Commit Graph

9 Commits (cf4f828dbe5daaafb93cfccf0f657377f5cec234)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Leah Rowe 852eb1db4f roms: only support SeaBIOS/SeaGRUB on x86
Never, ever build images where GRUB is the primary payload.

These options have been removed from target.cfg handling:

* seabios_withgrub
* grub_withseabios

The "payload_grub" variable now does the same thing as
the old "seabios_withgrub" variable, if set.

The "grubonly" configuration is retained, and enabled by
default when SeaGRUB is enabled (non-grubonly also available).

Due to lbmk issue #216, it is no longer Libreboot policy to
make GRUB the primary payload on any board. GRUB's sheer size
and complexity, plus the large number of memory corruption issues
similar to it that *have* been fixed over the years, tells me
that GRUB is a liability when it is the primary payload.

SeaBIOS is a much safer payload to run as primary, on x86, due
to its smaller size and much more conservative development; it
is simply far less likely to break.

If GRUB breaks in the future, the user's machine is not
bricked. This is because SeaBIOS is the default payload.

Since I no longer wish to ever provide GRUB as a primary
payload, supporting it in lbmk adds needless bloat that
will later probably break anyway due to lack of testing,
so let's just assume SeaGRUB in all cases where the user
wants to use a GRUB payload.

You can mitigate potential security issues with SeaBIOS
by disabling option ROM execution, which can be done at
runtime by inserting integers into CBFS. The SeaBIOS
documentation says how to do this.

Libreboot's GRUB hardening guide still says how to add
a bootorder file in CBFS, making SeaBIOS only load GRUB
from CBFS, and nothing else. This, combined with the
disablement of option ROM execution (if using Intel
graphics), pretty much provides the same security benefits
as GRUB-as-primary, for example when setting a GRUB password
and GPG checks, with encrypted /boot as in the hardening guide.

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-06-23 01:19:47 +01:00
Leah Rowe bb92776943 remove grub_scan_disk in all target.cfg files
A subsequest revision will set them again as needed,
per coreboot target.

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-05-27 23:35:18 +01:00
Leah Rowe d423421995 remove all status checks. only handle release.
the release variable is all we need, turning a target on
or off for a given release.

the status checks were prone to bugs, and unnecessary; it
also broke certain benchmark scripts.

it's better to keep the cbmk logic simpler. board status
will be moved to the documentation instead.

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-05-13 02:07:22 +01:00
Leah Rowe bd9404c237 update more board statuses before release
what's left to properly test are pineview/x4x/i945 boards

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-05-03 00:59:07 +01:00
Leah Rowe b56f79578a build/roms: report status when building images
export CBMK_VERSION_TYPE=x
x can be: stable, unstable

in target.cfg files, specify:
status=x
x can be: stable, unstable, broken, untested
if unset, cbmk defaults to "unknown"

if CBMK_VERSION_TYPE is set, no confirmation is asked
if the given target matches what's set (but what's set
in that environmental variable can only be stable or
unstable)

if CBMK_RELEASE="y", no confirmation is asked, unless
the target is something other than stable/unstable

"unstable" means it works, but has a few non-breaking
bugs, e.g. broken s3 on dell e6400

whereas, if raminit regularly fails or it is so absolutely
unreliable as to be unusable, then the board should be
declared "broken"

untested means: it has not been tested

With this change, it should now be easier to track whether
a given board is tested, in preparation for releases. When
working on trees/boards, status can be set for targets.

Also: in the board directory, you can add a "warn.txt" file
which will display a message. For example, if a board has a
particular quirk to watch out for, write that there. The message
will be printed during the build process, to stdout.

If status is anything *other* than stable, or it is unstable
but CBMK_VERSION_TYPE is not set to "unstable", and not building
a release, a confirmation is passed.

If the board is not specified as stable or unstable, during
a release build, the build is skipped and the ROM is not
provided in that release; this is in *addition* to
release="n" or release="y" that can be set in target.cfg,
which will skip the release build for that target if "n"

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <info@minifree.org>
2024-05-03 00:45:50 +01:00
Leah Rowe 102ce12cea rebase cbmk 9429287 per lbmk c4d90087..f5b04fa5
cbmk 9429287 is the present canoeboot revision, on this day,
two commits after canoeboot 20231107

the cbmk revision was based on lbmk c4d90087, but lbmk
has developed a lot since, right up to f5b04fa5. lbmk
c4d90087 was four commits after libreboot 20231106

this patch brings cbmk up to date, versus lbmk f5b04fa5,
which is 135 commits after libreboot 20231106 (not 4)

therefore, the next canoeboot release shall import lbmk
changes made *after* lbmk revision f5b04fa5. good day!

In English (the above is for my reference, next time
I make a new canoeboot release):

This imports all of the numerous improvements from
Libreboot, sans the non-FSDG-compliant changes. You
can find a full list of such changes in the audit4 page:

https://libreboot.org/news/audit4.html

A full canoeboot-ised changelog will be available in
the next canoeboot release, with these and subsequent
changes. Most notable here is the update to the new
GRUB 2.12 release (instead of 2.12-rc1), and the
improvements Riku made to pico-serprog. And the build
system improvements from lbmk, such as improved, more
generic cmake and autoconf handling.

Canoeboot-specific changes: I also tweaked the deblob
logic, to make it less error-prone. The new design
changes imported into cbmk (based on latest lbmk) somewhat
broke the deblob logic; it was constantly reminding the
user that blobs.list was missing for coreboot,
at config/coreboot/blobs.list - coreboot is a multi-tree
project in both cbmk and lbmk, and the deblob logic was
tuned for single/multi, but was treating coreboot as both.
for simplicity, i removed the check for whether blobs.list
is present. this means that the operator must ensure that
these files are present, in any given revision, where they
are required on a given set of projects (and the files are
all present, in this update to cbmk)

Also of note: the grub.cfg improvements are included in this
cbmk update. The improved grub.cfg can find grub/syslinux
configs by default, not just grub anymore, also finds extlinux,
and will also find them on EFI System Partition - in addition,
UEFI-based install media is also more robust; although cbmk
doesn't provide UEFI configurations on x86, our GRUB palyoad
does still need to work with distro install media, and many
of them now use UEFI-based GRUB configurations in their
installation media, which just happen to work with our GRUB

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2024-01-02 11:55:45 +00:00
Leah Rowe 3854d60a05 don't build u-boot on x86 qemu images
Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-11-07 18:56:03 +00:00
Leah Rowe 6adbc8680f Canoeboot 20231107 release
changes after libreboot 20231101 were imported,
up to libreboot 20231106, and then to revision:
c4d90087535617d4fb31ca94803f9426010cfec5

i945 and gm45 configs were re-done, and dell e6400
was moved to its own tree with the ddr2 fix moved
there, to prevent breakage on ddr3-based gm45 boards
(look at libreboot 20231106 for more info)

several fixes are present in this canoeboot release,
that were only merged in libreboot *after* the
libreboot 20231106 release, and they are:

* c4d90087 add grub mods: diskfilter,hashsum,loadenv,setjmp
* d0d6decb re-add grub modules: f2fs, json, read, scsi, sleep
* 86608721 nvmutil: print usage
* f12f5c3a nvmutil: fix makefile

the release documentation has also been updated,
pulling down newer cbwww and cbwww-img based on
the new canoeboot 20231107 release announcement

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-11-07 17:19:04 +00:00
Leah Rowe 58ec3ca34f Canoeboot 20231026 release
Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2023-10-27 08:21:04 +01:00