canoeboot build system. https://canoeboot.org/
 
 
 
Go to file
Leah Rowe cca3294194 GRUB: bump to today's latest revision
GRUB has not pushed many patches to master since the recent 2.12
release, but there are a number of interesting fixes.

canoeboot is doing a release soon. bump to latest grub revision.

Some of the new patches in GRUB are interesting:

XFS fixes:

"fs/xfs: Handle non-continuous data blocks in directory extents"
68dd65cfdaad08b1f8ec01b84949b0bf88bc0d8c
Fixes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2254370
Apparently, XFS could not boot in some reports, though this was
likely with BIOS or UEFI GRUB; no such reports were made to canoeboot

"gfxmenu/view: Resolve false grub_errno disrupting boot process"
39c927df66c7ca62d97905d1385054ac9ce67209

"util/grub-fstest: Add a new command zfs-bootfs"
28c4405208cfb6e2cea737f6cbaf17e631bac6cd

The gnulib revision does not need to be updated at this time.

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <info@minifree.org>
2024-05-02 23:23:48 +01:00
config GRUB: bump to today's latest revision 2024-05-02 23:23:48 +01:00
include cbmk: export TMPDIR from err.sh, not build 2024-05-02 23:21:40 +01:00
script build/roms: add missing deletion of tmp file 2024-05-02 23:17:45 +01:00
util dell-flash-unlock: add NetBSD support 2024-05-02 22:19:48 +01:00
.gitignore Canoeboot 20231107 release 2023-11-07 17:19:04 +00:00
COPYING censored libreboot c20230710 2023-10-26 20:20:43 +01:00
README.md simplified README, without affecting substance 2024-05-02 22:19:11 +01:00
build cbmk: export TMPDIR from err.sh, not build 2024-05-02 23:21:40 +01:00
projectname Canoeboot 20231026 release 2023-10-27 08:21:04 +01:00
update Canoeboot 20231026 release 2023-10-27 08:21:04 +01:00

README.md

Canoeboot

Find canoeboot documentation at https://canoeboot.org/

The canoeboot project provides libre boot firmware that initializes the hardware (e.g. memory controller, CPU, peripherals) on specific Intel/AMD x86 and ARM targets, which then starts a bootloader for your operating system. Linux/BSD are well-supported. It replaces proprietary BIOS/UEFI firmware. Help is available via #canoeboot IRC on Libera IRC.

Canoeboot is maintained in parallel with Libreboot, by the same developer. You are strongly advised to use Libreboot, but a certain minority may prefer Canoeboot, which is essentially a censored Libreboot (no binary blobs allowed, so only few boards supported whereas Libreboot supports more boards while minimising the number of blobs to zero when possible).

For more context, please read Libreboot's Binary Blob Reduction Policy:

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

You may also read Canoeboot's about page, which contains more history pertaining to Canoeboot. Please read this page:

https://canoeboot.org/about.html

Canoeboot is inferior to Libreboot, in every way, and you should never use it.

Project goals

  • Be Libreboot, but adhere to GNU FSDG as policy. This means that many boards from Libreboot must be removed; Canoeboot is therefore inferior to Libreboot, and always will be. It provides a useful proof of concept, showing what is still possible when you completely bastardise Libreboot in like with FSF/GNU dogma - and Canoeboot does it better than GNU ever could.
  • Support as much hardware as possible! (within the restrictions imposed by GNU FSDG policy)
  • Make coreboot easy to use. Coreboot is notoriously difficult to install, due to an overall lack of user-focused documentation and support. Most people will simply give up before attempting to install coreboot. Canoeboot's automated build system and user-friendly installation instructions solves this problem.

Canoeboot attempts to bridge this divide by providing a build system automating much of the coreboot image creation and customization. Secondly, the project produces documentation aimed at non-technical users. Thirdly, the project attempts to provide excellent user support via IRC.

Canoeboot already comes with a payload (GRUB), flashprog and other needed parts. Everything is fully integrated, in a way where most of the complicated steps that are otherwise required, are instead done for the user in advance.

You can download ROM images for your canoeboot system and install them without having to build anything from source. If, however, you are interested in building your own image, the build system makes it relatively easy to do so.

Not a coreboot fork!

Canoeboot is not a fork of coreboot. Every so often, the project re-bases on the latest version of coreboot, with the number of custom patches in use minimized. Tested, stable (static) releases are then provided in Canoeboot, based on specific coreboot revisions.

LICENSE FOR THIS README

It's just a README file. This README file is released under the terms of the Creative Commons Zero license, version 1.0 of the license, which you can read here:

https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode.txt

The documentation in Canoeboot will use a mix of other licenses, so you should check that for more information.