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Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Brown dbea47ce7d [build] Add efidrv.cab target for UEFI Secure Boot signing
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2013-05-14 20:46:53 +01:00
Michael Brown 640ab792a4 [build] Provide "allXXXs" targets for all media on all platforms
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2013-05-14 16:18:44 +01:00
Michael Brown 05d11b7337 [build] Use $(eval) if available
When the $(eval) function is available (in GNU make >= 3.80), we can
evaluate many of the dynamically-generated Makefile rules directly.
This avoids generating a few hundred Makefile fragments in the
filesystem, and so speeds up the build process.

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2013-05-14 14:28:30 +01:00
Michael Brown 9a93db3f09 [pxe] Provide PXENV_FILE_EXIT_HOOK only for ipxelinux.0 builds
PXENV_FILE_EXIT_HOOK is designed to allow ipxelinux.0 to unload both
the iPXE and pxelinux components without affecting the underlying PXE
stack.  Unfortunately, it causes unexpected behaviour in other
situations, such as when loading a non-embedded pxelinux.0 via
undionly.kpxe.  For example:

  PXE ROM -> undionly.kpxe -> pxelinux.0 -> chain.c32 to boot hd0

would cause control to return to iPXE instead of booting from the hard
disk.  In some cases, this would result in a harmless but confusing
"No more network devices" message; in other cases stranger things
would happen, such as being returned to the iPXE shell prompt.

The fundamental problem is that when pxelinux detects
PXENV_FILE_EXIT_HOOK, it may attempt to specify an exit hook and then
exit back to iPXE, assuming that iPXE will in turn exit cleanly via
the specified exit hook.  This is not a valid assumption in the
general case, since the action of exiting back to iPXE does not
directly cause iPXE to exit itself.  (In the specific case of
ipxelinux.0, this will work since the embedded script exits as soon as
pxelinux.0 exits.)

Fix the unexpected behaviour in the non-ipxelinux.0 cases by including
support for PXENV_FILE_EXIT_HOOK only when using a new .kkkpxe format.
The ipxelinux.0 build process should therefore now use undionly.kkkpxe
instead of undionly.kkpxe.

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2011-12-11 02:28:04 +00:00
Michael Brown f9e3581175 [exeprefix] Add .exe prefix
An iPXE .exe image can be loaded from DOS.  Tested using bin/ipxe.exe
to load a Linux kernel and simple initramfs from within MS-DOS 6.22.
(EDD must be disabled using the "edd=off" kernel parameter, since the
loaded kernel image has already overwritten parts of DOS' INT 13
wrapper.)

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2011-03-28 02:10:14 +01:00
Michael Brown 42a1f43bf9 [build] Provide %.fd0 build targets only for pcbios
Originally-fixed-by: Piotr Jaroszyński <p.jaroszynski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2010-08-17 14:36:39 +01:00
Piotr Jaroszyński 6142b721bf [build] Build pcbios specific drivers only on pcbios
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jaroszyński <p.jaroszynski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2010-08-16 16:54:37 +01:00
Michael Brown 719b49879d [build] Fix broken build caused by implied dependency upon "perl"
Commit ea12dc0 ("[build] Avoid hard-coding the path to perl")
introduced a build failure for fully clean trees (e.g. after running
"make veryclean"), since the dependency upon $(PARSEROM) now includes
a dependency upon "perl" (which doesn't exist) rather than upon
"/usr/bin/perl" (which does exist).

There should of course be no dependency upon the perl binary at all;
the dependency should be upon "./util/parserom.pl" alone.

Fix by removing the $(PERL) from the definition of Perl-based utility
paths, and adding $(PERL) at the point of usage.

Reported-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2010-06-24 17:25:54 +01:00
Michael Brown 132c391712 [romprefix] Add .mrom format, allowing loading of large ROMs
Add an infrastructure allowing the prefix to provide an open_payload()
method for obtaining out-of-band access to the whole iPXE image.  Add
a mechanism within this infrastructure that allows raw access to the
expansion ROM BAR by temporarily borrowing an address from a suitable
memory BAR on the same PCI card.

For cards that have a memory BAR that is at least as large as their
expansion ROM BAR, this allows large iPXE ROMs to be supported even on
systems where PMM fails, or where option ROM space pressure makes it
impossible to use PMM shrinking.  The BIOS sees only a stub ROM of
approximately 3kB in size; the remainder (which can be well over 64kB)
is loaded only at the time iPXE is invoked.

As a nice side-effect, an iPXE .mrom image will continue to work even
if its PMM-allocated areas are overwritten between initialisation and
invocation.

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2010-04-25 16:37:06 +01:00
Michael Brown d8c1f2e94f [build] Replace obsolete makerom.pl with quick script using Option::ROM
The only remaining useful function of makerom.pl is to correct the ROM
and PnP checksums; the PCI IDs are set at link time, and padding is
performed using padimg.pl.

Option::ROM already provides a facility for correcting the checksums,
so we may as well just use this instead.

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2010-04-25 02:54:12 +01:00
Michael Brown 8ffea19225 [romprefix] Remove .hrom prefix
The .hrom prefix provides an experimental mechanism for reducing
option ROM space usage on systems where PMM allocation fails, by
pretending that PMM allocation succeeded and gave us an address fixed
at compilation time.  This is unreliable, and potentially dangerous.
In particular, when multiple gPXE ROMs are present in a system, each
gPXE ROM will assume ownership of the same fixed address, resulting in
undefined behaviour.

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2010-04-19 23:43:48 +01:00
Michael Brown 329686c026 [romprefix] Remove .xrom prefix
The .xrom prefix provides an experimental mechanism for loading ROM
images greater than 64kB in size by mapping the expansion ROM BAR in
at a hopefully-unused address.  This is unreliable, and potentially
dangerous.  In particular, there is no guarantee that any PCI bridges
between the CPU and the device will respond to accesses for the
"unused" memory region that is chosen, and it is possible that the
process of scanning for the "unused" memory region may end up issuing
reads to other PCI devices.  If this ends up trampling on a register
with read side-effects belonging to an unrelated PCI device, this may
cause undefined behaviour.

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
2010-04-19 23:43:48 +01:00
Stefan Hajnoczi 1056a1c2d5 [prefix] Remove unsupported ELF prefices
The .elf, .elfd, .lmelf, and .lmelfd prefices were brought over from
legacy Etherboot and they do not build in gPXE.  This patch removes the
ELF prefices.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
2010-01-31 19:10:25 -05:00
Stefan Hajnoczi 9a89f0d17d [prefix] Remove unsupported .exe prefix
The unfinished .exe prefix was brought over from legacy Etherboot.
There has been no demand for .exe images so this patch removes the
prefix.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
2010-01-31 19:06:55 -05:00
Stefan Hajnoczi ddcf2d5f08 [prefix] Remove unsupported .com prefix
The DOS .com prefix was brought over from legacy Etherboot but does not
build.  There has been no demand for .com images so this patch removes
the prefix.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
2010-01-31 19:05:22 -05:00
Stefan Hajnoczi d3b9c3f3d0 [prefix] Remove .bImage in favor of .lkrn
The .lkrn prefix allows gPXE to be loaded as a Linux bzImage.  The
bImage prefix was carried over from legacy Etherboot and does not build.
This patch removes the .bImage prefix, use .lkrn instead.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
2010-01-31 19:00:56 -05:00
Joshua Oreman 06a8398422 [prefix] Add .xrom prefix for a ROM that loads itself by PCI accesses
The standard option ROM format provides a header indicating the size
of the entire ROM, which the BIOS will reserve space for, load, and
call as necessary. However, this space is strictly limited to 128k for
all ROMs. gPXE ameliorates this somewhat by reserving space for itself
in high memory and relocating the majority of its code there, but on
systems prior to PCI3 enough space must still be present to load the
ROM in the first place. Even on PCI3 systems, the BIOS often limits the
size of ROM it will load to a bit over 64kB.

These space problems can be solved by providing an artificially small
size in the ROM header: just enough to let the prefix code (at the
beginning of the ROM image) be loaded by the BIOS. To the BIOS, the
gPXE ROM will appear to be only a few kilobytes; it can then load
the rest of itself by accessing the ROM directly using the PCI
interface reserved for that task.

There are a few problems with this approach. First, gPXE needs to find
an unmapped region in memory to map the ROM so it can read from it;
this is done using the crude but effective approach of scanning high
memory (over 0xF0000000) for a sufficiently large region of all-ones
(0xFF) reads. (In x86 architecture, all-ones is returned for accesses
to memory regions that no mapped device can satisfy.) This is not
provably valid in all situations, but has worked well in practice.
More importantly, this type of ROM access can only work if the PCI ROM
BAR exists at all. NICs on physical add-in PCI cards generally must
have the BAR in order for the BIOS to be able to load their ROM, but
ISA cards and LAN-on-Motherboard cards will both fail to load gPXE
using this scheme.

Due to these uncertainties, it is recommended that .xrom only be used
when a regular .rom image is infeasible due to crowded option ROM
space. However, when it works it could allow loading gPXE images
as large as a flash chip one could find - 128kB or even higher.

Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
2010-01-20 17:46:48 -05:00
Joshua Oreman 5736f5eb32 [prefix] Add .hrom prefix for a ROM that loads high under PCI3 without PMM
gPXE currently takes advantage of the feature of PCI3.0 that allows
option ROMs to relocate the bulk of their code to high memory and so
take up only a small amount of space in the option ROM area. Currently,
the relocation can only take place if the BIOS's implementation of PMM
can be made to return blocks aligned to an even megabyte, because of
the A20 gate. AMI BIOSes, in particular, will not return allocations
that gPXE can use.

Ameliorate the situation somewhat by adding a prefix, .hrom, that works
identically to .rom except in the case that PMM allocation fails. Where
.rom would give up and place itself entirely in option ROM space, .hrom
moves to a block (assumed free) at HIGHMEM_LOADPOINT = 4MB. This allows
for the use of larger gPXE ROMs than would otherwise be possible.

Because there is no way to check that the area at HIGHMEM_LOADPOINT is
really free, other devices using that memory during the boot process
will cause failure for gPXE, the other device, or both. In practice
such conflicts will likely not occur, but this prefix should still be
considered EXPERIMENTAL.

Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
2010-01-14 10:56:08 -05:00
Stefan Hajnoczi 9760005fe8 [build] Pad .hd image type to 32 KB
The disk partition prefix code in hdprefix.S reads the gPXE image in
tracks, not individual sectors.  This means it will attempt to read
beyond the end of the image if the .hd image type is not padded to 32
KB.

This issue is affects virtualization software which may execute a .hd or
.usb image file directly - effectively running a machine with a tiny
disk containing just the gPXE image.  Boot will fail when gPXE tries to
read beyond the end of disk.
2009-12-15 20:22:04 +00:00
Marty Connor 96f4f96540 [build] Add syslinux floppy image type .sdsk
We add a syslinux floppy disk type using parts of the genliso script.
This floppy image cat be dd'ed to a physical floppy or used in
instances where a virtual floppy with an mountable DOS filesystem is
useful.

We also modify the genliso script to only generate .liso images
rather than creating images depending on how it is called.

Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@etherboot.org>
2009-08-02 11:04:13 +01:00
Michael Brown 7aee624881 [build] Reinstate the .pdsk padded-floppy image format
Some utilities that expect a floppy disk image (e.g. iLO?) may test
for a file of the correct size.  Reinstate the .pdsk image format in
order to provide this if needed.
2009-04-16 06:01:07 +01:00
Michael Brown 7741546a40 [build] Pad .rom, .dsk, and .hd images to 512-byte boundaries
QEMU will silently round down a disk or ROM image file to the nearest
512 bytes.  Fix by always padding .rom, .dsk and .hd images to the
nearest 512-byte boundary.

Originally-fixed-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
2009-04-16 03:15:08 +01:00
Michael Brown b5577553e5 [pxeprefix] Add .kkpxe image type and ability to return via PXE stack
Certain combinations of PXE stack and BIOS result in a broken INT 18
call, which will leave the system displaying a "PRESS ANY KEY TO
REBOOT" message instead of proceeding to the next boot device.  On
these systems, returning via the PXE stack is the only way to continue
to the next boot device.  Returning via the PXE stack works only if we
haven't already blown away the PXE base code in pxeprefix.S.

In most circumstances, we do want to blow away the PXE base code.
Base memory is a limited resource, and it is desirable to reclaim as
much as possible.  When we perform an iSCSI boot, we need to place the
iBFT above the 512kB mark, because otherwise it may not be detected by
the loaded OS; this may not be possible if the PXE base code is still
occupying that memory.

Introduce a new prefix type .kkpxe which will preserve both the PXE
base code and the UNDI driver (as compared to .kpxe, which preserves
the UNDI driver but uninstalls the PXE base code).  This prefix type
can be used on systems that are known to experience the specific
problem of INT 18 being broken, or in builds (such as gpxelinux.0) for
which it is particularly important to know that returning to the BIOS
will work.

Written by H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com> and Stefan Hajnoczi
<stefanha@gmail.com>, minor structural alterations by Michael Brown
<mcb30@etherboot.org>.
2009-02-18 18:12:32 +00:00
Michael Brown 3029eb0e84 [makefile] Reduce verbosity of various NON_AUTO_MEDIA rules 2008-10-10 03:57:31 +01:00
Michael Brown 5c695db474 [makefile] Split platform-dependent portions out of arch/i386/Makefile 2008-10-10 03:45:34 +01:00