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Date:      Fri, 1 May 2020 10:57:22 -0600
From:      Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com>
To:        Daniel Braniss <danny@cs.huji.ac.il>
Cc:        =?UTF-8?Q?Trond_Endrest=C3=B8l?= <trond.endrestol@ximalas.info>,  "freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org" <hackers@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: efi boot question
Message-ID:  <CANCZdfrezF=xgiLkX370ehgQK7EJ72D=ih%2Bhs1rL3AeFSyxG6A@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <C7EE759A-40FC-41D4-B363-FFDB645632AC@cs.huji.ac.il>
References:  <8B798F61-783C-4A1C-AEED-4B42E88E5010@cs.huji.ac.il> <alpine.BSF.2.22.395.2005011028470.91211@enterprise.ximalas.info> <9FAAF98B-77D1-4D39-8E8E-D20F2B4C2E5C@cs.huji.ac.il> <CANCZdfr%2BXM0wF7MyzP5o%2BOSjNvCwrLgq0EjDusGe2%2BTFqdhUpQ@mail.gmail.com> <C7EE759A-40FC-41D4-B363-FFDB645632AC@cs.huji.ac.il>

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On Fri, May 1, 2020 at 10:45 AM Daniel Braniss <danny@cs.huji.ac.il> wrote:

>
>
> On 1 May 2020, at 18:34, Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> On Fri, May 1, 2020 at 3:54 AM Daniel Braniss <danny@cs.huji.ac.il> wrote=
:
>
>>
>>
>> > On 1 May 2020, at 11:42, Trond Endrest=C3=B8l <trond.endrestol@ximalas=
.info>
>> wrote:
>> >
>> > On Fri, 1 May 2020 11:16+0300, Daniel Braniss wrote:
>> >
>> >> hi,
>> >> I have none efi boot that:
>> >>      - the bios is set to do network boot/pxe
>> >>      - if the dhcpd.conf is configured with filename set to pxeboot,
>> it loads as diskless,
>> >>        or if set to =E2=80=9Cpmbr=E2=80=9D then goes and boots off th=
e hard disk.
>> >>      (this is faster than changing the bios boot order)
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> so now i'm experimenting with efi boot,
>> >> the GPT is:
>> >>
>> >> =3D>         40      5857345456  mfid0  GPT  (2.7T)
>> >>              40      409600                1  efi (200M)
>> >>      409640     8388608               2  freebsd-ufs  ( 4.0G)
>> >>    8798248   100663296             3  freebsd-swap  (48G)
>> >> 109461544  5747883952            4  freebsd-zfs     (2.7T)
>> >>
>> >> but am at loss figuring out what boot file to download.
>> >> any insight is appreciated,
>> >
>> > You can try this:
>> >
>> > gpart bootcode -p /boot/boot1.efifat -i 1 mfid0
>> >
>> > This will populate /dev/mdid0p1 with a FAT filesystem containing
>> > /boot/boot1.efi, saved as efi/boot/BOOTx64.efi. You may later replace
>> > the latter file with /boot/loader.efi. You will also find
>> > efi/boot/startup.nsh which simple instructs the boot firmware to load
>> > and run BOOTx64.efi.
>> >
>> > I haven't worked out how you can grow the small 800K FAT filesystem to
>> > take advantage of your 200M partition. And indeed, we will need an ESP
>> > of more than 800K in the near future.
>> >
>> > This fstab entry might be handy:
>> >
>> > # Device      Mountpoint      FStype  Options
>>  Dump    Pass#
>> > /dev/mfid0p1  /esp            msdosfs rw,-l,-m=3D664,-M=3D775,noauto
>> 0       0
>> >
>> > --
>> > Trond.
>>
>>
>> the fat partition is fine, has all that is needed, but
>> I need the right bootblock instead of pmbr, and there are many  *efi* in
>> /boot and I don=E2=80=99t
>> know which one to use :-(
>>
>
> You don't need boot blocks in UEFI.
>
> Create the FAT partition, use newfs_msdos to initialize it. mount it and
> create a top-level directory named EFI.
>
> There are several options from here:
>
> (1) use the 'old style' of putting boot1.efi or loader.efi into
> EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI. If you have a really simple setup, this is likely t=
he
> easiest. It usually works (though there are exceptions for some crazy
> BIOSes). This works because the UEFI BIOS looks for removable devices wit=
h
> a ESP that has /EFI/BOOT/BOOTxxx.EFI (where xxx varies on architecture, f=
or
> AMD64 its X64). It loads this. Both boot1.efi and loader.efi know what to
> do from here if your root filesystem is on the same disk as the ESP.
> boot1.efi searches a little harder for things, while loader.efi is more
> disciplined in what it searches for to allow for predictable behavior. Th=
is
> option works great for a FreeBSD only machine.
>
> (2) Use the new style. mount the esp somewhere, say /boot/efi. Put
> loader.efi into /boot/efi/EFI/FreeBSD and use the following command:
> efibootmgr --create --loader /boot/efi/efi/freebsd/loader.efi --kernel
> /boot/kernel/kernel --label "FreeBSD Rocks" --activate --verbose
>
> which creates and activates a UEFI boot variable, that tells it to load
> loader.efi first and have it load the default kernel and to label it
> "FreeBSD Rocks".
>
> This also works well for FreeBSD only machines and gives you more control
> if you are doing things like having redundant partitions and you want to
> nail down exactly the right one. This also works for people that want to
> have multiple versions of FreeBSD on the machine (though 11 and older wor=
ks
> less well than 12 and newer).
>
> (3) There are a number of 3rd party chain loaders rEFInd is likely the
> most popular. I don't use those, so I can't comment on them further. Thes=
e
> work well when you have multiple OSes that each have their own fussy noti=
on
> of the proper early boot setup.
>
> Warner
>
>
> my problem is that the bios is set to network boot/pxe. In such case
> the dhcp responds with =E2=80=98filename=E2=80=99. With no efi partition,=
 just
> freebsd-boot, setting file to pmbr - which get loaded via tftp , it works
> fine, it boots from the
> disk =E2=80=99s freebd-ufs partition - if there are several, setting boot=
me does
> the trick.
>

If pmbr is working, you aren't booting with UEFI...


> my problem is that using pmbr it failed when the partition is efi (fat an=
d
> all the files are there) with no boot found - or something similar.
> so im wondering if there is some other file tat can be loaded via tftp
> that will load the right stuff from the efi/fat partition.
>

If pmbr is failing, you may be booting with UEFI, in which case just load
loader.efi. If you have several partitions, and want to use the bootme
trick, gptboot.efi may be better.

Warner



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