--- title: Insert vendor files on Sandybridge/Ivybridge/Haswell x-toc-enable: true ... **NOTE: This page also applies to PM45 machine Dell Latitude E6400 if it contains an Nvidia GPU (Libreboot vendor scripts can insert the VGA ROM)** This is not a general purpose installation guide, but you *should read it* before installing Libreboot! *This* guide *must* be followed, no matter what method you use to install Libreboot; even if you compile from source, you should still read this page for later reference. For how to use an external programmer see the [25xx NOR flashing guide](/docs/install/spi.html) Introduction ============ **PLEASE MAKE SURE you have build dependencies installed first. Although you do not need to re-compile release ROMs, you should follow these instructions before reading the instructions below: ** Coreboot is nominally free software, but requires certain vendor code on some boards, for certain functionalities; we cover this more thoroughly in the [Freedom Status](../../freedom-status.md) page and in the [Binary Blob Reduction Policy](../../news/policy.md). Well, not all of these files are freely redistributable. Coreboot does provide vendor files in some cases, if the vendor has allowed it. In other cases, extraction from factory firmware is required, or you can extract them from vendor-supplied updates - Libreboot's build system does the latter. When you [compile Libreboot ROM images from source](../build/), Libreboot will automatically download any given files that are required, for any given board target. This is done without user intervention, and only when absolutely needed to make the machine boot properly. The problem? ------------ Well, if the files cannot be freely redistributed, then we can't provide them. So how do we handle *that*, in the context of Libreboot releases? The solution ------------ The answer is very simple: these files are **NOT** provided, at all! However, the very same logic used by the build system can be run standalone, to re-insert these vendor files on release ROMs. The `inject` script detects what files are needed for your ROM image. The script will detect what board you're inserting on, or you can manually tell it what board, and it will fetch them for you, inserting them, so that your board is ready to flash - flashing it without these required files may result in a brick. Vendor file locations -------------- During auto-download of files, they are saved to these locations within the Libreboot build system: * ME firmware: `vendor/*/me.bin` - the `*` can be any given directory. Different ones will be used by given boards, but the directory name may not match the board target name. * SMSC SCH5545 fan control firmware (for Dell T1650): `vendor/t1650/sch5545ec.bin` - ditto 9010/7010 MT/SFF optiplex machines. * SMSC KBC1126 embedded controller firmware, on HP EliteBooks: `ec/` * Intel MRC firmware, provides raminit on HP EliteBook 820 G2 The above list refers to the *non-redistributable files*, and these are not directly included in releases. These are auto-downloaded during the build. The `me.bin` files are produced by extracting them from vendor updates and neutering them with `me_cleaner` so that Intel ME is disabled during early boot. Injecting vendor files into ROM ------------------------------------ You must determine the correct board name, for your board, based on the list generated when running this command: ./build roms list In order to inject the necessary files into a rom image, run the script from the root of lbmk and point to the rom image. If you only wish to flash a release rom then the process of injecting the necessary files is quite simple. Run the injection script pointing to the release archive you downloaded: ./vendor inject libreboot-RELEASE_targetname.tar.xz The script can automatically detect the board as long as you do not change the file name. You can then find flash-ready ROMs in `/bin/release/` Alternatively, you may patch only a single rom file, but you must supply the correct board target name as alluded to above. For example: ./vendor inject -r x230_libreboot.rom -b x230_12mb Optionally, you can use this script to modify the mac address of the rom with the `-m` flag. For example: ./vendor inject -r x230_libreboot.rom -b x230_12mb -m 00:f6:f0:40:71:fd Check that the files were inserted ================================== You *must* ensure that the files were inserted. Some examples of how to do that in lbmk: ./update trees -d coreboot TREENAME Now you find `cbutitls/default`, which is a directory containing `cbfstool` and `ifdtool`. Do this on your ROM image (`libreboot.rom` in the example below): ./cbutils/default/cbfstool libreboot.rom print You should check that the files were inserted in cbfs, if needed; for example, EC firmware or MRC firmware. Next: ./cbutils/default/ifdtool -x libreboot.rom This creates several `.bin` files, one of which says `me` in it (Intel ME). Run hexdump on it: hexdump flashregion_2_intel_me.bin Check the output. If it's all `0xFF` (all ones) or otherwise isn't a bunch of code, then the Intel ME firmware wasn't inserted. You'll note the small size of the Intel ME, e.g. 84KB on sandybridge platforms. This is because lbmk *automatically* neuters it, disabling it during early boot. This is done using `me_cleaner`, which lbmk imports. NOTE: the MAC changer makes use of `nvmutil`, which you can read more about in the [nvmutil documentation](nvmutil.md). Errata ====== NOTE: As of Libreboot releases from May 2024 onward, the Intel MRC is no longer included for Haswell; MRC is a blob for raminit, but we now provide libre raminit. The following targets no longer exist in the build system: * `t440pmrc_12mb` (use `t440plibremrc_12mb` instead) * `t440pbmrc_12mb` (use `t440plibremrc_12mb` instead) * `w541mrc_12mb` (use `w541_12mb` instead) * `w541bmrc_12mb` (use `w541_12mb` instead) * `dell9020sff_12mb` (use `dell9020sff_nri_12mb` instead) * `dell9020sffbmrc` (use `dell9020sff_nri_12mb` instead) * `dell9020mt_12mb` (use `dell9020mt_nri_12mb` instead) * `dell9020mtbmrc` (use `dell9020mt_nri_12mb` instead) This is written as errata because some users may still be using older release images but on the newer build system from May 2024 onward; you must use the Libreboot 20240225 release if you want to inject MRC and so on, for these older targets. Libreboot's [binary blob reduction policy](../../news/policy.md) is very strict, and states: if a blob can be avoided, it must be avoided. Therefore, the MRC is removed on Haswell and Libreboot will only use the libre raminit (called NRI, short for Native Ram Initialisation).