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Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +02001.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
2.. Copyright (c) 2018 Heinrich Schuchardt
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +01003
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +02004UEFI on U-Boot
5==============
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +01006
7The Unified Extensible Firmware Interface Specification (UEFI) [1] has become
8the default for booting on AArch64 and x86 systems. It provides a stable API for
9the interaction of drivers and applications with the firmware. The API comprises
10access to block storage, network, and console to name a few. The Linux kernel
11and boot loaders like GRUB or the FreeBSD loader can be executed.
12
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +020013Development target
14------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt9ba712d2019-03-28 08:09:16 +010015
Heinrich Schuchardtdc6f3f42019-04-10 08:04:38 +020016The implementation of UEFI in U-Boot strives to reach the requirements described
17in the "Embedded Base Boot Requirements (EBBR) Specification - Release v1.0"
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +020018[2]. The "Server Base Boot Requirements System Software on ARM Platforms" [3]
Heinrich Schuchardtdc6f3f42019-04-10 08:04:38 +020019describes a superset of the EBBR specification and may be used as further
20reference.
Heinrich Schuchardt9ba712d2019-03-28 08:09:16 +010021
22A full blown UEFI implementation would contradict the U-Boot design principle
23"keep it small".
24
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +020025Building U-Boot for UEFI
26------------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010027
Heinrich Schuchardt4f3cb4d2018-12-30 12:54:36 +010028The UEFI standard supports only little-endian systems. The UEFI support can be
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +020029activated for ARM and x86 by specifying::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010030
31 CONFIG_CMD_BOOTEFI=y
32 CONFIG_EFI_LOADER=y
33
34in the .config file.
35
36Support for attaching virtual block devices, e.g. iSCSI drives connected by the
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +020037loaded UEFI application [4], requires::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010038
39 CONFIG_BLK=y
40 CONFIG_PARTITIONS=y
41
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +020042Executing a UEFI binary
43~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010044
45The bootefi command is used to start UEFI applications or to install UEFI
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +020046drivers. It takes two parameters::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010047
48 bootefi <image address> [fdt address]
49
50* image address - the memory address of the UEFI binary
51* fdt address - the memory address of the flattened device tree
52
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +020053Below you find the output of an example session starting GRUB::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010054
55 => load mmc 0:2 ${fdt_addr_r} boot/dtb
56 29830 bytes read in 14 ms (2 MiB/s)
57 => load mmc 0:1 ${kernel_addr_r} efi/debian/grubaa64.efi
58 reading efi/debian/grubaa64.efi
59 120832 bytes read in 7 ms (16.5 MiB/s)
60 => bootefi ${kernel_addr_r} ${fdt_addr_r}
61
62The environment variable 'bootargs' is passed as load options in the UEFI system
63table. The Linux kernel EFI stub uses the load options as command line
64arguments.
65
Cristian Ciocaltea2dbab872019-12-24 18:05:41 +020066Launching a UEFI binary from a FIT image
67~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
68
69A signed FIT image can be used to securely boot a UEFI image via the
70bootm command. This feature is available if U-Boot is configured with::
71
72 CONFIG_BOOTM_EFI=y
73
74A sample configuration is provided as file doc/uImage.FIT/uefi.its.
75
76Below you find the output of an example session starting GRUB::
77
78 => load mmc 0:1 ${kernel_addr_r} image.fit
79 4620426 bytes read in 83 ms (53.1 MiB/s)
80 => bootm ${kernel_addr_r}#config-grub-nofdt
81 ## Loading kernel from FIT Image at 40400000 ...
82 Using 'config-grub-nofdt' configuration
83 Verifying Hash Integrity ... sha256,rsa2048:dev+ OK
84 Trying 'efi-grub' kernel subimage
85 Description: GRUB EFI Firmware
86 Created: 2019-11-20 8:18:16 UTC
87 Type: Kernel Image (no loading done)
88 Compression: uncompressed
89 Data Start: 0x404000d0
90 Data Size: 450560 Bytes = 440 KiB
91 Hash algo: sha256
92 Hash value: 4dbee00021112df618f58b3f7cf5e1595533d543094064b9ce991e8b054a9eec
93 Verifying Hash Integrity ... sha256+ OK
94 XIP Kernel Image (no loading done)
95 ## Transferring control to EFI (at address 404000d0) ...
96 Welcome to GRUB!
97
98See doc/uImage.FIT/howto.txt for an introduction to FIT images.
99
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900100Configuring UEFI secure boot
101~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
102
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200103The UEFI specification[1] defines a secure way of executing UEFI images
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900104by verifying a signature (or message digest) of image with certificates.
105This feature on U-Boot is enabled with::
106
107 CONFIG_UEFI_SECURE_BOOT=y
108
109To make the boot sequence safe, you need to establish a chain of trust;
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200110In UEFI secure boot the chain trust is defined by the following UEFI variables
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900111
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200112* PK - Platform Key
113* KEK - Key Exchange Keys
114* db - white list database
115* dbx - black list database
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900116
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200117An in depth description of UEFI secure boot is beyond the scope of this
118document. Please, refer to the UEFI specification and available online
119documentation. Here is a simple example that you can follow for your initial
120attempt (Please note that the actual steps will depend on your system and
121environment.):
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900122
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200123Install the required tools on your host
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900124
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200125* openssl
126* efitools
127* sbsigntool
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900128
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200129Create signing keys and the key database on your host:
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900130
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200131The platform key
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900132
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200133.. code-block:: bash
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900134
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200135 openssl req -x509 -sha256 -newkey rsa:2048 -subj /CN=TEST_PK/ \
136 -keyout PK.key -out PK.crt -nodes -days 365
137 cert-to-efi-sig-list -g 11111111-2222-3333-4444-123456789abc \
138 PK.crt PK.esl;
139 sign-efi-sig-list -c PK.crt -k PK.key PK PK.esl PK.auth
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900140
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200141The key exchange keys
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900142
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200143.. code-block:: bash
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900144
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200145 openssl req -x509 -sha256 -newkey rsa:2048 -subj /CN=TEST_KEK/ \
146 -keyout KEK.key -out KEK.crt -nodes -days 365
147 cert-to-efi-sig-list -g 11111111-2222-3333-4444-123456789abc \
148 KEK.crt KEK.esl
149 sign-efi-sig-list -c PK.crt -k PK.key KEK KEK.esl KEK.auth
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900150
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200151The whitelist database
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900152
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200153.. code-block:: bash
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900154
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200155 $ openssl req -x509 -sha256 -newkey rsa:2048 -subj /CN=TEST_db/ \
156 -keyout db.key -out db.crt -nodes -days 365
157 $ cert-to-efi-sig-list -g 11111111-2222-3333-4444-123456789abc \
158 db.crt db.esl
159 $ sign-efi-sig-list -c KEK.crt -k KEK.key db db.esl db.auth
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900160
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200161Copy the \*.auth files to media, say mmc, that is accessible from U-Boot.
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900162
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200163Sign an image with one of the keys in "db" on your host
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900164
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200165.. code-block:: bash
166
167 sbsign --key db.key --cert db.crt helloworld.efi
168
169Now in U-Boot install the keys on your board::
170
171 fatload mmc 0:1 <tmpaddr> PK.auth
172 setenv -e -nv -bs -rt -at -i <tmpaddr>,$filesize PK
173 fatload mmc 0:1 <tmpaddr> KEK.auth
174 setenv -e -nv -bs -rt -at -i <tmpaddr>,$filesize KEK
175 fatload mmc 0:1 <tmpaddr> db.auth
176 setenv -e -nv -bs -rt -at -i <tmpaddr>,$filesize db
177
178Set up boot parameters on your board::
179
180 efidebug boot add 1 HELLO mmc 0:1 /helloworld.efi.signed ""
181
182Now your board can run the signed image via the boot manager (see below).
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900183You can also try this sequence by running Pytest, test_efi_secboot,
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200184on the sandbox
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900185
Heinrich Schuchardt788bd902020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200186.. code-block:: bash
187
188 cd <U-Boot source directory>
189 pytest.py test/py/tests/test_efi_secboot/test_signed.py --bd sandbox
AKASHI Takahirob2ace872020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900190
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200191Executing the boot manager
192~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100193
Heinrich Schuchardt4f3cb4d2018-12-30 12:54:36 +0100194The UEFI specification foresees to define boot entries and boot sequence via UEFI
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200195variables. Booting according to these variables is possible via::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100196
197 bootefi bootmgr [fdt address]
198
199As of U-Boot v2018.03 UEFI variables are not persisted and cannot be set at
200runtime.
201
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200202Executing the built in hello world application
203~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100204
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200205A hello world UEFI application can be built with::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100206
207 CONFIG_CMD_BOOTEFI_HELLO_COMPILE=y
208
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200209It can be embedded into the U-Boot binary with::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100210
211 CONFIG_CMD_BOOTEFI_HELLO=y
212
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200213The bootefi command is used to start the embedded hello world application::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100214
215 bootefi hello [fdt address]
216
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200217Below you find the output of an example session::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100218
219 => bootefi hello ${fdtcontroladdr}
220 ## Starting EFI application at 01000000 ...
221 WARNING: using memory device/image path, this may confuse some payloads!
222 Hello, world!
223 Running on UEFI 2.7
224 Have SMBIOS table
225 Have device tree
226 Load options: root=/dev/sdb3 init=/sbin/init rootwait ro
227 ## Application terminated, r = 0
228
229The environment variable fdtcontroladdr points to U-Boot's internal device tree
230(if available).
231
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200232Executing the built-in self-test
233~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100234
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200235An UEFI self-test suite can be embedded in U-Boot by building with::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100236
237 CONFIG_CMD_BOOTEFI_SELFTEST=y
238
239For testing the UEFI implementation the bootefi command can be used to start the
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200240self-test::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100241
242 bootefi selftest [fdt address]
243
244The environment variable 'efi_selftest' can be used to select a single test. If
245it is not provided all tests are executed except those marked as 'on request'.
246If the environment variable is set to 'list' a list of all tests is shown.
247
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200248Below you can find the output of an example session::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100249
250 => setenv efi_selftest simple network protocol
251 => bootefi selftest
252 Testing EFI API implementation
253 Selected test: 'simple network protocol'
254 Setting up 'simple network protocol'
255 Setting up 'simple network protocol' succeeded
256 Executing 'simple network protocol'
257 DHCP Discover
258 DHCP reply received from 192.168.76.2 (52:55:c0:a8:4c:02)
259 as broadcast message.
260 Executing 'simple network protocol' succeeded
261 Tearing down 'simple network protocol'
262 Tearing down 'simple network protocol' succeeded
263 Boot services terminated
264 Summary: 0 failures
265 Preparing for reset. Press any key.
266
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200267The UEFI life cycle
268-------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100269
270After the U-Boot platform has been initialized the UEFI API provides two kinds
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200271of services:
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100272
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200273* boot services
274* runtime services
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100275
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200276The API can be extended by loading UEFI drivers which come in two variants:
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100277
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200278* boot drivers
279* runtime drivers
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100280
281UEFI drivers are installed with U-Boot's bootefi command. With the same command
282UEFI applications can be executed.
283
284Loaded images of UEFI drivers stay in memory after returning to U-Boot while
285loaded images of applications are removed from memory.
286
287An UEFI application (e.g. an operating system) that wants to take full control
288of the system calls ExitBootServices. After a UEFI application calls
289ExitBootServices
290
291* boot services are not available anymore
292* timer events are stopped
293* the memory used by U-Boot except for runtime services is released
294* the memory used by boot time drivers is released
295
296So this is a point of no return. Afterwards the UEFI application can only return
297to U-Boot by rebooting.
298
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200299The UEFI object model
300---------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100301
302UEFI offers a flexible and expandable object model. The objects in the UEFI API
303are devices, drivers, and loaded images. These objects are referenced by
304handles.
305
306The interfaces implemented by the objects are referred to as protocols. These
307are identified by GUIDs. They can be installed and uninstalled by calling the
308appropriate boot services.
309
310Handles are created by the InstallProtocolInterface or the
311InstallMultipleProtocolinterfaces service if NULL is passed as handle.
312
313Handles are deleted when the last protocol has been removed with the
314UninstallProtocolInterface or the UninstallMultipleProtocolInterfaces service.
315
316Devices offer the EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL. A device path is the concatenation
317of device nodes. By their device paths all devices of a system are arranged in a
318tree.
319
320Drivers offer the EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL. This protocol is used to connect
321a driver to devices (which are referenced as controllers in this context).
322
323Loaded images offer the EFI_LOADED_IMAGE_PROTOCOL. This protocol provides meta
324information about the image and a pointer to the unload callback function.
325
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200326The UEFI events
327---------------
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100328
329In the UEFI terminology an event is a data object referencing a notification
330function which is queued for calling when the event is signaled. The following
331types of events exist:
332
333* periodic and single shot timer events
334* exit boot services events, triggered by calling the ExitBootServices() service
335* virtual address change events
336* memory map change events
337* read to boot events
338* reset system events
339* system table events
340* events that are only triggered programmatically
341
342Events can be created with the CreateEvent service and deleted with CloseEvent
343service.
344
345Events can be assigned to an event group. If any of the events in a group is
346signaled, all other events in the group are also set to the signaled state.
347
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200348The UEFI driver model
349---------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100350
351A driver is specific for a single protocol installed on a device. To install a
352driver on a device the ConnectController service is called. In this context
353controller refers to the device for which the driver is installed.
354
355The relevant drivers are identified using the EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL. This
356protocol has has three functions:
357
358* supported - determines if the driver is compatible with the device
359* start - installs the driver by opening the relevant protocol with
360 attribute EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER
361* stop - uninstalls the driver
362
363The driver may create child controllers (child devices). E.g. a driver for block
364IO devices will create the device handles for the partitions. The child
365controllers will open the supported protocol with the attribute
366EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER.
367
368A driver can be detached from a device using the DisconnectController service.
369
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200370U-Boot devices mapped as UEFI devices
371-------------------------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100372
373Some of the U-Boot devices are mapped as UEFI devices
374
375* block IO devices
376* console
377* graphical output
378* network adapter
379
380As of U-Boot 2018.03 the logic for doing this is hard coded.
381
382The development target is to integrate the setup of these UEFI devices with the
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200383U-Boot driver model [5]. So when a U-Boot device is discovered a handle should
384be created and the device path protocol and the relevant IO protocol should be
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100385installed. The UEFI driver then would be attached by calling ConnectController.
386When a U-Boot device is removed DisconnectController should be called.
387
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200388UEFI devices mapped as U-Boot devices
389-------------------------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100390
391UEFI drivers binaries and applications may create new (virtual) devices, install
392a protocol and call the ConnectController service. Now the matching UEFI driver
393is determined by iterating over the implementations of the
394EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL.
395
396It is the task of the UEFI driver to create a corresponding U-Boot device and to
397proxy calls for this U-Boot device to the controller.
398
399In U-Boot 2018.03 this has only been implemented for block IO devices.
400
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200401UEFI uclass
402~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100403
404An UEFI uclass driver (lib/efi_driver/efi_uclass.c) has been created that
405takes care of initializing the UEFI drivers and providing the
406EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL implementation for the UEFI drivers.
407
408A linker created list is used to keep track of the UEFI drivers. To create an
409entry in the list the UEFI driver uses the U_BOOT_DRIVER macro specifying
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200410UCLASS_EFI as the ID of its uclass, e.g::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100411
412 /* Identify as UEFI driver */
413 U_BOOT_DRIVER(efi_block) = {
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200414 .name = "EFI block driver",
415 .id = UCLASS_EFI,
416 .ops = &driver_ops,
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100417 };
418
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200419The available operations are defined via the structure struct efi_driver_ops::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100420
421 struct efi_driver_ops {
422 const efi_guid_t *protocol;
423 const efi_guid_t *child_protocol;
424 int (*bind)(efi_handle_t handle, void *interface);
425 };
426
427When the supported() function of the EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL is called the
428uclass checks if the protocol GUID matches the protocol GUID of the UEFI driver.
429In the start() function the bind() function of the UEFI driver is called after
430checking the GUID.
431The stop() function of the EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL disconnects the child
432controllers created by the UEFI driver and the UEFI driver. (In U-Boot v2013.03
433this is not yet completely implemented.)
434
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200435UEFI block IO driver
436~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100437
438The UEFI block IO driver supports devices exposing the EFI_BLOCK_IO_PROTOCOL.
439
440When connected it creates a new U-Boot block IO device with interface type
441IF_TYPE_EFI, adds child controllers mapping the partitions, and installs the
442EFI_SIMPLE_FILE_SYSTEM_PROTOCOL on these. This can be used together with the
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200443software iPXE to boot from iSCSI network drives [4].
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100444
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200445This driver is only available if U-Boot is configured with::
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100446
447 CONFIG_BLK=y
448 CONFIG_PARTITIONS=y
449
Heinrich Schuchardt71a7de42020-02-22 07:47:20 +0100450Miscellaneous
451-------------
452
453Load file 2 protocol
454~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
455
456The load file 2 protocol can be used by the Linux kernel to load the initial
457RAM disk. U-Boot can be configured to provide an implementation with::
458
459 EFI_LOAD_FILE2_INITRD=y
460 EFI_INITRD_FILESPEC=interface dev:part path_to_initrd
461
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200462Links
463-----
Heinrich Schuchardt1914e5b2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100464
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200465* [1] http://uefi.org/specifications - UEFI specifications
466* [2] https://github.com/ARM-software/ebbr/releases/download/v1.0/ebbr-v1.0.pdf -
Heinrich Schuchardtdc6f3f42019-04-10 08:04:38 +0200467 Embedded Base Boot Requirements (EBBR) Specification - Release v1.0
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200468* [3] https://developer.arm.com/docs/den0044/latest/server-base-boot-requirements-system-software-on-arm-platforms-version-11 -
Heinrich Schuchardt9ba712d2019-03-28 08:09:16 +0100469 Server Base Boot Requirements System Software on ARM Platforms - Version 1.1
Heinrich Schuchardt73d95c22019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200470* [4] :doc:`iscsi`
471* [5] :doc:`../driver-model/index`