5baf1ffe7e
For release announce on mailing list, see [1]. For release general news, see [2]. This commit removes all package patches, as they are all included in this version. The .checkpackageignore file is updated accordingly (the entry for patch 0001 is removed). This commit also removes GRUB2_AVOID_AUTORECONF hooks, since patch 0001 is removed. This commit also removes the GRUB2_IGNORE_CVES entries associated to the removed patches. The version bump should now explicitly exclude those CVEs. For patches 8 and 9, the upstream commit IDs were incorrectly recorded: - patch 8 mentioned d5caac8ab79d068ad9a41030c772d03a4d4fbd7b while the actual commit is 5bff31cdb6b93d738f850834e6291df1d0b136fa - patch 9 mentioned 166a4d61448f74745afe1dac2f2cfb85d04909bf while the actual commit is 347880a13c239b4c2811c94c9a7cf78b607332e3 Finally, this commit introduces a new patch, adding a missing file in the release tarball. [1] https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/grub-devel/2023-12/msg00052.html [2] https://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=grub.git;a=blob;f=NEWS;hb=refs/tags/grub-2.12 Signed-off-by: Julien Olivain <ju.o@free.fr> Signed-off-by: Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998@free.fr> |
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.. | ||
0001-Add-missing-grub-core-extra_deps.lst-file-in-release.patch | ||
Config.in | ||
grub2.hash | ||
grub2.mk | ||
grub.cfg | ||
readme.txt |
Notes on using Grub2 for BIOS-based platforms ============================================= 1. Create a disk image dd if=/dev/zero of=disk.img bs=1M count=32 2. Partition it (either legacy or GPT style partitions work) cfdisk disk.img - Create one partition, type Linux, for the root filesystem. The only constraint is to make sure there is enough free space *before* the first partition to store Grub2. Leaving 1 MB of free space is safe. 3. Setup loop device and loop partitions sudo losetup -f disk.img sudo partx -a /dev/loop0 4. Prepare the root partition sudo mkfs.ext3 -L root /dev/loop0p1 sudo mount /dev/loop0p1 /mnt sudo tar -C /mnt -xf output/images/rootfs.tar sudo umount /mnt 5. Install Grub2 sudo ./output/host/sbin/grub-bios-setup \ -b ./output/host/lib/grub/i386-pc/boot.img \ -c ./output/images/grub.img -d . /dev/loop0 6. Cleanup loop device sudo partx -d /dev/loop0 sudo losetup -d /dev/loop0 7. Your disk.img is ready! Using genimage -------------- If you use genimage to generate your complete image, installing Grub can be tricky. Here is how to achieve Grub's installation with genimage: partition boot { in-partition-table = "no" image = "path_to_boot.img" offset = 0 size = 512 } partition grub { in-partition-table = "no" image = "path_to_grub.img" offset = 512 } The result is not byte to byte identical to what grub-bios-setup does but it works anyway. To test your BIOS image in Qemu ------------------------------- qemu-system-{i386,x86-64} -hda disk.img Notes on using Grub2 for x86/x86_64 EFI-based platforms ======================================================= 1. Create a disk image dd if=/dev/zero of=disk.img bs=1M count=32 2. Partition it with GPT partitions cgdisk disk.img - Create a first partition, type EF00, for the bootloader and kernel image - Create a second partition, type 8300, for the root filesystem. 3. Setup loop device and loop partitions sudo losetup -f disk.img sudo partx -a /dev/loop0 4. Prepare the boot partition sudo mkfs.vfat -n boot /dev/loop0p1 sudo mount /dev/loop0p1 /mnt sudo cp -a output/images/efi-part/* /mnt/ sudo cp output/images/bzImage /mnt/ sudo umount /mnt 5. Prepare the root partition sudo mkfs.ext3 -L root /dev/loop0p2 sudo mount /dev/loop0p2 /mnt sudo tar -C /mnt -xf output/images/rootfs.tar sudo umount /mnt 6 Cleanup loop device sudo partx -d /dev/loop0 sudo losetup -d /dev/loop0 7. Your disk.img is ready! To test your i386/x86-64 EFI image in Qemu ------------------------------------------ 1. Download/install the EFI BIOS for Qemu You can get it using the edk2 package in Buildroot (installed in BINARIES_DIR), grab prebuilt images from the unofficial nightly builds [0], or use one provided by your distribution as OVMF. [0] https://github.com/retrage/edk2-nightly 2. qemu-system-{i386,x86-64} -bios <path-to-OVMF.fd> -hda disk.img Notes on using Grub2 for ARM u-boot-based platforms =================================================== The following steps show how to use the Grub2 arm-uboot platform support in the simplest way possible and with a single buildroot-generated filesystem. 1. Load qemu_arm_vexpress_defconfig 2. Enable u-boot with the vexpress_ca9x4 board name and with u-boot.elf image format. 3. Enable grub2 for the arm-uboot platform. 4. Enable "Install kernel image to /boot in target" in the kernel menu to populate a /boot directory with zImage in it. 5. The upstream u-boot vexpress_ca9x4 doesn't have CONFIG_API enabled by default, which is required. Before building, patch u-boot (for example, make u-boot-extract to edit the source before building) file include/configs/vexpress_common.h to define: #define CONFIG_API #define CONFIG_SYS_MMC_MAX_DEVICE 1 6. Create a custom grub2 config file with the following contents and set its path in BR2_TARGET_GRUB2_CFG: set default="0" set timeout="5" menuentry "Buildroot" { set root='(hd0)' linux /boot/zImage root=/dev/mmcblk0 console=ttyAMA0 devicetree /boot/vexpress-v2p-ca9.dtb } 7. Create a custom builtin config file with the following contents and set its path in BR2_TARGET_GRUB2_BUILTIN_CONFIG: set root=(hd0) set prefix=/boot/grub 8. Create a custom post-build script which copies files from ${BINARIES_DIR}/boot-part to $(TARGET_DIR)/boot (set its path in BR2_ROOTFS_POST_BUILD_SCRIPT): #!/bin/sh cp -r ${BINARIES_DIR}/boot-part/* ${TARGET_DIR}/boot/ 9. make 10. Run qemu with: qemu-system-arm -M vexpress-a9 -kernel output/images/u-boot -m 1024 \ -nographic -sd output/images/rootfs.ext2 11. In u-boot, stop at the prompt and run grub2 with: => ext2load mmc 0:0 ${loadaddr} /boot/grub/grub.img => bootm 12. This should bring the grub2 menu, upon which selecting the "Buildroot" entry should boot Linux. Notes on using Grub2 for Aarch64 EFI-based platforms ==================================================== The following steps show how to use the Grub2 arm64-efi platform, using qemu and EFI firmware built for qemu. 1. Load aarch64_efi_defconfig 2. make 3. Download the EFI firmware for qemu aarch64 You can get it using the edk2 package in Buildroot (installed in BINARIES_DIR), grab prebuilt images from the unofficial nightly builds [1], or use one provided by your distribution as OVMF-aarch64 or AAVMF. [1] https://github.com/retrage/edk2-nightly 4. Run qemu with: qemu-system-aarch64 -M virt -cpu cortex-a57 -m 512 -nographic \ -bios <path/to/EDK2>/QEMU_EFI.fd -hda output/images/disk.img \ -netdev user,id=eth0 -device virtio-net-device,netdev=eth0 5. This should bring the grub2 menu, upon which selecting the "Buildroot" entry should boot Linux.