Make sure you have installed the dependencies uuid-dev, nasm, and
acpica-tools (or equivalent for your distribution).
You need to provide:
The vendor UEFI firmware for the mainboard
A Linux kernel built with the CONFIG_EFI_BDS option enabled
An initrd.cpio file with enough tools to kexec the rest of the system.
For the initrd, the Heads firmware or
u-root systems work well.
Both will build minimal runtimes that can fit into the few megabytes
of space available.
For everything except qemu, you'll need to copy the vendor ROM dump
to boards/$(BOARD)/$(BOARD).rom. Due to copyright restrictions, we can't
bundle the ROM images in this tree and you must supply your own ROM from
your own machine. qemu can built its own ROM from the edk2 tree,
so this is not necessary.
Configure the build system:
cp path/to/s2600wf.rom boards/s2600wf/
make \
BOARD=s2600wf \
KERNEL=../path/to/bzImage \
INITRD=../path/to/initrd.cpio.xz \
config
make
This will write the values into the .config file so that you don't
need to specify them each time. If all goes well you will end up with
a file in build/$(BOARD)/linuxboot.rom that can be flashed to your machine.
It will take a while since it also clones the LinuxBoot patched version
of tianocore/edk2 UDK2018 branch
and build it.
Emulating with qemu
If you want to experiment with LinuxBoot you can run it under qemu.
No ROM file is necessary, although you still need a Heads or NERF runtime
kernel/initrd pair. You can launch the emulator by running:
make run
This will use your current terminal as the serial console, which
will likely mess with the settings. After killing qemu by closing
the window you will need to run stty sane to restore the terminal
settings (echo is likely turned off, so you'll have to type this in
the blind).
Adding a new mainboard
Copy Makefile.board from one of the other mainboards and edit it to match
your new board's ROM layout. The qemu one is not the best example since it has
to match the complex layout of OVMF; most real mainboards are not this messy.
You'll need to figure out which FVs have to be preserved, how much space
can be recovered from the ME region, etc. The per-board makefile needs
to set the following variables:
FVS: an ordered list of IFD, firmware volumes and padding
linuxboot-size: the final size of the ROM image in bytes (we should verify this against the real ROM instead)
请发表评论