance there was a complicated series of chain boots, this may not be what you want. For setups that don't add layers on top of the raw devices, it is accurate. Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22432 |
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.. | ||
efibootmgr.8 | ||
efibootmgr.c | ||
Makefile |