kumquat-buildroot/boot/grub2
Tarek El-Sherbiny 523b27afa9 grub2: force -fno-stack-protector in CPPFLAGS
In commit 2a27294e9a ("grub2: force
-fno-stack-protector in CFLAGS"), a fix was made to the grub2 package
to make it build properly even when SSP support is enabled.

However, commit 20a4583ebf ("security
hardening: add RELFO, FORTIFY options") reworked how SSP options are
passed, and they are now passed in CPPFLAGS instead of CFLAGS, making
the fix introduced by 2a27294e9a no
longer operating.

This commit will force no-stack-protector in CPPFLAGS instead of
CFLAGS.

Fixes bug #10961.

Signed-off-by: Tarek El-Sherbiny <tarek_el-sherbiny@waters.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@bootlin.com>
2018-04-19 23:26:06 +02:00
..
Config.in
grub2.hash
grub2.mk grub2: force -fno-stack-protector in CPPFLAGS 2018-04-19 23:26:06 +02:00
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 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 EFI image in Qemu
------------------------------

1. Download the EFI BIOS for Qemu
   Version IA32 or X64 depending on the chosen Grub2
   platform (i386-efi vs. x86-64-efi)
   http://sourceforge.net/projects/edk2/files/OVMF/
2. Extract, and rename OVMF.fd to bios.bin and
   CirrusLogic5446.rom to vgabios-cirrus.bin.
3. qemu-system-{i386,x86-64} -L ovmf-dir/ -hda disk.img
4. Make sure to pass pci=nocrs to the kernel command line,
   to workaround a bug in the EFI BIOS regarding the
   EFI framebuffer.