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Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +02001.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
2.. Copyright (c) 2018 Heinrich Schuchardt
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +01003
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +02004UEFI on U-Boot
5==============
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +01006
7The Unified Extensible Firmware Interface Specification (UEFI) [1] has become
8the default for booting on AArch64 and x86 systems. It provides a stable API for
9the interaction of drivers and applications with the firmware. The API comprises
10access to block storage, network, and console to name a few. The Linux kernel
11and boot loaders like GRUB or the FreeBSD loader can be executed.
12
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +020013Development target
14------------------
Heinrich Schuchardta28d0732019-03-28 08:09:16 +010015
Heinrich Schuchardt9ec8f5e2019-04-10 08:04:38 +020016The implementation of UEFI in U-Boot strives to reach the requirements described
17in the "Embedded Base Boot Requirements (EBBR) Specification - Release v1.0"
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +020018[2]. The "Server Base Boot Requirements System Software on ARM Platforms" [3]
Heinrich Schuchardt9ec8f5e2019-04-10 08:04:38 +020019describes a superset of the EBBR specification and may be used as further
20reference.
Heinrich Schuchardta28d0732019-03-28 08:09:16 +010021
22A full blown UEFI implementation would contradict the U-Boot design principle
23"keep it small".
24
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +020025Building U-Boot for UEFI
26------------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010027
Heinrich Schuchardt10288402018-12-30 12:54:36 +010028The UEFI standard supports only little-endian systems. The UEFI support can be
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +020029activated for ARM and x86 by specifying::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010030
31 CONFIG_CMD_BOOTEFI=y
32 CONFIG_EFI_LOADER=y
33
34in the .config file.
35
36Support for attaching virtual block devices, e.g. iSCSI drives connected by the
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +020037loaded UEFI application [4], requires::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010038
39 CONFIG_BLK=y
40 CONFIG_PARTITIONS=y
41
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +020042Executing a UEFI binary
43~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010044
45The bootefi command is used to start UEFI applications or to install UEFI
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +020046drivers. It takes two parameters::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010047
48 bootefi <image address> [fdt address]
49
50* image address - the memory address of the UEFI binary
51* fdt address - the memory address of the flattened device tree
52
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +020053Below you find the output of an example session starting GRUB::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010054
55 => load mmc 0:2 ${fdt_addr_r} boot/dtb
56 29830 bytes read in 14 ms (2 MiB/s)
57 => load mmc 0:1 ${kernel_addr_r} efi/debian/grubaa64.efi
58 reading efi/debian/grubaa64.efi
59 120832 bytes read in 7 ms (16.5 MiB/s)
60 => bootefi ${kernel_addr_r} ${fdt_addr_r}
61
Heinrich Schuchardt6b821592021-01-12 12:46:24 +010062When booting from a memory location it is unknown from which file it was loaded.
63Therefore the bootefi command uses the device path of the block device partition
64or the network adapter and the file name of the most recently loaded PE-COFF
65file when setting up the loaded image protocol.
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +010066
Cristian Ciocaltea62bb8902019-12-24 18:05:41 +020067Launching a UEFI binary from a FIT image
68~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
69
70A signed FIT image can be used to securely boot a UEFI image via the
71bootm command. This feature is available if U-Boot is configured with::
72
73 CONFIG_BOOTM_EFI=y
74
75A sample configuration is provided as file doc/uImage.FIT/uefi.its.
76
77Below you find the output of an example session starting GRUB::
78
79 => load mmc 0:1 ${kernel_addr_r} image.fit
80 4620426 bytes read in 83 ms (53.1 MiB/s)
81 => bootm ${kernel_addr_r}#config-grub-nofdt
82 ## Loading kernel from FIT Image at 40400000 ...
83 Using 'config-grub-nofdt' configuration
84 Verifying Hash Integrity ... sha256,rsa2048:dev+ OK
85 Trying 'efi-grub' kernel subimage
86 Description: GRUB EFI Firmware
87 Created: 2019-11-20 8:18:16 UTC
88 Type: Kernel Image (no loading done)
89 Compression: uncompressed
90 Data Start: 0x404000d0
91 Data Size: 450560 Bytes = 440 KiB
92 Hash algo: sha256
93 Hash value: 4dbee00021112df618f58b3f7cf5e1595533d543094064b9ce991e8b054a9eec
94 Verifying Hash Integrity ... sha256+ OK
95 XIP Kernel Image (no loading done)
96 ## Transferring control to EFI (at address 404000d0) ...
97 Welcome to GRUB!
98
99See doc/uImage.FIT/howto.txt for an introduction to FIT images.
100
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900101Configuring UEFI secure boot
102~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
103
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200104The UEFI specification[1] defines a secure way of executing UEFI images
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900105by verifying a signature (or message digest) of image with certificates.
106This feature on U-Boot is enabled with::
107
108 CONFIG_UEFI_SECURE_BOOT=y
109
110To make the boot sequence safe, you need to establish a chain of trust;
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200111In UEFI secure boot the chain trust is defined by the following UEFI variables
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900112
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200113* PK - Platform Key
114* KEK - Key Exchange Keys
115* db - white list database
116* dbx - black list database
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900117
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200118An in depth description of UEFI secure boot is beyond the scope of this
119document. Please, refer to the UEFI specification and available online
120documentation. Here is a simple example that you can follow for your initial
121attempt (Please note that the actual steps will depend on your system and
122environment.):
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900123
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200124Install the required tools on your host
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900125
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200126* openssl
127* efitools
128* sbsigntool
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900129
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200130Create signing keys and the key database on your host:
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900131
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200132The platform key
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900133
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200134.. code-block:: bash
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900135
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200136 openssl req -x509 -sha256 -newkey rsa:2048 -subj /CN=TEST_PK/ \
137 -keyout PK.key -out PK.crt -nodes -days 365
138 cert-to-efi-sig-list -g 11111111-2222-3333-4444-123456789abc \
139 PK.crt PK.esl;
140 sign-efi-sig-list -c PK.crt -k PK.key PK PK.esl PK.auth
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900141
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200142The key exchange keys
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900143
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200144.. code-block:: bash
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900145
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200146 openssl req -x509 -sha256 -newkey rsa:2048 -subj /CN=TEST_KEK/ \
147 -keyout KEK.key -out KEK.crt -nodes -days 365
148 cert-to-efi-sig-list -g 11111111-2222-3333-4444-123456789abc \
149 KEK.crt KEK.esl
150 sign-efi-sig-list -c PK.crt -k PK.key KEK KEK.esl KEK.auth
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900151
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200152The whitelist database
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900153
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200154.. code-block:: bash
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900155
Heinrich Schuchardt200584c2020-12-12 09:15:12 +0100156 openssl req -x509 -sha256 -newkey rsa:2048 -subj /CN=TEST_db/ \
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200157 -keyout db.key -out db.crt -nodes -days 365
Heinrich Schuchardt200584c2020-12-12 09:15:12 +0100158 cert-to-efi-sig-list -g 11111111-2222-3333-4444-123456789abc \
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200159 db.crt db.esl
Heinrich Schuchardt200584c2020-12-12 09:15:12 +0100160 sign-efi-sig-list -c KEK.crt -k KEK.key db db.esl db.auth
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900161
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200162Copy the \*.auth files to media, say mmc, that is accessible from U-Boot.
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900163
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200164Sign an image with one of the keys in "db" on your host
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900165
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200166.. code-block:: bash
167
168 sbsign --key db.key --cert db.crt helloworld.efi
169
170Now in U-Boot install the keys on your board::
171
172 fatload mmc 0:1 <tmpaddr> PK.auth
Heinrich Schuchardtfa11c862020-08-24 08:27:49 +0200173 setenv -e -nv -bs -rt -at -i <tmpaddr>:$filesize PK
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200174 fatload mmc 0:1 <tmpaddr> KEK.auth
Heinrich Schuchardtfa11c862020-08-24 08:27:49 +0200175 setenv -e -nv -bs -rt -at -i <tmpaddr>:$filesize KEK
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200176 fatload mmc 0:1 <tmpaddr> db.auth
Heinrich Schuchardtfa11c862020-08-24 08:27:49 +0200177 setenv -e -nv -bs -rt -at -i <tmpaddr>:$filesize db
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200178
179Set up boot parameters on your board::
180
Ilias Apalodimas773c0902021-03-17 21:55:01 +0200181 efidebug boot add -b 1 HELLO mmc 0:1 /helloworld.efi.signed ""
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200182
Ilias Apalodimasc92aa4b2021-03-17 21:55:02 +0200183Since kernel 5.7 there's an alternative way of loading an initrd using
184LoadFile2 protocol if CONFIG_EFI_LOAD_FILE2_INITRD is enabled.
185The initrd path can be specified with::
186
187 efidebug boot add -b ABE0 'kernel' mmc 0:1 Image -i mmc 0:1 initrd
188
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200189Now your board can run the signed image via the boot manager (see below).
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900190You can also try this sequence by running Pytest, test_efi_secboot,
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200191on the sandbox
192
193.. code-block:: bash
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900194
Heinrich Schuchardt664ad182020-04-16 20:31:56 +0200195 cd <U-Boot source directory>
196 pytest.py test/py/tests/test_efi_secboot/test_signed.py --bd sandbox
AKASHI Takahiroe674d8d2020-04-14 11:51:54 +0900197
Heinrich Schuchardt87f43de2020-07-14 12:52:51 +0200198UEFI binaries may be signed by Microsoft using the following certificates:
199
200* KEK: Microsoft Corporation KEK CA 2011
201 http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=321185.
202* db: Microsoft Windows Production PCA 2011
203 http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?linkid=321192.
204* db: Microsoft Corporation UEFI CA 2011
205 http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?linkid=321194.
206
Ilias Apalodimasef8bd412020-05-17 22:25:47 +0300207Using OP-TEE for EFI variables
208~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
209
210Instead of implementing UEFI variable services inside U-Boot they can
211also be provided in the secure world by a module for OP-TEE[1]. The
212interface between U-Boot and OP-TEE for variable services is enabled by
213CONFIG_EFI_MM_COMM_TEE=y.
214
215Tianocore EDK II's standalone management mode driver for variables can
216be linked to OP-TEE for this purpose. This module uses the Replay
217Protected Memory Block (RPMB) of an eMMC device for persisting
218non-volatile variables. When calling the variable services via the
219OP-TEE API U-Boot's OP-TEE supplicant relays calls to the RPMB driver
220which has to be enabled via CONFIG_SUPPORT_EMMC_RPMB=y.
221
Ilias Apalodimasa300e442021-04-01 13:35:38 +0300222EDK2 Build instructions
223***********************
224
225.. code-block:: bash
226
227 $ git clone https://github.com/tianocore/edk2.git
228 $ git clone https://github.com/tianocore/edk2-platforms.git
229 $ cd edk2
230 $ git submodule init && git submodule update --init --recursive
231 $ cd ..
232 $ export WORKSPACE=$(pwd)
233 $ export PACKAGES_PATH=$WORKSPACE/edk2:$WORKSPACE/edk2-platforms
234 $ export ACTIVE_PLATFORM="Platform/StandaloneMm/PlatformStandaloneMmPkg/PlatformStandaloneMmRpmb.dsc"
235 $ export GCC5_AARCH64_PREFIX=aarch64-linux-gnu-
236 $ source edk2/edksetup.sh
237 $ make -C edk2/BaseTools
238 $ build -p $ACTIVE_PLATFORM -b RELEASE -a AARCH64 -t GCC5 -n `nproc`
239
240OP-TEE Build instructions
241*************************
242
243.. code-block:: bash
244
245 $ git clone https://github.com/OP-TEE/optee_os.git
246 $ cd optee_os
247 $ ln -s ../Build/MmStandaloneRpmb/RELEASE_GCC5/FV/BL32_AP_MM.fd
248 $ export ARCH=arm
249 $ CROSS_COMPILE32=arm-linux-gnueabihf- make -j32 CFG_ARM64_core=y \
250 PLATFORM=<myboard> CFG_STMM_PATH=BL32_AP_MM.fd CFG_RPMB_FS=y \
251 CFG_RPMB_FS_DEV_ID=0 CFG_CORE_HEAP_SIZE=524288 CFG_RPMB_WRITE_KEY=1 \
252 CFG_CORE_HEAP_SIZE=524288 CFG_CORE_DYN_SHM=y CFG_RPMB_TESTKEY=y \
253 CFG_REE_FS=n CFG_CORE_ARM64_PA_BITS=48 CFG_TEE_CORE_LOG_LEVEL=1 \
254 CFG_TEE_TA_LOG_LEVEL=1 CFG_SCTLR_ALIGNMENT_CHECK=n
255
256U-Boot Build instructions
257*************************
258
259Although the StandAloneMM binary comes from EDK2, using and storing the
260variables is currently available in U-Boot only.
261
262.. code-block:: bash
263
264 $ git clone https://github.com/u-boot/u-boot.git
265 $ cd u-boot
266 $ export CROSS_COMPILE=aarch64-linux-gnu-
267 $ export ARCH=<arch>
268 $ make <myboard>_defconfig
269 $ make menuconfig
270
271Enable ``CONFIG_OPTEE``, ``CONFIG_CMD_OPTEE_RPMB`` and ``CONFIG_EFI_MM_COMM_TEE``
272
273.. warning::
274
275 - Your OP-TEE platform port must support Dynamic shared memory, since that's
276 the only kind of memory U-Boot supports for now.
277
278[1] https://optee.readthedocs.io/en/latest/building/efi_vars/stmm.html
Ilias Apalodimasef8bd412020-05-17 22:25:47 +0300279
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200280Executing the boot manager
281~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100282
Heinrich Schuchardt8d343f82020-08-16 12:27:19 +0200283The UEFI specification foresees to define boot entries and boot sequence via
284UEFI variables. Booting according to these variables is possible via::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100285
286 bootefi bootmgr [fdt address]
287
Heinrich Schuchardt8d343f82020-08-16 12:27:19 +0200288As of U-Boot v2020.10 UEFI variables cannot be set at runtime. The U-Boot
289command 'efidebug' can be used to set the variables.
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100290
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200291Executing the built in hello world application
292~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100293
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200294A hello world UEFI application can be built with::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100295
296 CONFIG_CMD_BOOTEFI_HELLO_COMPILE=y
297
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200298It can be embedded into the U-Boot binary with::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100299
300 CONFIG_CMD_BOOTEFI_HELLO=y
301
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200302The bootefi command is used to start the embedded hello world application::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100303
304 bootefi hello [fdt address]
305
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200306Below you find the output of an example session::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100307
308 => bootefi hello ${fdtcontroladdr}
309 ## Starting EFI application at 01000000 ...
310 WARNING: using memory device/image path, this may confuse some payloads!
311 Hello, world!
312 Running on UEFI 2.7
313 Have SMBIOS table
314 Have device tree
315 Load options: root=/dev/sdb3 init=/sbin/init rootwait ro
316 ## Application terminated, r = 0
317
318The environment variable fdtcontroladdr points to U-Boot's internal device tree
319(if available).
320
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200321Executing the built-in self-test
322~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100323
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200324An UEFI self-test suite can be embedded in U-Boot by building with::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100325
326 CONFIG_CMD_BOOTEFI_SELFTEST=y
327
328For testing the UEFI implementation the bootefi command can be used to start the
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200329self-test::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100330
331 bootefi selftest [fdt address]
332
333The environment variable 'efi_selftest' can be used to select a single test. If
334it is not provided all tests are executed except those marked as 'on request'.
335If the environment variable is set to 'list' a list of all tests is shown.
336
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200337Below you can find the output of an example session::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100338
339 => setenv efi_selftest simple network protocol
340 => bootefi selftest
341 Testing EFI API implementation
342 Selected test: 'simple network protocol'
343 Setting up 'simple network protocol'
344 Setting up 'simple network protocol' succeeded
345 Executing 'simple network protocol'
346 DHCP Discover
347 DHCP reply received from 192.168.76.2 (52:55:c0:a8:4c:02)
348 as broadcast message.
349 Executing 'simple network protocol' succeeded
350 Tearing down 'simple network protocol'
351 Tearing down 'simple network protocol' succeeded
352 Boot services terminated
353 Summary: 0 failures
354 Preparing for reset. Press any key.
355
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200356The UEFI life cycle
357-------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100358
359After the U-Boot platform has been initialized the UEFI API provides two kinds
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200360of services:
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100361
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200362* boot services
363* runtime services
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100364
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200365The API can be extended by loading UEFI drivers which come in two variants:
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100366
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200367* boot drivers
368* runtime drivers
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100369
370UEFI drivers are installed with U-Boot's bootefi command. With the same command
371UEFI applications can be executed.
372
373Loaded images of UEFI drivers stay in memory after returning to U-Boot while
374loaded images of applications are removed from memory.
375
376An UEFI application (e.g. an operating system) that wants to take full control
377of the system calls ExitBootServices. After a UEFI application calls
378ExitBootServices
379
380* boot services are not available anymore
381* timer events are stopped
382* the memory used by U-Boot except for runtime services is released
383* the memory used by boot time drivers is released
384
385So this is a point of no return. Afterwards the UEFI application can only return
386to U-Boot by rebooting.
387
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200388The UEFI object model
389---------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100390
391UEFI offers a flexible and expandable object model. The objects in the UEFI API
392are devices, drivers, and loaded images. These objects are referenced by
393handles.
394
395The interfaces implemented by the objects are referred to as protocols. These
396are identified by GUIDs. They can be installed and uninstalled by calling the
397appropriate boot services.
398
399Handles are created by the InstallProtocolInterface or the
400InstallMultipleProtocolinterfaces service if NULL is passed as handle.
401
402Handles are deleted when the last protocol has been removed with the
403UninstallProtocolInterface or the UninstallMultipleProtocolInterfaces service.
404
405Devices offer the EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL. A device path is the concatenation
406of device nodes. By their device paths all devices of a system are arranged in a
407tree.
408
409Drivers offer the EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL. This protocol is used to connect
410a driver to devices (which are referenced as controllers in this context).
411
412Loaded images offer the EFI_LOADED_IMAGE_PROTOCOL. This protocol provides meta
413information about the image and a pointer to the unload callback function.
414
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200415The UEFI events
416---------------
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100417
418In the UEFI terminology an event is a data object referencing a notification
419function which is queued for calling when the event is signaled. The following
420types of events exist:
421
422* periodic and single shot timer events
423* exit boot services events, triggered by calling the ExitBootServices() service
424* virtual address change events
425* memory map change events
426* read to boot events
427* reset system events
428* system table events
429* events that are only triggered programmatically
430
431Events can be created with the CreateEvent service and deleted with CloseEvent
432service.
433
434Events can be assigned to an event group. If any of the events in a group is
435signaled, all other events in the group are also set to the signaled state.
436
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200437The UEFI driver model
438---------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100439
440A driver is specific for a single protocol installed on a device. To install a
441driver on a device the ConnectController service is called. In this context
442controller refers to the device for which the driver is installed.
443
444The relevant drivers are identified using the EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL. This
445protocol has has three functions:
446
447* supported - determines if the driver is compatible with the device
448* start - installs the driver by opening the relevant protocol with
449 attribute EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_DRIVER
450* stop - uninstalls the driver
451
452The driver may create child controllers (child devices). E.g. a driver for block
453IO devices will create the device handles for the partitions. The child
454controllers will open the supported protocol with the attribute
455EFI_OPEN_PROTOCOL_BY_CHILD_CONTROLLER.
456
457A driver can be detached from a device using the DisconnectController service.
458
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200459U-Boot devices mapped as UEFI devices
460-------------------------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100461
462Some of the U-Boot devices are mapped as UEFI devices
463
464* block IO devices
465* console
466* graphical output
467* network adapter
468
469As of U-Boot 2018.03 the logic for doing this is hard coded.
470
471The development target is to integrate the setup of these UEFI devices with the
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200472U-Boot driver model [5]. So when a U-Boot device is discovered a handle should
473be created and the device path protocol and the relevant IO protocol should be
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100474installed. The UEFI driver then would be attached by calling ConnectController.
475When a U-Boot device is removed DisconnectController should be called.
476
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200477UEFI devices mapped as U-Boot devices
478-------------------------------------
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100479
480UEFI drivers binaries and applications may create new (virtual) devices, install
481a protocol and call the ConnectController service. Now the matching UEFI driver
482is determined by iterating over the implementations of the
483EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL.
484
485It is the task of the UEFI driver to create a corresponding U-Boot device and to
486proxy calls for this U-Boot device to the controller.
487
488In U-Boot 2018.03 this has only been implemented for block IO devices.
489
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200490UEFI uclass
491~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100492
493An UEFI uclass driver (lib/efi_driver/efi_uclass.c) has been created that
494takes care of initializing the UEFI drivers and providing the
495EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL implementation for the UEFI drivers.
496
497A linker created list is used to keep track of the UEFI drivers. To create an
498entry in the list the UEFI driver uses the U_BOOT_DRIVER macro specifying
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200499UCLASS_EFI as the ID of its uclass, e.g::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100500
501 /* Identify as UEFI driver */
502 U_BOOT_DRIVER(efi_block) = {
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200503 .name = "EFI block driver",
504 .id = UCLASS_EFI,
505 .ops = &driver_ops,
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100506 };
507
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200508The available operations are defined via the structure struct efi_driver_ops::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100509
510 struct efi_driver_ops {
511 const efi_guid_t *protocol;
512 const efi_guid_t *child_protocol;
513 int (*bind)(efi_handle_t handle, void *interface);
514 };
515
516When the supported() function of the EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL is called the
517uclass checks if the protocol GUID matches the protocol GUID of the UEFI driver.
518In the start() function the bind() function of the UEFI driver is called after
519checking the GUID.
520The stop() function of the EFI_DRIVER_BINDING_PROTOCOL disconnects the child
521controllers created by the UEFI driver and the UEFI driver. (In U-Boot v2013.03
522this is not yet completely implemented.)
523
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200524UEFI block IO driver
525~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100526
527The UEFI block IO driver supports devices exposing the EFI_BLOCK_IO_PROTOCOL.
528
529When connected it creates a new U-Boot block IO device with interface type
530IF_TYPE_EFI, adds child controllers mapping the partitions, and installs the
531EFI_SIMPLE_FILE_SYSTEM_PROTOCOL on these. This can be used together with the
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200532software iPXE to boot from iSCSI network drives [4].
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100533
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200534This driver is only available if U-Boot is configured with::
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100535
536 CONFIG_BLK=y
537 CONFIG_PARTITIONS=y
538
Heinrich Schuchardtc4d45422020-02-22 07:47:20 +0100539Miscellaneous
540-------------
541
542Load file 2 protocol
543~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
544
545The load file 2 protocol can be used by the Linux kernel to load the initial
546RAM disk. U-Boot can be configured to provide an implementation with::
547
548 EFI_LOAD_FILE2_INITRD=y
Ilias Apalodimasc92aa4b2021-03-17 21:55:02 +0200549
550When the option is enabled the user can add the initrd path with the efidebug
551command.
552
553Load options Boot#### have a FilePathList[] member. The first element of
554the array (FilePathList[0]) is the EFI binary to execute. When an initrd
555is specified the Device Path for the initrd is denoted by a VenMedia node
556with the EFI_INITRD_MEDIA_GUID. Each entry of the array is terminated by the
557'end of entire device path' subtype (0xff). If a user wants to define multiple
558initrds, those must by separated by the 'end of this instance' identifier of
559the end node (0x01).
560
561So our final format of the FilePathList[] is::
562
563 Loaded image - end node (0xff) - VenMedia - initrd_1 - [end node (0x01) - initrd_n ...] - end node (0xff)
Heinrich Schuchardtc4d45422020-02-22 07:47:20 +0100564
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200565Links
566-----
Heinrich Schuchardt5fa03de2018-03-02 19:58:50 +0100567
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200568* [1] http://uefi.org/specifications - UEFI specifications
569* [2] https://github.com/ARM-software/ebbr/releases/download/v1.0/ebbr-v1.0.pdf -
Heinrich Schuchardt9ec8f5e2019-04-10 08:04:38 +0200570 Embedded Base Boot Requirements (EBBR) Specification - Release v1.0
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200571* [3] https://developer.arm.com/docs/den0044/latest/server-base-boot-requirements-system-software-on-arm-platforms-version-11 -
Heinrich Schuchardta28d0732019-03-28 08:09:16 +0100572 Server Base Boot Requirements System Software on ARM Platforms - Version 1.1
Heinrich Schuchardtfd0b53f2019-07-26 06:46:08 +0200573* [4] :doc:`iscsi`
574* [5] :doc:`../driver-model/index`