110 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
110 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
|
% Libreboot 20211122 released!
|
||
|
% Leah Rowe
|
||
|
% 22 November 2021
|
||
|
|
||
|
Free your BIOS today!
|
||
|
=====================
|
||
|
|
||
|
Libreboot is free (as in freedom) boot firmware, which initializes the hardware
|
||
|
(e.g. memory controller, CPU, peripherals) in your computer so that software
|
||
|
can run. Libreboot then starts a bootloader to load your operating system. It
|
||
|
replaces the proprietary BIOS/UEFI firmware typically found on a computer.
|
||
|
Libreboot is compatible with specifical computer models that use the Intel/AMD
|
||
|
x86 architecture. Libreboot works well with GNU+Linux and BSD operating systems.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The last Libreboot release, version 20210522, was released on May 22nd
|
||
|
in 2021. *This* new release, Libreboot 20211122, is released today on November
|
||
|
22nd, 2021. This is yet another *testing* release, so expect there to be some
|
||
|
bugs. Every effort has been made to ensure reliability on all boards, however.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You can find this release in the `testing` directory on Libreboot release
|
||
|
mirrors. If you check in the `stable` directory, you'll still only find
|
||
|
the 20160907 release in there, so please ensure that you check the `testing`
|
||
|
directory!
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is a *bug fix* release, relative to 20210522. No new boards or major
|
||
|
features have been added, but several problems that existed in the previous
|
||
|
release have now been fixed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Work done since the 20210522 release:
|
||
|
-------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
* Updated to newer coreboot, SeaBIOS and GRUB versions. The 20210522
|
||
|
release was using coreboot 4.14, on most boards, from May 2021. This release
|
||
|
is using a coreboot revision from November 2021.
|
||
|
* Tianocore dropped from the build system. It was planned that this would be
|
||
|
provided in ROM images, but Tianocore is very bloated and buggy, and not
|
||
|
worth maintaining. It was supported in the build system, but not actually
|
||
|
enabled on any boards. Instead, a future release of Libreboot will include
|
||
|
a busybox+linux payload with the u-root bootloader:
|
||
|
<https://github.com/u-root/u-root>
|
||
|
* New upstream used for SeaBIOS: <https://review.coreboot.org/seabios>
|
||
|
* Dummy PIKE2008 option ROM now automatically inserted into ASUS KGPE-D16 and
|
||
|
KCMA-D8 ROM images. It is literally an empty file. This disables the option
|
||
|
ROM from being loaded, which is known to hang SeaBIOS on these boards.
|
||
|
* 16MB configs now available, for more boards. For instance, ThinkPad X60 and
|
||
|
T60, ASUS KGPE-D16, etc. It's always possible to upgrade the flash, and
|
||
|
information about this is provided in the documentation.
|
||
|
* `memtest86+` included on more ROMs by default (where text mode startup is used)
|
||
|
* `memtest86+`: Now coreboot's own fork is used, instead of upstream. This fork
|
||
|
works much more reliably on coreboot targets, when running on bare metal.
|
||
|
* More 16MB configs added, for more boards. This will be finished by the time
|
||
|
of the next release. Already, several older laptops such as the ThinkPad X60
|
||
|
or T60, have these configs in the latest `lbmk.git`. If you upgrade the
|
||
|
default SPI flash to 16MByte / 128MBit (maximum size possible), you can then
|
||
|
easily put an entire busybox+linux system in the flash.
|
||
|
* `coreboot`: Added persmule's 2016 patch to enable more SATA/eSATA ports on
|
||
|
ThinkPad T400. This change benefits T400S users.
|
||
|
* `grub.cfg`: LUKS setups are now detected on mdraid setups.
|
||
|
* `grub.cfg`: Default timeout changed to 10 seconds, instead of 1. This benefit
|
||
|
desktop users, who previously complained about not having time to respond if
|
||
|
they wanted to interact with the boot menu.
|
||
|
* `grub.cfg`: Performance optimization when scanning for encrypted LUKS volumes.
|
||
|
GRUB will stall a lot less often, and feel more responsive, when dealing with
|
||
|
LUKS-encrypted setups.
|
||
|
* `coreboot`: cstate 3 now supported on MacBook2,1 and Macbook1,1. This results
|
||
|
in lower CPU temperatures and higher battery life on idle. Thanks go to
|
||
|
vitali64 on IRC for this fix
|
||
|
* Reset bug fixed, on GM45 platforms (ThinkPad X200/T400/T500 and so on). These
|
||
|
laptops did not reliably reboot, on the Libreboot 20210522 testing release.
|
||
|
They now reboot reliably, with this fix. See:
|
||
|
<https://notabug.org/libreboot/lbmk/issues/3>
|
||
|
* `lbmk`: Use `env` instead of hardcoding the bash path, in bash scripts. This
|
||
|
should make the build system slightly more portable between distros.
|
||
|
* Turkish keyboard layout added on GRUB payloads
|
||
|
|
||
|
New release schedule under consideration
|
||
|
========================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
The 20210522 release happened to coincide with coreboot 4.14's release, more
|
||
|
or less.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This release also coincides roughly with the coreboot 4.15 release, which came
|
||
|
out on November 5th. See:
|
||
|
<https://doc.coreboot.org/releases/coreboot-4.15-relnotes.html>
|
||
|
|
||
|
Coreboot has, since the 4.15 release, decided to release every 3 months instead
|
||
|
of every 6. That means the coreboot 4.16 release is planned for February 2022.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I'm considering this: 2 releases every 3 months, of Libreboot. A testing release
|
||
|
and then a fork of that is created, to fix bugs ready for a stable release 3
|
||
|
months later, while simultaneously working (in the lbmk master branch) towards
|
||
|
another testing release. *If no stable release is available at the same time as
|
||
|
a testing release, then delay it if the delay will be minimal, otherwise
|
||
|
cancel and abandon that particular stable branch.*
|
||
|
|
||
|
So: if I do this, the next stable release of Libreboot could be in February
|
||
|
2022 based on bug fixes of this November 2021 release, using coreboot 4.15.
|
||
|
A testing release could be simultaneously made, with perhaps extra features,
|
||
|
and based on coreboot 4.16.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I'm considering it. In general, I do want Libreboot to be in sync with the
|
||
|
coreboot project, but coreboot does not guarantee stability in their releases.
|
||
|
Rather, releases are regarded as *milestones* for the coreboot developers to
|
||
|
reflect on current developments, and plan the next few months.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Libreboot first started, coreboot did not have a fixed release scheduled.
|
||
|
It was purely rolling release. Coreboot however has been quite reliable with
|
||
|
its own release schedules in the past few years, making it viable for Libreboot
|
||
|
to also have a fixed schedule.
|