gptboot.efi — GPT
bootcode for UFS on UEFI computers
gptboot.efi is used on UEFI computers to
boot from a UFS partition on a GPT-partitioned disk.
gptboot.efi is installed in the EFI System Partition
(ESP). For BIOS-based computers, see
gptboot(8)
for details. While conceptually similar, the details differ.
gptboot.efi works only with UFS root file systems.
Users with ZFS partitions should use
loader.efi(8)
with
bectl(8)
to control what dataset is used for root.
What UEFI computers boot is usually controlled via the mechanisms
explained in
efibootmgr(8)
using
loader.efi(8)
or
boot1.efi(8).
However, some setups cannot use those mechanisms. When the users cannot rely
on host-supplied UEFI variables or they want the contents of the media alone
to decide root, gptboot.efi accomplishes these
goals.
When it starts, gptboot.efi first reads
the GPT and determines which drive and partition to boot from, as described
under BOOTING, below. If it does not find
an eligible partition, it returns to the UEFI firmware. The firmware will
then try the next bootable item in the UEFI Boot Manager's list, if any,
usually a different disk.
The GPT standard allows a variable number of partitions, but
gptboot.efi only boots from tables with 128
partitions or less.
gptboot.efi checks and manages several
attributes of GPT UFS partitions. These flags are
FreeBSD specific and non-standard.
bootme
- Attempt to boot from this partition. If more than one partition has the
bootme attribute set,
gptboot.efi will attempt to boot each one until
successful.
bootonce
- Attempt to boot from this partition only one time. Setting this attribute
with
gpart(8)
automatically also sets the
bootme attribute.
Multiple partitions may have the bootonce and
bootme attributes set.
bootfailed
- The
bootfailed attribute marks partitions that had
the bootonce attribute set, but failed to boot.
This attribute is managed by the system. See
BOOTING and
POST-BOOT ACTIONS below for
details.
For normal usage, the user does not have to set or manage any of
the partition attributes. gptboot.efi will boot from
the first UFS partition found on the device.
The bootonce attribute can be used for
testing an upgraded operating system on an already-working computer. The
existing system partition is left untouched, and the new version of the
operating system to be tested is installed on another partition. The
bootonce attribute is set on that new test
partition. The next boot is attempted from the test partition. Success or
failure will be shown in the system log files. After a successful boot of
the test partition, a user script can check the logs and change the
bootme attributes so the test partition becomes the
new system partition. Because the bootonce attribute
is cleared after an attempted boot, a failed boot will not leave the system
attempting to boot from a partition that will never succeed. Instead, the
system will boot from the older, known-working operating system that has not
been modified. If the bootme attribute is set on any
partitions, booting will be attempted from them first. If no partitions with
bootme attributes are found, booting will be
attempted from the first UFS partition found.
gptboot.efi first reads the partition
table. All freebsd-ufs partitions with only the
bootonce attribute set, indicating a failed boot,
are set to bootfailed.
gptboot.efi then scans through all of the
freebsd-ufs partitions. Boot behavior depends on the
combination of bootme and
bootonce attributes set on those partitions.
bootonce
+ bootme
- Highest priority: booting is attempted from each of the
freebsd-ufs partitions with both of these
attributes. On each partition, the bootme
attribute is removed and the boot attempted.
bootme
- Middle priority: booting is attempted from each of the
freebsd-ufs partitions with the
bootme attribute.
If neither bootonce nor
bootme attributes are found on any partitions,
booting is attempted from the first freebsd-ufs
partition on the disk.
The startup script /etc/rc.d/gptboot
checks the attributes of freebsd-ufs partitions on
all GPT disks. Partitions with the bootfailed
attribute generate a “boot from X failed” system log message.
Partitions with only the bootonce attribute,
indicating a partition that successfully booted, generate a “boot
from X succeeded” system log message. The
bootfailed attributes are cleared from all the
partitions. The bootonce attribute is cleared from
the partition that successfully booted. There is normally only one of
these.
- /boot/gptboot.efi
- bootcode binary
- /boot/efi/efi/boot/bootx64.efi
- Default boot loader for amd64 systems.
- /boot/efi/efi/boot/bootaa64.efi
- Default boot loader for arm64 systems.
- /boot/efi/efi/boot/bootarm.efi
- Default boot loader for arm systems.
- /boot/efi/efi/boot/bootriscv64.efi
- Default boot loader for riscv systems.
gptboot.efi is installed in the ESP with
cp(1).
Install gptboot.efi into the ESP for the
system. This assumes the ESP is mounted in the standard
/boot/efi directory. For amd64, use the
following
cp /boot/gptboot.efi /boot/efi/efi/boot/bootx64.efi
For other systems, use the file listed in the
FILES section.
Set the bootme attribute for partition
2:
gpart set -a bootme -i 2 ada0
Set the bootonce attribute for partition
2, automatically also setting the bootme
attribute:
gpart set -a bootonce -i 2 ada0
gptboot.efi appeared in
FreeBSD 13.0
This manual page was written by Warner
Losh ⟨imp@FreeBSD.org⟩. It is based heavily on the
gptboot(8)
man page by
Warren Block ⟨wblock@FreeBSD.org⟩.