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https://github.com/rhboot/efibootmgr
efibootmgr development tree
https://github.com/rhboot/efibootmgr
Last synced: 11 days ago
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efibootmgr development tree
- Host: GitHub
- URL: https://github.com/rhboot/efibootmgr
- Owner: rhboot
- License: gpl-2.0
- Created: 2013-06-12T18:20:20.000Z (over 11 years ago)
- Default Branch: main
- Last Pushed: 2024-08-18T22:13:52.000Z (3 months ago)
- Last Synced: 2024-10-11T00:47:14.471Z (about 1 month ago)
- Language: C
- Size: 642 KB
- Stars: 517
- Watchers: 29
- Forks: 97
- Open Issues: 48
-
Metadata Files:
- Readme: README
- License: COPYING
- Code of conduct: CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
- Authors: AUTHORS
Awesome Lists containing this project
README
This is efibootmgr, a Linux user-space application to modify the Intel
Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) Boot Manager. This application
can create and destroy boot entries, change the boot order, change
the next running boot option, and more.Details on the EFI Boot Manager are available from the EFI
Specification, v1.02 or above, available from: http://www.uefi.orgNote: efibootmgr requires either the efivarfs or the
legacy efivars kernel module to be loaded prior to use.usage: efibootmgr [options]
-a | --active Set bootnum active.
-A | --inactive Set bootnum inactive.
-b | --bootnum XXXX Modify BootXXXX (hex).
-B | --delete-bootnum Delete bootnum.
-c | --create Create new variable bootnum and add to bootorder.
-d | --disk disk (Defaults to /dev/sda) containing loader.
-e | --edd [1|3|-1] Force EDD 1.0 or 3.0 creation variables, or guess.
-E | --device num EDD 1.0 device number (defaults to 0x80).
-f | --reconnect Re-connect devices after driver is loaded.
-F | --no-reconnect Do not re-connect devices after driver is loaded.
-g | --gpt Force disk w/ invalid PMBR to be treated as GPT.
-i | --iface name Create a netboot entry for the named interface.
-l | --loader name (Defaults to \elilo.efi).
-L | --label label Boot manager display label (defaults to "Linux").
-n | --bootnext XXXX Set BootNext to XXXX (hex).
-N | --delete-bootnext Delete BootNext.
-o | --bootorder XXXX,YYYY,ZZZZ,... Explicitly set BootOrder (hex).
-O | --delete-bootorder Delete BootOrder.
-p | --part part (Defaults to 1) containing loader.
-q | --quiet Be quiet.
-t | --timeout seconds Boot manager timeout.
-T | --delete-timeout Delete Timeout value.
-u | --unicode | --UCS-2 Pass extra args as UCS-2 (default is ASCII).
-v | --verbose Print additional information.
-V | --version Return version and exit.
-@ | --append-binary-args Append extra variable args from
file (use - to read from stdin).Typical usage:
Root can use it to display the current Boot Manager settings.
[root@localhost ~]# efibootmgr
BootCurrent: 0004
BootNext: 0003
BootOrder: 0004,0000,0001,0002,0003
Timeout: 30 seconds
Boot0000* Diskette Drive(device:0)
Boot0001* CD-ROM Drive(device:FF)
Boot0002* Hard Drive(Device:80)/HD(Part1,Sig00112233)
Boot0003* PXE Boot: MAC(00D0B7C15D91)
Boot0004* LinuxThis shows:
BootCurrent - the boot entry used to start the currently running
system.BootOrder - the boot order as would appear in the boot manager. The
boot manager tries to boot the first active entry on this list. If
unsuccessful, it tries the next entry, and so on.BootNext - the boot entry which is scheduled to be run on next boot.
This supersedes BootOrder for one boot only, and is deleted by the
boot manager after first use. This allows you to change the next boot
behavior without changing BootOrder.Timeout - the time in seconds between when the boot manager appears
on the screen until when it automatically chooses the startup value
from BootNext or BootOrder.Five boot entries (0000 - 0004), the active/inactive flag (* means
active), and the name displayed on the screen.Alternative use cases could be as follows:
1) An OS installer would call 'efibootmgr -c'. This assumes that
/dev/sda1 is your EFI System Partition, and is mounted at /boot/efi.
This creates a new boot option, called "Linux", and puts it at the top
of the boot order list. Options may be passed to modify the
default behavior. The default OS Loader is elilo.efi.2) A system administrator wants to change the boot order. She would
call 'efibootmgr -o 3,4' to specify PXE boot first, then Linux
boot.3) A system administrator wants to change the boot order for the next
boot only. She would call 'efibootmgr -n 4' to specify that the
Linux entry be taken on next boot.4) A system administrator wants to delete the Linux boot option from
the menu. 'efibootmgr -b 4 -B' deletes entry 4 and removes it
from BootOrder.5) A system administrator wants to create a boot option to network
boot (PXE). You create the boot entry with:
'efibootmgr -c -i eth0 -L netboot'Please direct any bugs, features, patches, etc. to the Red Hat bootloader
team:https://github.com/rhboot/efibootmgr