Hướng dẫn sử dụng usb-hdd boot v2.5.4.2
This is the documentation of GNU GRUB, the GRand Unified Bootloader, a flexible and powerful boot loader program for a wide range of architectures. Show
This edition documents version 2.12. This manual is for GNU GRUB (version 2.12, 5 December 2023). Copyright © 1999,2000,2001,2002,2004,2006,2008,2009,2010,2011,2012,2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections. 1 Introduction to GRUB1.1 OverviewBriefly, a boot loader is the first software program that runs when a computer starts. It is responsible for loading and transferring control to an operating system kernel software (such as Linux or GNU Mach). The kernel, in turn, initializes the rest of the operating system (e.g. a GNU system). GNU GRUB is a very powerful boot loader, which can load a wide variety of free operating systems, as well as proprietary operating systems with chain-loading. GRUB is designed to address the complexity of booting a personal computer; both the program and this manual are tightly bound to that computer platform, although porting to other platforms may be addressed in the future. One of the important features in GRUB is flexibility; GRUB understands filesystems and kernel executable formats, so you can load an arbitrary operating system the way you like, without recording the physical position of your kernel on the disk. Thus you can load the kernel just by specifying its file name and the drive and partition where the kernel resides. When booting with GRUB, you can use either a command-line interface (see ), or a menu interface (see ). Using the command-line interface, you type the drive specification and file name of the kernel manually. In the menu interface, you just select an OS using the arrow keys. The menu is based on a configuration file which you prepare beforehand (see ). While in the menu, you can switch to the command-line mode, and vice-versa. You can even edit menu entries before using them. In the following chapters, you will learn how to specify a drive, a partition, and a file name (see ) to GRUB, how to install GRUB on your drive (see ), and how to boot your OSes (see ), step by step. 1.2 History of GRUBGRUB originated in 1995 when Erich Boleyn was trying to boot the GNU Hurd with the University of Utah’s Mach 4 microkernel (now known as GNU Mach). Erich and Brian Ford designed the Multiboot Specification (see in The Multiboot Specification), because they were determined not to add to the large number of mutually-incompatible PC boot methods. Erich then began modifying the FreeBSD boot loader so that it would understand Multiboot. He soon realized that it would be a lot easier to write his own boot loader from scratch than to keep working on the FreeBSD boot loader, and so GRUB was born. Erich added many features to GRUB, but other priorities prevented him from keeping up with the demands of its quickly-expanding user base. In 1999, Gordon Matzigkeit and Yoshinori K. Okuji adopted GRUB as an official GNU package, and opened its development by making the latest sources available via anonymous CVS. See , for more information. Over the next few years, GRUB was extended to meet many needs, but it quickly became clear that its design was not keeping up with the extensions being made to it, and we reached the point where it was very difficult to make any further changes without breaking existing features. Around 2002, Yoshinori K. Okuji started work on PUPA (Preliminary Universal Programming Architecture for GNU GRUB), aiming to rewrite the core of GRUB to make it cleaner, safer, more robust, and more powerful. PUPA was eventually renamed to GRUB 2, and the original version of GRUB was renamed to GRUB Legacy. Small amounts of maintenance continued to be done on GRUB Legacy, but the last release (0.97) was made in 2005 and at the time of writing it seems unlikely that there will be another. By around 2007, GNU/Linux distributions started to use GRUB 2 to limited extents, and by the end of 2009 multiple major distributions were installing it by default. 1.3 Differences from previous versionsGRUB 2 is a rewrite of GRUB (see ), although it shares many characteristics with the previous version, now known as GRUB Legacy. Users of GRUB Legacy may need some guidance to find their way around this new version.
1.4 GRUB featuresThe primary requirement for GRUB is that it be compliant with the Multiboot Specification, which is described in in The Multiboot Specification. The other goals, listed in approximate order of importance, are:
Except for specific compatibility modes (chain-loading and the Linux piggyback format), all kernels will be started in much the same state as in the Multiboot Specification. Only kernels loaded at 1 megabyte or above are presently supported. Any attempt to load below that boundary will simply result in immediate failure and an error message reporting the problem. In addition to the requirements above, GRUB has the following features (note that the Multiboot Specification doesn’t require all the features that GRUB supports): Recognize multiple executable formats Support many of the a.out variants plus ELF. Symbol tables are also loaded. Support non-Multiboot kernels Support many of the various free 32-bit kernels that lack Multiboot compliance (primarily FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and Linux). Chain-loading of other boot loaders is also supported. Load multiples modules Fully support the Multiboot feature of loading multiple modules. Load a configuration file Support a human-readable text configuration file with preset boot commands. You can also load another configuration file dynamically and embed a preset configuration file in a GRUB image file. The list of commands (see ) are a superset of those supported on the command-line. An example configuration file is provided in . Provide a menu interface A menu interface listing preset boot commands, with a programmable timeout, is available. There is no fixed limit on the number of boot entries, and the current implementation has space for several hundred. Have a flexible command-line interface A fairly flexible command-line interface, accessible from the menu, is available to edit any preset commands, or write a new boot command set from scratch. If no configuration file is present, GRUB drops to the command-line. The list of commands (see ) are a subset of those supported for configuration files. Editing commands closely resembles the Bash command-line (see in Bash Features), with TAB-completion of commands, devices, partitions, and files in a directory depending on context. Support multiple filesystem types Support multiple filesystem types transparently, plus a useful explicit blocklist notation. The currently supported filesystem types are Amiga Fast FileSystem (AFFS), AtheOS fs, BeFS, BtrFS (including raid0, raid1, raid10, gzip and lzo), cpio (little- and big-endian bin, odc and newc variants), Linux ext2/ext3/ext4, DOS FAT12/FAT16/FAT32, exFAT, F2FS, HFS, HFS+, ISO9660 (including Joliet, Rock-ridge and multi-chunk files), JFS, Minix fs (versions 1, 2 and 3), nilfs2, NTFS (including compression), ReiserFS, ROMFS, Amiga Smart FileSystem (SFS), Squash4, tar, UDF, BSD UFS/UFS2, XFS, and ZFS (including lzjb, gzip, zle, mirror, stripe, raidz1/2/3 and encryption in AES-CCM and AES-GCM). See , for more information. Support automatic decompression Can decompress files which were compressed by grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi0 or grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi1. This function is both automatic and transparent to the user (i.e. all functions operate upon the uncompressed contents of the specified files). This greatly reduces a file size and loading time, a particularly great benefit for floppies. It is conceivable that some kernel modules should be loaded in a compressed state, so a different module-loading command can be specified to avoid uncompressing the modules. Access data on any installed device Support reading data from any or all floppies or hard disk(s) recognized by the BIOS, independent of the setting of the root device. Be independent of drive geometry translations Unlike many other boot loaders, GRUB makes the particular drive translation irrelevant. A drive installed and running with one translation may be converted to another translation without any adverse effects or changes in GRUB’s configuration. Detect all installed RAM GRUB can generally find all the installed RAM on a PC-compatible machine. It uses an advanced BIOS query technique for finding all memory regions. As described on the Multiboot Specification (see in The Multiboot Specification), not all kernels make use of this information, but GRUB provides it for those who do. Support Logical Block Address mode In traditional disk calls (called CHS mode), there is a geometry translation problem, that is, the BIOS cannot access over 1024 cylinders, so the accessible space is limited to at least 508 MB and to at most 8GB. GRUB can’t universally solve this problem, as there is no standard interface used in all machines. However, several newer machines have the new interface, Logical Block Address (LBA) mode. GRUB automatically detects if LBA mode is available and uses it if available. In LBA mode, GRUB can access the entire disk. Support network booting GRUB is basically a disk-based boot loader but also has network support. You can load OS images from a network by using the TFTP protocol. Support remote terminals To support computers with no console, GRUB provides remote terminal support, so that you can control GRUB from a remote host. Only serial terminal support is implemented at the moment. 1.5 The role of a boot loaderThe following is a quotation from Gordon Matzigkeit, a GRUB fanatic: Some people like to acknowledge both the operating system and kernel when they talk about their computers, so they might say they use “GNU/Linux” or “GNU/Hurd”. Other people seem to think that the kernel is the most important part of the system, so they like to call their GNU operating systems “Linux systems.” We, the GRUB maintainers, do not (usually) encourage Gordon’s level of fanaticism, but it helps to remember that boot loaders deserve recognition. We hope that you enjoy using GNU GRUB as much as we did writing it. 2 Naming conventionThe device syntax used in GRUB is a wee bit different from what you may have seen before in your operating system(s), and you need to know it so that you can specify a drive/partition. Look at the following examples and explanations: First of all, GRUB requires that the device name be enclosed with ‘(’ and ‘)’. The ‘fd’ part means that it is a floppy disk. The number ‘0’ is the drive number, which is counted from zero. This expression means that GRUB will use the whole floppy disk. Here, ‘hd’ means it is a hard disk drive. The first integer ‘0’ indicates the drive number, that is, the first hard disk, the string ‘msdos’ indicates the partition scheme, while the second integer, ‘2’, indicates the partition number (or the PC slice number in the BSD terminology). The partition numbers are counted from one, not from zero (as was the case in previous versions of GRUB). This expression means the second partition of the first hard disk drive. In this case, GRUB uses one partition of the disk, instead of the whole disk. This specifies the first extended partition of the first hard disk drive. Note that the partition numbers for extended partitions are counted from ‘5’, regardless of the actual number of primary partitions on your hard disk. This means the BSD ‘a’ partition on first PC slice number of the second hard disk. Of course, to actually access the disks or partitions with GRUB, you need to use the device specification in a command, like ‘set root=(fd0)’ or ‘parttool (hd0,msdos3) hidden-’. To help you find out which number specifies a partition you want, the GRUB command-line (see ) options have argument completion. This means that, for example, you only need to type followed by a TAB, and GRUB will display the list of drives, partitions, or file names. So it should be quite easy to determine the name of your target partition, even with minimal knowledge of the syntax. Note that GRUB does not distinguish IDE from SCSI - it simply counts the drive numbers from zero, regardless of their type. Normally, any IDE drive number is less than any SCSI drive number, although that is not true if you change the boot sequence by swapping IDE and SCSI drives in your BIOS. Now the question is, how to specify a file? Again, consider an example: This specifies the file named ‘vmlinuz’, found on the first partition of the first hard disk drive. Note that the argument completion works with file names, too. That was easy, admit it. Now read the next chapter, to find out how to actually install GRUB on your drive. 3 OS-specific notes about grub toolsOn OS which have device nodes similar to Unix-like OS GRUB tools use the OS name. E.g. for GNU/Linux: On AROS we use another syntax. For volumes: E.g. For disks we use syntax: //: E.g. grub-install //:ata.device/0/0On Windows we use UNC path. For volumes it’s typically \?\Volume{ E.g. \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: For disks it’s \?\PhysicalDrive E.g. grub-install \?\PhysicalDrive0Beware that you may need to further escape the backslashes depending on your shell. When compiled with cygwin support then cygwin drive names are automatically when needed. E.g. 4 InstallationIn order to install GRUB as your boot loader, you need to first install the GRUB system and utilities under your UNIX-like operating system (see ). You can do this either from the source tarball, or as a package for your OS. After you have done that, you need to install the boot loader on a drive (floppy or hard disk) by using the utility grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi2 (see ) on a UNIX-like OS. GRUB comes with boot images, which are normally put in the directory /usr/lib/grub/ 4.1 Installing GRUB using grub-installFor information on where GRUB should be installed on PC BIOS platforms, see . In order to install GRUB under a UNIX-like OS (such as GNU), invoke the program grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi2 (see ) as the superuser (root). The usage is basically very simple. You only need to specify one argument to the program, namely, where to install the boot loader. The argument has to be either a device file (like ‘/dev/hda’). For example, under Linux the following will install GRUB into the MBR of the first IDE disk: Likewise, under GNU/Hurd, this has the same effect: But all the above examples assume that GRUB should put images under the /boot directory. If you want GRUB to put images under a directory other than /boot, you need to specify the option --boot-directory. The typical usage is that you create a GRUB boot floppy with a filesystem. Here is an example: mke2fs /dev/fd0mount -t ext2 /dev/fd0 /mntmkdir /mnt/bootgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/boot /dev/fd0umount /mntSome BIOSes have a bug of exposing the first partition of a USB drive as a floppy instead of exposing the USB drive as a hard disk (they call it “USB-FDD” boot). In such cases, you need to install like this: losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop0This install doesn’t conflict with standard install as long as they are in separate directories. On EFI systems for fixed disk install you have to mount EFI System Partition. If you mount it at /boot/efi then you don’t need any special arguments: Otherwise you need to specify where your EFI System partition is mounted: grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efiFor removable installs you have to use --removable and specify both --boot-directory and --efi-directory: grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable4.2 Making a GRUB bootable CD-ROMGRUB supports the no emulation mode in the El Torito specification. This means that you can use the whole CD-ROM from GRUB and you don’t have to make a floppy or hard disk image file, which can cause compatibility problems. For booting from a CD-ROM, GRUB uses a special image called cdboot.img, which is concatenated with core.img. The core.img used for this should be built with at least the ‘iso9660’ and ‘biosdisk’ modules. Your bootable CD-ROM will usually also need to include a configuration file grub.cfg and some other GRUB modules. To make a simple generic GRUB rescue CD, you can use the grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi4 program (see ): grub-install //:ata.device/0/00 You will often need to include other files in your image. To do this, first make a top directory for the bootable image, say, ‘iso’: Make a directory for GRUB: If desired, make the config file grub.cfg under iso/boot/grub (see ), and copy any files and directories for the disc to the directory iso/. Finally, make the image: grub-install //:ata.device/0/01 This produces a file named grub.iso, which then can be burned into a CD (or a DVD), or written to a USB mass storage device. The root device will be set up appropriately on entering your grub.cfg configuration file, so you can refer to file names on the CD without needing to use an explicit device name. This makes it easier to produce rescue images that will work on both optical drives and USB mass storage devices. 4.3 The map between BIOS drives and OS devicesIf the device map file exists, the GRUB utilities ( grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi5, etc.) read it to map BIOS drives to OS devices. This file consists of lines like this: device is a drive specified in the GRUB syntax (see ), and file is an OS file, which is normally a device file. Historically, the device map file was used because GRUB device names had to be used in the configuration file, and they were derived from BIOS drive numbers. The map between BIOS drives and OS devices cannot always be guessed correctly: for example, GRUB will get the order wrong if you exchange the boot sequence between IDE and SCSI in your BIOS. Unfortunately, even OS device names are not always stable. Modern versions of the Linux kernel may probe drives in a different order from boot to boot, and the prefix (/dev/hd* versus /dev/sd*) may change depending on the driver subsystem in use. As a result, the device map file required frequent editing on some systems. GRUB avoids this problem nowadays by using UUIDs or file system labels when generating grub.cfg, and we advise that you do the same for any custom menu entries you write. If the device map file does not exist, then the GRUB utilities will assume a temporary device map on the fly. This is often good enough, particularly in the common case of single-disk systems. However, the device map file is not entirely obsolete yet, and it is used for overriding when current environment is different from the one on boot. Most common case is if you use a partition or logical volume as a disk for virtual machine. You can put any comments in the file if needed, as the GRUB utilities assume that a line is just a comment if the first character is ‘#’. 4.4 BIOS installationMBRThe partition table format traditionally used on PC BIOS platforms is called the Master Boot Record (MBR) format; this is the format that allows up to four primary partitions and additional logical partitions. With this partition table format, there are two ways to install GRUB: it can be embedded in the area between the MBR and the first partition (called by various names, such as the "boot track", "MBR gap", or "embedding area", and which is usually at least 1000 KiB), or the core image can be installed in a file system and a list of the blocks that make it up can be stored in the first sector of that partition. Modern tools usually leave MBR gap of at least 1023 KiB. This amount is sufficient to cover most configurations. Hence this value is recommended by the GRUB team. Historically many tools left only 31 KiB of space. This is not enough to parse reliably difficult structures like Btrfs, ZFS, RAID or LVM, or to use difficult disk access methods like ahci. Hence GRUB will warn if attempted to install into small MBR gap except in a small number of configurations that were grandfathered. The grandfathered config must:
MBR gap has few technical problems. There is no way to reserve space in the embedding area with complete safety, and some proprietary software is known to use it to make it difficult for users to work around licensing restrictions. GRUB works around it by detecting sectors by other software and avoiding them and protecting its own sectors using Reed-Solomon encoding. GRUB team recommends having MBR gap of at least 1000 KiB. Should it not be possible, GRUB has support for a fallback solution which is heavily recommended against. Installing to a filesystem means that GRUB is vulnerable to its blocks being moved around by filesystem features such as tail packing, or even by aggressive fsck implementations, so this approach is quite fragile; and this approach can only be used if the /boot filesystem is on the same disk that the BIOS boots from, so that GRUB does not have to rely on guessing BIOS drive numbers. The GRUB development team generally recommends embedding GRUB before the first partition, unless you have special requirements. You must ensure that the first partition starts at least 1000 KiB (2000 sectors) from the start of the disk; on modern disks, it is often a performance advantage to align partitions on larger boundaries anyway, so the first partition might start 1 MiB from the start of the disk. GPTSome newer systems use the GUID Partition Table (GPT) format. This was specified as part of the Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI), but it can also be used on BIOS platforms if system software supports it; for example, GRUB and GNU/Linux can be used in this configuration. With this format, it is possible to reserve a whole partition for GRUB, called the BIOS Boot Partition. GRUB can then be embedded into that partition without the risk of being overwritten by other software and without being contained in a filesystem which might move its blocks around. When creating a BIOS Boot Partition on a GPT system, you should make sure that it is at least 31 KiB in size. (GPT-formatted disks are not usually particularly small, so we recommend that you make it larger than the bare minimum, such as 1 MiB, to allow plenty of room for growth.) You must also make sure that it has the proper partition type. Using GNU Parted, you can set this using a command such as the following: grub-install //:ata.device/0/02 If you are using gdisk, set the partition type to ‘0xEF02’. With partitioning programs that require setting the GUID directly, it should be ‘21686148-6449-6e6f-744e656564454649’. Caution: Be very careful which partition you select! When GRUB finds a BIOS Boot Partition during installation, it will automatically overwrite part of it. Make sure that the partition does not contain any other data. 5 BootingGRUB can load Multiboot-compliant kernels in a consistent way, but for some free operating systems you need to use some OS-specific magic. 5.1 How to boot operating systemsGRUB has three distinct boot methods: loading an operating system directly, using kexec from userspace, and chainloading another bootloader. Generally speaking, the first two are more desirable because you don’t need to install or maintain other boot loaders and GRUB is flexible enough to load an operating system from an arbitrary disk/partition. However, chainloading is sometimes required, as GRUB doesn’t support all existing operating systems natively. 5.1.1 How to boot an OS directly with GRUBMultiboot (see in The Multiboot Specification) is the native format supported by GRUB. For the sake of convenience, there is also support for Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD. If you want to boot other operating systems, you will have to chain-load them (see ). FIXME: this section is incomplete.
However, DOS and Windows have some deficiencies, so you might have to use more complicated instructions. See , for more information. 5.1.2 Kexec with grub2-emuGRUB can be run in userspace by invoking the grub2-emu tool. It will read all configuration scripts as if booting directly (see ). With the grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi7 flag, and kexec(8) support from the operating system, the grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi8 command will directly boot the target image. For systems that lack working systemctl(1) support for kexec, passing the grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi7 flag twice will fallback to invoking kexec(8) directly; note however that this fallback may be unsafe outside read-only environments, as it does not invoke shutdown machinery. 5.1.3 Chain-loading an OSOperating systems that do not support Multiboot and do not have specific support in GRUB (specific support is available for Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD) must be chain-loaded, which involves loading another boot loader and jumping to it in real mode or via the firmware. The grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable0 command (see ) is used to set this up. It is normally also necessary to load some GRUB modules and set the appropriate root device. Putting this together, we get something like this, for a Windows system on the first partition of the first hard disk: grub-install //:ata.device/0/03 On systems with multiple hard disks, an additional workaround may be required. See . Chain-loading is only supported on PC BIOS and EFI platforms. 5.2 Loopback bootingGRUB is able to read from an image (be it one of CD or HDD) stored on any of its accessible storages (refer to see command). However the OS itself should be able to find its root. This usually involves running a userspace program running before the real root is discovered. This is achieved by GRUB loading a specially made small image and passing it as ramdisk to the kernel. This is achieved by commands grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable1, grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable2, grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable3, grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable4 (see ), grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable5 (see ), grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable6, grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable7 or grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable8 depending on the loader. Note that for knetbsd the image must be put inside miniroot.kmod and the whole miniroot.kmod has to be loaded. In kopenbsd payload this is disabled by default. Additionally, behaviour of initial ramdisk depends on command line options. Several distributors provide the image for this purpose or it’s integrated in their standard ramdisk and activated by special option. Consult your kernel and distribution manual for more details. Other loaders like grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable9, grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/usb --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/boot --removable0 (BIOS, EFI, coreboot), grub-install //:ata.device/0/001, grub-install //:ata.device/0/002, grub-install //:ata.device/0/003 and grub-install //:ata.device/0/004 provide no possibility of loading initial ramdisk and as far as author is aware the payloads in question don’t support either initial ramdisk or discovering loopback boot in other way and as such not bootable this way. Please consider alternative boot methods like copying all files from the image to actual partition. Consult your OS documentation for more details. 5.3 Booting from LVM cache logical volumeThe LVM cache logical volume is the logical volume consisting of the original and the cache pool logical volume. The original is usually on a larger and slower storage device while the cache pool is on a smaller and faster one. The performance of the original volume can be improved by storing the frequently used data on the cache pool to utilize the greater performance of faster device. GRUB boots from LVM cache logical volume merely by reading it’s original logical volume so that dirty data in cache pool volume is disregarded. This is not a problem for "writethrough" cache mode as it ensures that any data written will be stored both on the cache and the origin LV. For the other cache mode "writeback", which delays writing from the cache pool back to the origin LV to boost performance, GRUB may fail to boot in the wake of accidental power outage due to it’s inability to assemble the cache device for reading the required dirty data left behind. The situation will be improved after adding full support to the LVM cache logical volume in the future. 5.4 Some caveats on OS-specific issuesHere, we describe some caveats on several operating systems. 5.4.1 GNU/HurdSince GNU/Hurd is Multiboot-compliant, it is easy to boot it; there is nothing special about it. But do not forget that you have to specify a root partition to the kernel.
5.4.2 GNU/LinuxIt is relatively easy to boot GNU/Linux from GRUB, because it somewhat resembles to boot a Multiboot-compliant OS.
5.4.3 NetBSDBooting a NetBSD kernel from GRUB is also relatively easy: first set GRUB’s root device, then load the kernel and the modules, and finally run grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi6.
5.4.4 DOS/WindowsGRUB cannot boot DOS or Windows directly, so you must chain-load them (see ). However, their boot loaders have some critical deficiencies, so it may not work to just chain-load them. To overcome the problems, GRUB provides you with two helper functions. If you have installed DOS (or Windows) on a non-first hard disk, you have to use the disk swapping technique, because that OS cannot boot from any disks but the first one. The workaround used in GRUB is the command grub-install //:ata.device/0/021 (see ), like this: This performs a virtual swap between your first and second hard drive. Caution: This is effective only if DOS (or Windows) uses BIOS to access the swapped disks. If that OS uses a special driver for the disks, this probably won’t work. Another problem arises if you installed more than one set of DOS/Windows onto one disk, because they could be confused if there are more than one primary partitions for DOS/Windows. Certainly you should avoid doing this, but there is a solution if you do want to do so. Use the partition hiding/unhiding technique. If GRUB hides a DOS (or Windows) partition (see ), DOS (or Windows) will ignore the partition. If GRUB unhides a DOS (or Windows) partition, DOS (or Windows) will detect the partition. Thus, if you have installed DOS (or Windows) on the first and the second partition of the first hard disk, and you want to boot the copy on the first partition, do the following: \?\Volume{ 2 6 Writing your own configuration fileGRUB is configured using grub.cfg, usually located under /boot/grub. This file is quite flexible, but most users will not need to write the whole thing by hand. 6.1 Simple configuration handlingThe program losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 (see ) generates grub.cfg files suitable for most cases. It is suitable for use when upgrading a distribution, and will discover available kernels and attempt to generate menu entries for them. losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 does have some limitations. While adding extra custom menu entries to the end of the list can be done by editing /etc/grub.d/40_custom or creating /boot/grub/custom.cfg, changing the order of menu entries or changing their titles may require making complex changes to shell scripts stored in /etc/grub.d/. This may be improved in the future. In the meantime, those who feel that it would be easier to write grub.cfg directly are encouraged to do so (see , and ), and to disable any system provided by their distribution to automatically run losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06. The file /etc/default/grub controls the operation of losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06. It is sourced by a shell script, and so must be valid POSIX shell input; normally, it will just be a sequence of ‘KEY=value’ lines, but if the value contains spaces or other special characters then it must be quoted. For example: \?\Volume{ 3 Valid keys in /etc/default/grub are as follows: ‘GRUB_DEFAULT’ The default menu entry. This may be a number, in which case it identifies the Nth entry in the generated menu counted from zero, or the title of a menu entry, or the special string ‘saved’. Using the id may be useful if you want to set a menu entry as the default even though there may be a variable number of entries before it. For example, if you have: \?\Volume{ 4 then you can make this the default using: \?\Volume{ 5 Previously it was documented the way to use entry title. While this still works it’s not recommended since titles often contain unstable device names and may be translated If you set this to ‘saved’, then the default menu entry will be that saved by ‘GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT’ or grub-install //:ata.device/0/026. This relies on the environment block, which may not be available in all situations (see ). The default is ‘0’. ‘GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT’ If this option is set to ‘true’, then, when an entry is selected, save it as a new default entry for use by future runs of GRUB. This is only useful if ‘GRUB_DEFAULT=saved’; it is a separate option because ‘GRUB_DEFAULT=saved’ is useful without this option, in conjunction with grub-install //:ata.device/0/026. Unset by default. This option relies on the environment block, which may not be available in all situations (see ). ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT’ Boot the default entry this many seconds after the menu is displayed, unless a key is pressed. The default is ‘5’. Set to ‘0’ to boot immediately without displaying the menu, or to ‘-1’ to wait indefinitely. If ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE’ is set to ‘countdown’ or ‘hidden’, the timeout is instead counted before the menu is displayed. ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE’ If this option is unset or set to ‘menu’, then GRUB will display the menu and then wait for the timeout set by ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT’ to expire before booting the default entry. Pressing a key interrupts the timeout. If this option is set to ‘countdown’ or ‘hidden’, then, before displaying the menu, GRUB will wait for the timeout set by ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT’ to expire. If ESC or F4 are pressed, or SHIFT is held down during that time, it will display the menu and wait for input. If a hotkey associated with a menu entry is pressed, it will boot the associated menu entry immediately. If the timeout expires before either of these happens, it will boot the default entry. In the ‘countdown’ case, it will show a one-line indication of the remaining time. ‘GRUB_DEFAULT_BUTTON’ ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_BUTTON’ ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE_BUTTON’ ‘GRUB_BUTTON_CMOS_ADDRESS’ Variants of the corresponding variables without the ‘_BUTTON’ suffix, used to support vendor-specific power buttons. See . ‘GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR’ Set by distributors of GRUB to their identifying name. This is used to generate more informative menu entry titles. ‘GRUB_TERMINAL_INPUT’ Select the terminal input device. You may select multiple devices here, separated by spaces. Valid terminal input names depend on the platform, but may include ‘console’ (native platform console), ‘serial’ (serial terminal), ‘serial_ The default is to use the platform’s native terminal input. ‘GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT’ Select the terminal output device. You may select multiple devices here, separated by spaces. Valid terminal output names depend on the platform, but may include ‘console’ (native platform console), ‘serial’ (serial terminal), ‘serial_ ‘spkmodem’ is useful when no serial port is available. Connect the output of sending system (where GRUB is running) to line-in of receiving system (usually developer machine). On receiving system compile ‘spkmodem-recv’ from ‘util/spkmodem-recv.c’ and run: \?\Volume{ 6 The default is to use the platform’s native terminal output. ‘GRUB_TERMINAL’ If this option is set, it overrides both ‘GRUB_TERMINAL_INPUT’ and ‘GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT’ to the same value. ‘GRUB_SERIAL_COMMAND’ A command to configure the serial port when using the serial console. See . Defaults to ‘serial’. ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX’ Command-line arguments to add to menu entries for the Linux kernel. ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT’ Unless ‘GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY’ is set to ‘true’, two menu entries will be generated for each Linux kernel: one default entry and one entry for recovery mode. This option lists command-line arguments to add only to the default menu entry, after those listed in ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX’. ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_RECOVERY’ Unless ‘GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY’ is set to ‘true’, two menu entries will be generated for each Linux kernel: one default entry and one entry for recovery mode. This option lists command-line arguments to add only to the recovery menu entry, before those listed in ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX’. The default is ‘single’. ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_NETBSD’ ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_NETBSD_DEFAULT’ As ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX’ and ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT’, but for NetBSD. ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_GNUMACH’ As ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX’, but for GNU Mach. ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_XEN’ ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_XEN_DEFAULT’ The values of these options are passed to Xen hypervisor Xen menu entries, for all respectively normal entries. ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_XEN_REPLACE’ ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_XEN_REPLACE_DEFAULT’ The values of these options replace the values of ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX’ and ‘GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT’ for Linux and Xen menu entries. ‘GRUB_TOP_LEVEL’ ‘GRUB_TOP_LEVEL_XEN’ This option should be an absolute path to a kernel image. If provided, the image specified will be made the top-level entry if it is found in the scan. ‘GRUB_TOP_LEVEL_OS_PROBER’ This option should be a line of output from grub-install //:ata.device/0/028. As ‘GRUB_TOP_LEVEL’, if provided, the image specified will be made the top-level entry if it is found in the scan. ‘GRUB_EARLY_INITRD_LINUX_CUSTOM’ ‘GRUB_EARLY_INITRD_LINUX_STOCK’ List of space-separated early initrd images to be loaded from ‘/boot’. This is for loading things like CPU microcode, firmware, ACPI tables, crypto keys, and so on. These early images will be loaded in the order declared, and all will be loaded before the actual functional initrd image. ‘GRUB_EARLY_INITRD_LINUX_STOCK’ is for your distribution to declare images that are provided by the distribution. It should not be modified without understanding the consequences. They will be loaded first. ‘GRUB_EARLY_INITRD_LINUX_CUSTOM’ is for your custom created images. The default stock images are as follows, though they may be overridden by your distribution: \?\Volume{ 7 ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID’ Normally, losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 will generate menu entries that use universally-unique identifiers (UUIDs) to identify the root filesystem to the Linux kernel, using a ‘root=UUID=...’ kernel parameter. This is usually more reliable, but in some cases it may not be appropriate. To disable the use of UUIDs, set this option to ‘true’. ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_PARTUUID’ If losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 cannot identify the root filesystem via its universally-unique indentifier (UUID), losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 can use the UUID of the partition containing the filesystem to identify the root filesystem to the Linux kernel via a ‘root=PARTUUID=...’ kernel parameter. This is not as reliable as using the filesystem UUID, but is more reliable than using the Linux device names. When ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_PARTUUID’ is set to ‘false’, the Linux kernel version must be 2.6.37 (3.10 for systems using the MSDOS partition scheme) or newer. This option defaults to ‘true’. To enable the use of partition UUIDs, set this option to ‘false’. ‘GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY’ If this option is set to ‘true’, disable the generation of recovery mode menu entries. ‘GRUB_DISABLE_UUID’ Normally, losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 will generate menu entries that use universally-unique identifiers (UUIDs) to identify various filesystems to search for files. This is usually more reliable, but in some cases it may not be appropriate. To disable this use of UUIDs, set this option to ‘true’. Setting this option to ‘true’, will also set the options ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID’ and ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_PARTUUID’ to ‘true’, unless they have been explicilty set to ‘false’. ‘GRUB_VIDEO_BACKEND’ If graphical video support is required, either because the ‘gfxterm’ graphical terminal is in use or because ‘GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX’ is set, then losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 will normally load all available GRUB video drivers and use the one most appropriate for your hardware. If you need to override this for some reason, then you can set this option. After grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi2 has been run, the available video drivers are listed in /boot/grub/video.lst. ‘GRUB_GFXMODE’ Set the resolution used on the ‘gfxterm’ graphical terminal. Note that you can only use modes which your graphics card supports via VESA BIOS Extensions (VBE), so for example native LCD panel resolutions may not be available. The default is ‘auto’, which tries to select a preferred resolution. See . ‘GRUB_BACKGROUND’ Set a background image for use with the ‘gfxterm’ graphical terminal. The value of this option must be a file readable by GRUB at boot time, and it must end with .png, .tga, .jpg, or .jpeg. The image will be scaled if necessary to fit the screen. Image height and width will be restricted by an artificial limit of 16384. ‘GRUB_THEME’ Set a theme for use with the ‘gfxterm’ graphical terminal. ‘GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX’ Set to ‘text’ to force the Linux kernel to boot in normal text mode, ‘keep’ to preserve the graphics mode set using ‘GRUB_GFXMODE’, ‘widthxheight’[‘xdepth’] to set a particular graphics mode, or a sequence of these separated by commas or semicolons to try several modes in sequence. See . Depending on your kernel, your distribution, your graphics card, and the phase of the moon, note that using this option may cause GNU/Linux to suffer from various display problems, particularly during the early part of the boot sequence. If you have problems, set this option to ‘text’ and GRUB will tell Linux to boot in normal text mode. ‘GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER’ The losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 has a feature to use the external grub-install //:ata.device/0/028 program to discover other operating systems installed on the same machine and generate appropriate menu entries for them. It is disabled by default since automatic and silent execution of grub-install //:ata.device/0/028, and creating boot entries based on that data, is a potential attack vector. Set this option to ‘false’ to enable this feature in the losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 command. ‘GRUB_OS_PROBER_SKIP_LIST’ List of space-separated FS UUIDs of filesystems to be ignored from os-prober output. For efi chainloaders it’s ‘GRUB_DISABLE_SUBMENU’ Normally, losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 will generate top level menu entry for the kernel with highest version number and put all other found kernels or alternative menu entries for recovery mode in submenu. For entries returned by grub-install //:ata.device/0/028 first entry will be put on top level and all others in submenu. If this option is set to ‘true’, flat menu with all entries on top level will be generated instead. Changing this option will require changing existing values of ‘GRUB_DEFAULT’, ‘fallback’ (see ) and ‘default’ (see ) environment variables as well as saved default entry using grub-install //:ata.device/0/026 and value used with grub-install //:ata.device/0/042. ‘GRUB_ENABLE_CRYPTODISK’ If set to ‘y’, losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 and grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi2 will check for encrypted disks and generate additional commands needed to access them during boot. Note that in this case unattended boot is not possible because GRUB will wait for passphrase to unlock encrypted container. ‘GRUB_INIT_TUNE’ Play a tune on the speaker when GRUB starts. This is particularly useful for users unable to see the screen. The value of this option is passed directly to . ‘GRUB_BADRAM’ If this option is set, GRUB will issue a command to filter out specified regions of RAM. ‘GRUB_PRELOAD_MODULES’ This option may be set to a list of GRUB module names separated by spaces. Each module will be loaded as early as possible, at the start of grub.cfg. The following options are still accepted for compatibility with existing configurations, but have better replacements: ‘GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT’ Wait this many seconds before displaying the menu. If ESC or F4 are pressed, or SHIFT is held down during that time, display the menu and wait for input according to ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT’. If a hotkey associated with a menu entry is pressed, boot the associated menu entry immediately. If the timeout expires before either of these happens, display the menu for the number of seconds specified in ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT’ before booting the default entry. If you set ‘GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT’, you should also set ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT=0’ so that the menu is not displayed at all unless ESC or F4 are pressed, or SHIFT is held down. This option is unset by default, and is deprecated in favour of the less confusing ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=countdown’ or ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden’. ‘GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_QUIET’ In conjunction with ‘GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT’, set this to ‘true’ to suppress the verbose countdown while waiting for a key to be pressed before displaying the menu. This option is unset by default, and is deprecated in favour of the less confusing ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=countdown’. ‘GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_BUTTON’ Variant of ‘GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT’, used to support vendor-specific power buttons. See . This option is unset by default, and is deprecated in favour of the less confusing ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=countdown’ or ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden’. For more detailed customisation of losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06’s output, you may edit the scripts in /etc/grub.d directly. /etc/grub.d/40_custom is particularly useful for adding entire custom menu entries; simply type the menu entries you want to add at the end of that file, making sure to leave at least the first two lines intact. 6.2 Root Identifcation HeuristicsIf the target operating system uses the Linux kernel, losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 attempts to identify the root file system via a heuristic algoirthm. This algorithm selects the identification method of the root file system by considering three factors. The first is if an initrd for the target operating system is also present. The second is ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID’ and if set to ‘true’, prevents losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 from identifying the root file system by its UUID. The third is ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_PARTUUID’ and if set to ‘true’, prevents losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 from identifying the root file system via the UUID of its enclosing partition. If the variables are assigned any other value, that value is considered equivalent to ‘false’. The variables are also considered to be set to ‘false’ if they are not set. When booting, the Linux kernel will delegate the task of mounting the root filesystem to the initrd. Most initrd images determine the root file system by checking the Linux kernel’s command-line for the ‘root’ key and use its value as the identification method of the root file system. To improve the reliability of booting, most initrd images also allow the root file system to be identified by its UUID. Because of this behavior, the losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 command will set ‘root’ to ‘root=UUID=...’ to provide the initrd with the filesystem UUID of the root file system. If no initrd is detected or ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID’ is set to ‘true’ then grub-install //:ata.device/0/050 will identify the root filesystem by setting the kernel command-line variable ‘root’ to ‘root=PARTUUID=...’ unless ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_PARTUUID’ is also set to ‘true’. If ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_PARTUUID’ is also set to ‘true’, grub-install //:ata.device/0/050 will identify by its Linux device name. The following table summarizes the behavior of the losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 command. Initrd detectedGRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_PARTUUID Set ToGRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID Set ToLinux Root ID Method falsefalsefalsepart UUID falsefalsetruepart UUID falsetruefalsedev name falsetruetruedev name truefalsefalsefs UUID truefalsetruepart UUID truetruefalsefs UUID truetruetruedev name Remember, ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_PARTUUID’ and ‘GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID’ are also considered to be set to ‘true’ and ‘false’, respectively, when they are unset. 6.3 Writing full configuration files directlygrub.cfg is written in GRUB’s built-in scripting language, which has a syntax quite similar to that of GNU Bash and other Bourne shell derivatives. WordsA word is a sequence of characters considered as a single unit by GRUB. Words are separated by metacharacters, which are the following plus space, tab, and newline: Quoting may be used to include metacharacters in words; see below. Reserved wordsReserved words have a special meaning to GRUB. The following words are recognised as reserved when unquoted and either the first word of a simple command or the third word of a grub-install //:ata.device/0/053 command: \?\Volume{ 8 Not all of these reserved words have a useful purpose yet; some are reserved for future expansion. QuotingQuoting is used to remove the special meaning of certain characters or words. It can be used to treat metacharacters as part of a word, to prevent reserved words from being recognised as such, and to prevent variable expansion. There are three quoting mechanisms: the escape character, single quotes, and double quotes. A non-quoted backslash (\) is the escape character. It preserves the literal value of the next character that follows, with the exception of newline. Enclosing characters in single quotes preserves the literal value of each character within the quotes. A single quote may not occur between single quotes, even when preceded by a backslash. Enclosing characters in double quotes preserves the literal value of all characters within the quotes, with the exception of ‘$’ and ‘\’. The ‘$’ character retains its special meaning within double quotes. The backslash retains its special meaning only when followed by one of the following characters: ‘$’, ‘"’, ‘\’, or newline. A backslash-newline pair is treated as a line continuation (that is, it is removed from the input stream and effectively ignored). A double quote may be quoted within double quotes by preceding it with a backslash. Variable expansionThe ‘$’ character introduces variable expansion. The variable name to be expanded may be enclosed in braces, which are optional but serve to protect the variable to be expanded from characters immediately following it which could be interpreted as part of the name. Normal variable names begin with an alphabetic character, followed by zero or more alphanumeric characters. These names refer to entries in the GRUB environment (see ). Positional variable names consist of one or more digits. They represent parameters passed to function calls, with ‘$1’ representing the first parameter, and so on. The special variable name ‘?’ expands to the exit status of the most recently executed command. When positional variable names are active, other special variable names ‘@’, ‘*’ and ‘#’ are defined and they expand to all positional parameters with necessary quoting, positional parameters without any quoting, and positional parameter count respectively. CommentsA word beginning with ‘#’ causes that word and all remaining characters on that line to be ignored. Simple commandsA simple command is a sequence of words separated by spaces or tabs and terminated by a semicolon or a newline. The first word specifies the command to be executed. The remaining words are passed as arguments to the invoked command. The return value of a simple command is its exit status. If the reserved word grub-install //:ata.device/0/054 precedes the command, then the return value is instead the logical negation of the command’s exit status. Compound commandsA compound command is one of the following: for name in word …; do list; done The list of words following grub-install //:ata.device/0/055 is expanded, generating a list of items. The variable name is set to each element of this list in turn, and list is executed each time. The return value is the exit status of the last command that executes. If the expansion of the items following grub-install //:ata.device/0/055 results in an empty list, no commands are executed, and the return status is 0. if list; then list; [elif list; then list;] … [else list;] fi The grub-install //:ata.device/0/057 list is executed, where list is a series of simple commands separated by a ";". If its exit status of the last command is zero, the grub-install //:ata.device/0/058 list is executed. Otherwise, each grub-install //:ata.device/0/059 list is executed in turn, and if its last command’s exit status is zero, the corresponding grub-install //:ata.device/0/058 list is executed and the command completes. Otherwise, the grub-install //:ata.device/0/061 list is executed, if present. The exit status is the exit status of the last command executed, or zero if no condition tested true. while cond; do list; done until cond; do list; done The grub-install //:ata.device/0/062 command continuously executes the grub-install //:ata.device/0/063 list as long as the last command in cond returns an exit status of zero, where cond is a list of simple commands separated by a ";". The grub-install //:ata.device/0/064 command is identical to the grub-install //:ata.device/0/062 command, except that the test is negated; the grub-install //:ata.device/0/063 list is executed as long as the last command in cond returns a non-zero exit status. The exit status of the grub-install //:ata.device/0/062 and grub-install //:ata.device/0/064 commands is the exit status of the last grub-install //:ata.device/0/063 list command executed, or zero if none was executed. function name { command; … } This defines a function named name. The body of the function is the list of commands within braces, each of which must be terminated with a semicolon or a newline. This list of commands will be executed whenever name is specified as the name of a simple command. Function definitions do not affect the exit status in grub-install //:ata.device/0/070. When executed, the exit status of a function is the exit status of the last command executed in the body. menuentry title [--class=class …] [--users=users] [--unrestricted] [--hotkey=key] [--id=id] { command; … } See . Built-in CommandsSome built-in commands are also provided by GRUB script to help script writers perform actions that are otherwise not possible. For example, these include commands to jump out of a loop without fully completing it, etc. break [ grub-install //:ata.device/0/071] Exit from within a grub-install //:ata.device/0/053, grub-install //:ata.device/0/062, or grub-install //:ata.device/0/064 loop. If grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is specified, break grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 levels. grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 must be greater than or equal to 1. If grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is greater than the number of enclosing loops, all enclosing loops are exited. The return value is 0 unless grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is not greater than or equal to 1. continue [ grub-install //:ata.device/0/071] Resume the next iteration of the enclosing grub-install //:ata.device/0/053, grub-install //:ata.device/0/062 or grub-install //:ata.device/0/064 loop. If grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is specified, resume at the grub-install //:ata.device/0/071th enclosing loop. grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 must be greater than or equal to 1. If grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is greater than the number of enclosing loops, the last enclosing loop (the top-level loop) is resumed. The return value is 0 unless grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is not greater than or equal to 1. return [ grub-install //:ata.device/0/071] Causes a function to exit with the return value specified by grub-install //:ata.device/0/071. If grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is omitted, the return status is that of the last command executed in the function body. If used outside a function the return status is false. setparams [ grub-install //:ata.device/0/092] … Replace positional parameters starting with grub-install //:ata.device/0/093 with arguments to grub-install //:ata.device/0/094. shift [ grub-install //:ata.device/0/071] The positional parameters from grub-install //:ata.device/0/071+1 … are renamed to grub-install //:ata.device/0/093…. Parameters represented by the numbers grub-install //:ata.device/0/098 down to grub-install //:ata.device/0/098- grub-install //:ata.device/0/071+1 are unset. grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 must be a non-negative number less than or equal to grub-install //:ata.device/0/098. If grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is 0, no parameters are changed. If grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is not given, it is assumed to be 1. If grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is greater than grub-install //:ata.device/0/098, the positional parameters are not changed. The return status is greater than zero if grub-install //:ata.device/0/071 is greater than grub-install //:ata.device/0/098 or less than zero; otherwise 0. 6.4 Multi-boot manual configCurrently autogenerating config files for multi-boot environments depends on os-prober and has several shortcomings. Due to that it is disabled by default. It is advised to use the power of GRUB syntax and do it yourself. A possible configuration is detailed here, feel free to adjust to your needs. First create a separate GRUB partition, big enough to hold GRUB. Some of the following entries show how to load OS installer images from this same partition, for that you obviously need to make the partition large enough to hold those images as well. Mount this partition on/mnt/boot and disable GRUB in all OSes and manually install self-compiled latest GRUB with: \?\Volume{ 09 In all the OSes install GRUB tools but disable installing GRUB in bootsector, so you’ll have menu.lst and grub.cfg available for use. Also disable os-prober use by setting: \?\Volume{ 10 in /etc/default/grub Then write a grub.cfg (/mnt/boot/grub/grub.cfg): \?\Volume{ 9 Notes:
6.5 Embedding a configuration file into GRUBGRUB supports embedding a configuration file directly into the core image, so that it is loaded before entering normal mode. This is useful, for example, when it is not straightforward to find the real configuration file, or when you need to debug problems with loading that file. grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi2 uses this feature when it is not using BIOS disk functions or when installing to a different disk from the one containing /boot/grub, in which case it needs to use the \?\Volume{ 13 command (see ) to find /boot/grub. To embed a configuration file, use the -c option to \?\Volume{ 14. The file is copied into the core image, so it may reside anywhere on the file system, and may be removed after running \?\Volume{ 14. After the embedded configuration file (if any) is executed, GRUB will load the ‘normal’ module (see ), which will then read the real configuration file from $prefix/grub.cfg. By this point, the \?\Volume{ 16 variable will also have been set to the root device name. For example, \?\Volume{ 17 might be set to ‘(hd0,1)/boot/grub’, and \?\Volume{ 16 might be set to ‘hd0,1’. Thus, in most cases, the embedded configuration file only needs to set the \?\Volume{ 17 and \?\Volume{ 16 variables, and then drop through to GRUB’s normal processing. A typical example of this might look like this: \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: 0 (The ‘search_fs_uuid’ module must be included in the core image for this example to work.) In more complex cases, it may be useful to read other configuration files directly from the embedded configuration file. This allows such things as reading files not called grub.cfg, or reading files from a directory other than that where GRUB’s loadable modules are installed. To do this, include the ‘configfile’ and ‘normal’ modules in the core image, and embed a configuration file that uses the \?\Volume{ 21 command to load another file. The following example of this also requires the \?\Volume{ 22, \?\Volume{ 23, and \?\Volume{ 24 modules to be included in the core image: \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: 1 The embedded configuration file may not contain menu entries directly, but may only read them from elsewhere using \?\Volume{ 21. 7 Theme file format7.1 IntroductionThe GRUB graphical menu supports themes that can customize the layout and appearance of the GRUB boot menu. The theme is configured through a plain text file that specifies the layout of the various GUI components (including the boot menu, timeout progress bar, and text messages) as well as the appearance using colors, fonts, and images. Example is available in docs/example_theme.txt 7.2 Theme Elements7.2.1 ColorsColors can be specified in several ways:
7.2.2 FontsThe fonts GRUB uses “PFF2 font format” bitmap fonts. Fonts are specified with full font names. Currently there is no provision for a preference list of fonts, or deriving one font from another. Fonts are loaded with the “loadfont” command in GRUB (). To see the list of loaded fonts, execute the “lsfonts” command (). If there are too many fonts to fit on screen, do “set pager=1” before executing “lsfonts”. 7.2.3 Progress BarProgress bars are used to display the remaining time before GRUB boots the default menu entry. To create a progress bar that will display the remaining time before automatic boot, simply create a “progress_bar” component with the id “__timeout__”. This indicates to GRUB that the progress bar should be updated as time passes, and it should be made invisible if the countdown to automatic boot is interrupted by the user. Progress bars may optionally have text displayed on them. This text is controlled by variable “text” which contains a printf template with the only argument %d is the number of seconds remaining. Additionally special values “@TIMEOUT_NOTIFICATION_SHORT@”, “@TIMEOUT_NOTIFICATION_MIDDLE@”, “@TIMEOUT_NOTIFICATION_LONG@” are replaced with standard and translated templates. 7.2.4 Circular Progress IndicatorThe circular progress indicator functions similarly to the progress bar. When given an id of “__timeout__”, GRUB updates the circular progress indicator’s value to indicate the time remaining. For the circular progress indicator, there are two images used to render it: the *center* image, and the *tick* image. The center image is rendered in the center of the component, while the tick image is used to render each mark along the circumference of the indicator. 7.2.5 LabelsText labels can be placed on the boot screen. The font, color, and horizontal alignment can be specified for labels. If a label is given the id “__timeout__”, then the “text” property for that label is also updated with a message informing the user of the number of seconds remaining until automatic boot. This is useful in case you want the text displayed somewhere else instead of directly on the progress bar. 7.2.6 Boot MenuThe boot menu where GRUB displays the menu entries from the “grub.cfg” file. It is a list of items, where each item has a title and an optional icon. The icon is selected based on the *classes* specified for the menu entry. If there is a PNG file named “myclass.png” in the “grub/themes/icons” directory, it will be displayed for items which have the class *myclass*. The boot menu can be customized in several ways, such as the font and color used for the menu entry title, and by specifying styled boxes for the menu itself and for the selected item highlight. 7.2.7 Styled BoxesOne of the most important features for customizing the layout is the use of *styled boxes*. A styled box is composed of 9 rectangular (and potentially empty) regions, which are used to seamlessly draw the styled box on screen: Northwest (nw)North (n)Northeast (ne) West (w)Center (c)East (e) Southwest (sw)South (s)Southeast (se) To support any size of box on screen, the center slice and the slices for the top, bottom, and sides are all scaled to the correct size for the component on screen, using the following rules:
As an example of how an image might be sliced up, consider the styled box used for a terminal view. 7.2.8 Creating Styled Box ImagesThe Inkscape_ scalable vector graphics editor is a very useful tool for creating styled box images. One process that works well for slicing a drawing into the necessary image slices is:
7.3 Theme File ManualThe theme file is a plain text file. Lines that begin with “#“ are ignored and considered comments. (Note: This may not be the case if the previous line ended where a value was expected.) The theme file contains two types of statements:
7.3.1 Global Properties7.3.2 FormatGlobal properties are specified with the simple format:
In this example, name3 is assigned a color value. 7.3.3 Global Property Listtitle-textSpecifies the text to display at the top center of the screen as a title. title-fontDefines the font used for the title message at the top of the screen. title-colorDefines the color of the title message. message-fontCurrently unused. Left for backward compatibility. message-colorCurrently unused. Left for backward compatibility. message-bg-colorCurrently unused. Left for backward compatibility. desktop-imageSpecifies the image to use as the background. It will be scaled to fit the screen size or proportionally scaled depending on the scale method. desktop-image-scale-methodSpecifies the scaling method for the *desktop-image*. Options are “stretch“, “crop“, “padding“, “fitwidth“, “fitheight“. “stretch“ for fitting the screen size. Otherwise it is proportional scaling of a part of *desktop-image* to the part of the screen. “crop“ part of the *desktop-image* will be proportionally scaled to fit the screen sizes. “padding“ the entire *desktop-image* will be contained on the screen. “fitwidth“ for fitting the *desktop-image*’s width with screen width. “fitheight“ for fitting the *desktop-image*’s height with the screen height. Default is “stretch“. desktop-image-h-alignSpecifies the horizontal alignment of the *desktop-image* if *desktop-image-scale-method* isn’t equeal to “stretch“. Options are “left“, “center“, “right“. Default is “center“. desktop-image-v-alignSpecifies the vertical alignment of the *desktop-image* if *desktop-image-scale-method* isn’t equeal to “stretch“. Options are “top“, “center“, “bottom“. Default is “center“. desktop-colorSpecifies the color for the background if *desktop-image* is not specified. terminal-boxSpecifies the file name pattern for the styled box slices used for the command line terminal window. For example, “terminal-box: terminal_*.png“ will use the images “terminal_c.png“ as the center area, “terminal_n.png“ as the north (top) edge, “terminal_nw.png“ as the northwest (upper left) corner, and so on. If the image for any slice is not found, it will simply be left empty. terminal-borderSpecifies the border width of the terminal window. terminal-leftSpecifies the left coordinate of the terminal window. terminal-topSpecifies the top coordinate of the terminal window. terminal-widthSpecifies the width of the terminal window. terminal-heightSpecifies the height of the terminal window. 7.3.4 Component ConstructionGreater customizability comes is provided by components. A tree of components forms the user interface. *Containers* are components that can contain other components, and there is always a single root component which is an instance of a *canvas* container. Components are created in the theme file by prefixing the type of component with a ’+’ sign: \?\Volume{ 26 properties of a component are specified as "name = value" (whitespace surrounding tokens is optional and is ignored) where *value* may be:
7.3.5 Component ListThe following is a list of the components and the properties they support.
7.3.6 Common propertiesThe following properties are supported by all components: ‘left’ The distance from the left border of container to left border of the object in either of three formats: xValue in pixels p%Percentage p%+xmixture of both ‘top’ The distance from the left border of container to left border of the object in same format. ‘width’ The width of object in same format. ‘height’ The height of object in same format. ‘id’ The identifier for the component. This can be any arbitrary string. The ID can be used by scripts to refer to various components in the GUI component tree. Currently, there is one special ID value that GRUB recognizes: “__timeout__“Component with this ID will be updated by GRUB and will indicate time elapsed to an automatical boot of the default entry. Affected components: “label“, “circular_progress“, “progress_bar“. 8 Booting GRUB from the networkThe following instructions don’t work for *-emu, i386-qemu, i386-coreboot, i386-multiboot, mips_loongson, mips-arc and mips_qemu_mips To generate a netbootable directory, run: \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: 2 E.g. for i386-pc: \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: 3 Then follow instructions printed out by grub-mknetdir on configuring your DHCP server. The grub.cfg file is placed in the same directory as the path output by grub-mknetdir hereafter referred to as FWPATH. GRUB will search for its configuration files in order using the following rules where the appended value corresponds to a value on the client machine. \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: 4 The UUID is the Client Machine Identifier Option Definition as specified in RFC 4578. The client will only attempt to loouk up a UUID config file if it was provided by the DHCP server. The client will only attempt to look up an IPv6 address config once, however, it will try the IPv4 multiple times. The concrete example below shows what would happen under the IPv4 case. \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: 5 \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: 6 This feature is enabled by default but it can be disabled by setting the ‘feature_net_search_cfg’ to ‘n’. Since this happens before the configuration file is read by GRUB, this option has to be disabled in an embedded configuration file (see ). After GRUB has started, files on the TFTP server will be accessible via the ‘(tftp)’ device. The server IP address can be controlled by changing the ‘(tftp)’ device name to ‘(tftp,server-ip)’. Note that this should be changed both in the prefix and in any references to the device name in the configuration file. GRUB provides several environment variables which may be used to inspect or change the behaviour of the PXE device. In the following description ‘net_ The network interface’s IP address. Read-only. ‘net_ The network interface’s MAC address. Read-only. ‘net_ The client id provided by DHCP. Read-only. ‘net_ The client uuid provided by DHCP. Read-only. ‘net_ The client host name provided by DHCP. Read-only. ‘net_ The client domain name provided by DHCP. Read-only. ‘net_ The path to the client’s root disk provided by DHCP. Read-only. ‘net_ The path to additional DHCP vendor extensions provided by DHCP. Read-only. ‘net_ The boot file name provided by DHCP. Read-only. ‘net_ The name of the DHCP server responsible for these boot parameters. Read-only. ‘net_ The IP address of the next (usually, TFTP) server provided by DHCP. Read-only. ‘net_default_interface’ Initially set to name of network interface that was used to load grub. Read-write, although setting it affects only interpretation of ‘net_default_ip’ and ‘net_default_mac’ ‘net_default_ip’ The IP address of default interface. Read-only. This is alias for the ‘net_${net_default_interface}_ip’. ‘net_default_mac’ The default interface’s MAC address. Read-only. This is alias for the ‘net_${net_default_interface}_mac’. ‘net_default_server’ The default server used by network drives (see ). Read-write, although setting this is only useful before opening a network device. 9 Using GRUB via a serial lineThis chapter describes how to use the serial terminal support in GRUB. If you have many computers or computers with no display/keyboard, it could be very useful to control the computers through serial communications. To connect one computer with another via a serial line, you need to prepare a null-modem (cross) serial cable, and you may need to have multiport serial boards, if your computer doesn’t have extra serial ports. In addition, a terminal emulator is also required, such as minicom. Refer to a manual of your operating system, for more information. As for GRUB, the instruction to set up a serial terminal is quite simple. Here is an example: \?\Volume{17f34d50-cf64-4b02-800e-51d79c3aa2ff} \?\C: 7 The command \?\Volume{ 27 initializes the serial unit 0 with the speed 9600bps. The serial unit 0 is usually called ‘COM1’, so, if you want to use COM2, you must specify ‘--unit=1’ instead. This command accepts many other options, see for more details. Without argument or with ‘--port=auto’, GRUB will attempt to use ACPI when available to auto-detect the default serial port and its configuration. The commands \?\Volume{ 28 (see ) and \?\Volume{ 29 (see ) choose which type of terminal you want to use. In the case above, the terminal will be a serial terminal, but you can also pass \?\Volume{ 30 to the command, as ‘terminal_input serial console’. In this case, a terminal in which you press any key will be selected as a GRUB terminal. In the example above, note that you need to put both commands on the same command line, as you will lose the ability to type commands on the console after the first command. However, note that GRUB assumes that your terminal emulator is compatible with VT100 by default. This is true for most terminal emulators nowadays, but you should pass the option --dumb to the command if your terminal emulator is not VT100-compatible or implements few VT100 escape sequences. If you specify this option then GRUB provides you with an alternative menu interface, because the normal menu requires several fancy features of your terminal. 10 Using GRUB with vendor power-on keysSome laptop vendors provide an additional power-on button which boots another OS. GRUB supports such buttons with the ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_BUTTON’, ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE_BUTTON’, ‘GRUB_DEFAULT_BUTTON’, and ‘GRUB_BUTTON_CMOS_ADDRESS’ variables in default/grub (see ). ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_BUTTON’, ‘GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE_BUTTON’, and ‘GRUB_DEFAULT_BUTTON’ are used instead of the corresponding variables without the ‘_BUTTON’ suffix when powered on using the special button. ‘GRUB_BUTTON_CMOS_ADDRESS’ is vendor-specific and partially model-specific. Values known to the GRUB team are: Dell XPS M1330M 121:3 Dell XPS M1530 85:3 Dell Latitude E4300 85:3 Asus EeePC 1005PE 84:1 (unconfirmed) LENOVO ThinkPad T410s (2912W1C) 101:3 To take full advantage of this function, install GRUB into the MBR (see ). If you have a laptop which has a similar feature and not in the above list could you figure your address and contribute? To discover the address do the following:
Then compare these text files and find where a bit was toggled. E.g. in case of Dell XPS it was: It’s a bit number 3 as seen from following table: 001 102 204 308 410 520 640 780 0x47 is decimal 71. Linux nvram implementation cuts first 14 bytes of CMOS. So the real byte address in CMOS is 71+14=85 So complete address is 85:3 11 GRUB image filesGRUB consists of several images: a variety of bootstrap images for starting GRUB in various ways, a kernel image, and a set of modules which are combined with the kernel image to form a core image. Here is a short overview of them. boot.img On PC BIOS systems, this image is the first part of GRUB to start. It is written to a master boot record (MBR) or to the boot sector of a partition. Because a PC boot sector is 512 bytes, the size of this image is exactly 512 bytes. The sole function of boot.img is to read the first sector of the core image from a local disk and jump to it. Because of the size restriction, boot.img cannot understand any file system structure, so grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi2 hardcodes the location of the first sector of the core image into boot.img when installing GRUB. diskboot.img This image is used as the first sector of the core image when booting from a hard disk. It reads the rest of the core image into memory and starts the kernel. Since file system handling is not yet available, it encodes the location of the core image using a block list format. cdboot.img This image is used as the first sector of the core image when booting from a CD-ROM drive. It performs a similar function to diskboot.img. pxeboot.img This image is used as the start of the core image when booting from the network using PXE. See . lnxboot.img This image may be placed at the start of the core image in order to make GRUB look enough like a Linux kernel that it can be booted by LILO using an ‘image=’ section. kernel.img This image contains GRUB’s basic run-time facilities: frameworks for device and file handling, environment variables, the rescue mode command-line parser, and so on. It is rarely used directly, but is built into all core images. core.img This is the core image of GRUB. It is built dynamically from the kernel image and an arbitrary list of modules by the \?\Volume{ 14 program. Usually, it contains enough modules to access /boot/grub, and loads everything else (including menu handling, the ability to load target operating systems, and so on) from the file system at run-time. The modular design allows the core image to be kept small, since the areas of disk where it must be installed are often as small as 32KB. See , for details on where the core image can be installed on PC systems. *.mod Everything else in GRUB resides in dynamically loadable modules. These are often loaded automatically, or built into the core image if they are essential, but may also be loaded manually using the \?\Volume{ 33 command (see ). For GRUB Legacy usersGRUB 2 has a different design from GRUB Legacy, and so correspondences with the images it used cannot be exact. Nevertheless, GRUB Legacy users often ask questions in the terms they are familiar with, and so here is a brief guide to how GRUB 2’s images relate to that. stage1 Stage 1 from GRUB Legacy was very similar to boot.img in GRUB 2, and they serve the same function. *_stage1_5 In GRUB Legacy, Stage 1.5’s function was to include enough filesystem code to allow the much larger Stage 2 to be read from an ordinary filesystem. In this respect, its function was similar to core.img in GRUB 2. However, core.img is much more capable than Stage 1.5 was; since it offers a rescue shell, it is sometimes possible to recover manually in the event that it is unable to load any other modules, for example if partition numbers have changed. core.img is built in a more flexible way, allowing GRUB 2 to support reading modules from advanced disk types such as LVM and RAID. GRUB Legacy could run with only Stage 1 and Stage 2 in some limited configurations, while GRUB 2 requires core.img and cannot work without it. stage2 GRUB 2 has no single Stage 2 image. Instead, it loads modules from /boot/grub at run-time. stage2_eltorito In GRUB 2, images for booting from CD-ROM drives are now constructed using cdboot.img and core.img, making sure that the core image contains the ‘iso9660’ module. It is usually best to use the grub-install --efi-directory=/mnt/efi4 program for this. nbgrub There is as yet no equivalent for nbgrub in GRUB 2; it was used by Etherboot and some other network boot loaders. pxegrub In GRUB 2, images for PXE network booting are now constructed using pxeboot.img and core.img, making sure that the core image contains the ‘pxe’ and ‘pxecmd’ modules. See . 12 Core image size limitationHeavily limited platforms:
Lightly limited platforms:
13 Filesystem syntax and semanticsGRUB uses a special syntax for specifying disk drives which can be accessed by BIOS. Because of BIOS limitations, GRUB cannot distinguish between IDE, ESDI, SCSI, or others. You must know yourself which BIOS device is equivalent to which OS device. Normally, that will be clear if you see the files in a device or use the command \?\Volume{ 13 (see ). 13.1 How to specify devicesThe device syntax is like this: \?\PhysicalDrive 0 ‘[]’ means the parameter is optional. device depends on the disk driver in use. BIOS and EFI disks use either ‘fd’ or ‘hd’ followed by a digit, like ‘fd0’, or ‘cd’. AHCI, PATA (ata), crypto, USB use the name of driver followed by a number. Memdisk and host are limited to one disk and so it’s refered just by driver name. RAID (md), ofdisk (ieee1275 and nand), LVM (lvm), LDM, virtio (vdsk) and arcdisk (arc) use intrinsic name of disk prefixed by driver name. Additionally just “nand” refers to the disk aliased as “nand”. Conflicts are solved by suffixing a number if necessarry. Commas need to be escaped. Loopback uses whatever name specified to \?\Volume{ 36 command. Hostdisk uses names specified in device.map as long as it’s of the form [fhc]d[0-9]* or hostdisk/ \?\PhysicalDrive 1 part-num represents the partition number of device, starting from one. partname is optional but is recommended since disk may have several top-level partmaps. Specifying third and later component you can access to subpartitions. The syntax ‘(hd0)’ represents using the entire disk (or the MBR when installing GRUB), while the syntax ‘(hd0,1)’ represents using the first partition of the disk (or the boot sector of the partition when installing GRUB). \?\PhysicalDrive 2 If you enabled the network support, the special drives \?\Volume{ 37 are also available. Supported protocols are ‘http’ and ‘tftp’. If server is omitted, value of environment variable ‘net_default_server’ is used. Before using the network drive, you must initialize the network. See , for more information. When using ‘http’ or ‘tftp’, ports other than ‘80’ can be specified using a colon (‘:’) after the address. To avoid parsing conflicts, when using IPv6 addresses with custom ports, the addresses must be enclosed with square brackets (‘[]’), as is standard practice. \?\PhysicalDrive 3 If you boot GRUB from a CD-ROM, ‘(cd)’ is available. See , for details. 13.2 How to specify filesThere are two ways to specify files, by absolute file name and by block list. An absolute file name resembles a Unix absolute file name, using ‘/’ for the directory separator (not ‘\’ as in DOS). One example is ‘(hd0,1)/boot/grub/grub.cfg’. This means the file /boot/grub/grub.cfg in the first partition of the first hard disk. If you omit the device name in an absolute file name, GRUB uses GRUB’s root device implicitly. So if you set the root device to, say, ‘(hd1,1)’ by the command ‘set root=(hd1,1)’ (see ), then \?\Volume{ 38 is the same as \?\Volume{ 39. On ZFS filesystem the first path component must be volume‘@’[snapshot]. So ‘/rootvol@snap-129/boot/grub/grub.cfg’ refers to file ‘/boot/grub/grub.cfg’ in snapshot of volume ‘rootvol’ with name ‘snap-129’. Trailing ‘@’ after volume name is mandatory even if snapshot name is omitted. 13.3 How to specify block listsA block list is used for specifying a file that doesn’t appear in the filesystem, like a chainloader. The syntax is \?\Volume{ 40. Here is an example: This represents that GRUB should read blocks 0 through 99, block 200, blocks 300 through 599, and blocks 800 until the end of the device. If you omit an offset, then GRUB assumes the offset is zero. If the length is omitted, then GRUB assumes the block list extends until the end of the device. Like the file name syntax (see ), if a blocklist does not contain a device name, then GRUB uses GRUB’s root device. So \?\Volume{ 41 is the same as \?\Volume{ 42 when the root device is ‘(hd0,2)’. 14 GRUB’s user interfaceGRUB has both a simple menu interface for choosing preset entries from a configuration file, and a highly flexible command-line for performing any desired combination of boot commands. GRUB looks for its configuration file as soon as it is loaded. If one is found, then the full menu interface is activated using whatever entries were found in the file. If you choose the command-line menu option, or if the configuration file was not found, then GRUB drops to the command-line interface. 14.1 The flexible command-line interfaceThe command-line interface provides a prompt and after it an editable text area much like a command-line in Unix or DOS. Each command is immediately executed after it is entered. The commands (see ) are a subset of those available in the configuration file, used with exactly the same syntax. Cursor movement and editing of the text on the line can be done via a subset of the functions available in the Bash shell: C-f PC right key Move forward one character. C-b PC left key Move back one character. C-a HOME Move to the start of the line. C-e END Move the the end of the line. C-d DEL Delete the character underneath the cursor. C-h BS Delete the character to the left of the cursor. C-k Kill the text from the current cursor position to the end of the line. C-u Kill backward from the cursor to the beginning of the line. C-y Yank the killed text back into the buffer at the cursor. C-p PC up key Move up through the history list. C-n PC down key Move down through the history list. When typing commands interactively, if the cursor is within or before the first word in the command-line, pressing the TAB key (or C-i) will display a listing of the available commands, and if the cursor is after the first word, the TAB will provide a completion listing of disks, partitions, and file names depending on the context. Note that to obtain a list of drives, one must open a parenthesis, as \?\Volume{ 43. Note that you cannot use the completion functionality in the TFTP filesystem. This is because TFTP doesn’t support file name listing for the security. 14.2 The simple menu interfaceThe menu interface is quite easy to use. Its commands are both reasonably intuitive and described on screen. Basically, the menu interface provides a list of boot entries to the user to choose from. Use the arrow keys to select the entry of choice, then press RET to run it. An optional timeout is available to boot the default entry (the first one if not set), which is aborted by pressing any key. Commands are available to enter a bare command-line by pressing c (which operates exactly like the non-config-file version of GRUB, but allows one to return to the menu if desired by pressing ESC) or to edit any of the boot entries by pressing e. If you protect the menu interface with a password (see ), all you can do is choose an entry by pressing RET, or press p to enter the password. Pressing Ctrl-l will refresh the menu, which can be useful when connecting via serial after the menu has been drawn. 14.3 Editing a menu entryThe menu entry editor looks much like the main menu interface, but the lines in the menu are individual commands in the selected entry instead of entry names. If an ESC is pressed in the editor, it aborts all the changes made to the configuration entry and returns to the main menu interface. Each line in the menu entry can be edited freely, and you can add new lines by pressing RET at the end of a line. To boot the edited entry, press Ctrl-x. Although GRUB unfortunately does not support undo, you can do almost the same thing by just returning to the main menu using ESC. 15 GRUB environment variablesGRUB supports environment variables which are rather like those offered by all Unix-like systems. Environment variables have a name, which is unique and is usually a short identifier, and a value, which is an arbitrary string of characters. They may be set (see ), unset (see ), or looked up (see ) by name. A number of environment variables have special meanings to various parts of GRUB. Others may be used freely in GRUB configuration files. 15.1 Special environment variablesThese variables have special meaning to GRUB. 15.1.1 biosnumWhen chain-loading another boot loader (see ), GRUB may need to know what BIOS drive number corresponds to the root device (see ) so that it can set up registers properly. If the biosnum variable is set, it overrides GRUB’s own means of guessing this. For an alternative approach which also changes BIOS drive mappings for the chain-loaded system, see . 15.1.2 check_signaturesThis variable controls whether GRUB enforces digital signature validation on loaded files. See . 15.1.3 chosenWhen executing a menu entry, GRUB sets the chosen variable to the title of the entry being executed. If the menu entry is in one or more submenus, then chosen is set to the titles of each of the submenus starting from the top level followed by the title of the menu entry itself, separated by ‘>’. 15.1.4 cmdpathThe location from which core.img was loaded as an absolute directory name (see ). This is set by GRUB at startup based on information returned by platform firmware. Not every platform provides this information and some may return only device without path name. 15.1.5 color_highlightThis variable contains the “highlight” foreground and background terminal colors, separated by a slash (‘/’). Setting this variable changes those colors. For the available color names, see . The default is ‘black/light-gray’. 15.1.6 color_normalThis variable contains the “normal” foreground and background terminal colors, separated by a slash (‘/’). Setting this variable changes those colors. Each color must be a name from the following list:
The default is ‘light-gray/black’. The color support support varies from terminal to terminal. ‘morse’ has no color support at all. ‘mda_text’ color support is limited to highlighting by black/white reversal. ‘console’ on ARC, EMU and IEEE1275, ‘serial_*’ and ‘spkmodem’ are governed by terminfo and support only 8 colors if in modes ‘vt100-color’ (default for console on emu), ‘arc’ (default for console on ARC), ‘ieee1275’ (default for console on IEEE1275). When in mode ‘vt100’ then the color support is limited to highlighting by black/white reversal. When in mode ‘dumb’ there is no color support. When console supports no colors this setting is ignored. When console supports 8 colors, then the colors from the second half of the previous list are mapped to the matching colors of first half. ‘console’ on EFI and BIOS and ‘vga_text’ support all 16 colors. ‘gfxterm’ supports all 16 colors and would be theoretically extendable to support whole rgb24 palette but currently there is no compelling reason to go beyond the current 16 colors. 15.1.7 config_directoryThis variable is automatically set by GRUB to the directory part of current configuration file name (see ). 15.1.8 config_fileThis variable is automatically set by GRUB to the name of configuration file that is being processed by commands \?\Volume{ 21 (see ) or \?\Volume{ 45 (see ). It is restored to the previous value when command completes. 15.1.9 debugThis variable may be set to enable debugging output from various components of GRUB. The value is an ordered list of debug facility names separated by whitespace or ‘,’. If the special facility named ‘all’ is present then debugging output of all facility names is enabled at the start of processing the value of this variable. A facility’s debug output can then be disabled by prefixing its name with a ‘-’. The last occurence facility name with or without a leading ‘-’ takes precendent over any previous occurence. This allows the easy enabling or disabling of facilities by appending a ‘,’ and then the facility name with or without the leading ‘-’, which will preserve the state of the rest of the facilities. The facility names are the first argument to grub_dprintf. Consult the source for more details. 15.1.10 defaultIf this variable is set, it identifies a menu entry that should be selected by default, possibly after a timeout (see ). The entry may be identified by number (starting from 0 at each level of the hierarchy), by title, or by id. For example, if you have: \?\Volume{ 4 then you can make this the default using: \?\PhysicalDrive 5 If the entry is in a submenu, then it must be identified using the number, title, or id of each of the submenus starting from the top level, followed by the number, title, or id of the menu entry itself, with each element separated by ‘>’. For example, take the following menu structure: \?\PhysicalDrive 6 The more recent release of Minix would then be identified as ‘Other platforms>Minix>Version 3.4.0’, or as ‘1>0>0’, or as ‘other>minix>minix-3.4.0’. This variable is often set by ‘GRUB_DEFAULT’ (see ), grub-install //:ata.device/0/026, or grub-install //:ata.device/0/042. 15.1.11 fallbackIf this variable is set, it identifies a menu entry that should be selected if the default menu entry fails to boot. Entries are identified in the same way as for ‘default’ (see ). 15.1.12 gfxmodeIf this variable is set, it sets the resolution used on the ‘gfxterm’ graphical terminal. Note that you can only use modes which your graphics card supports via VESA BIOS Extensions (VBE), so for example native LCD panel resolutions may not be available. The default is ‘auto’, which selects a platform-specific default that should look reasonable. Supported modes can be listed by ‘videoinfo’ command in GRUB. The resolution may be specified as a sequence of one or more modes, separated by commas (‘,’) or semicolons (‘;’); each will be tried in turn until one is found. Each mode should be either ‘auto’, ‘widthxheight’, or ‘widthxheightxdepth’. 15.1.13 gfxpayloadIf this variable is set, it controls the video mode in which the Linux kernel starts up, replacing the ‘vga=’ boot option (see ). It may be set to ‘text’ to force the Linux kernel to boot in normal text mode, ‘keep’ to preserve the graphics mode set using ‘gfxmode’, or any of the permitted values for ‘gfxmode’ to set a particular graphics mode (see ). Depending on your kernel, your distribution, your graphics card, and the phase of the moon, note that using this option may cause GNU/Linux to suffer from various display problems, particularly during the early part of the boot sequence. If you have problems, set this variable to ‘text’ and GRUB will tell Linux to boot in normal text mode. The default is platform-specific. On platforms with a native text mode (such as PC BIOS platforms), the default is ‘text’. Otherwise the default may be ‘auto’ or a specific video mode. This variable is often set by ‘GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX’ (see ). 15.1.14 gfxterm_fontIf this variable is set, it names a font to use for text on the ‘gfxterm’ graphical terminal. Otherwise, ‘gfxterm’ may use any available font. 15.1.15 grub_cpuIn normal mode (see ), GRUB sets the ‘grub_cpu’ variable to the CPU type for which GRUB was built (e.g. ‘i386’ or ‘powerpc’). 15.1.16 grub_platformIn normal mode (see ), GRUB sets the ‘grub_platform’ variable to the platform for which GRUB was built (e.g. ‘pc’ or ‘efi’). 15.1.17 icondirIf this variable is set, it names a directory in which the GRUB graphical menu should look for icons after looking in the theme’s ‘icons’ directory. See . 15.1.18 langIf this variable is set, it names the language code that the \?\Volume{ 48 command (see ) uses to translate strings. For example, French would be named as ‘fr’, and Simplified Chinese as ‘zh_CN’. losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 (see ) will try to set a reasonable default for this variable based on the system locale. 15.1.19 locale_dirIf this variable is set, it names the directory where translation files may be found (see ), usually /boot/grub/locale. Otherwise, internationalization is disabled. losetup /dev/loop0 /dev/sdb1mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/usbgrub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/usb/bugbios --force --allow-floppy /dev/loop06 (see ) will set a reasonable default for this variable if internationalization is needed and any translation files are available. 15.1.20 lockdownIf this variable is set to ‘y’, it means that GRUB has entered see mode. 15.1.21 menu_color_highlightThis variable contains the foreground and background colors to be used for the highlighted menu entry, separated by a slash (‘/’). Setting this variable changes those colors. For the available color names, see . The default is the value of ‘color_highlight’ (see ). 15.1.22 menu_color_normalThis variable contains the foreground and background colors to be used for non-highlighted menu entries, separated by a slash (‘/’). Setting this variable changes those colors. For the available color names, see . The default is the value of ‘color_normal’ (see ). 15.1.23 net_ |