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From Libreboot 20231021 onwards, all releases (including 20231021)
have lbwww.git
(the website) and lbwww-img.git
(images for the website)
archived in the src tar archive for that release; older releases were hit
or miss, from 20210522 to 20230625, as to whether they came with documentation;
releases older than 20210522 generally always came with documentation. Modern
Libreboot documentation is written in Markdown (pandoc variant)
If you're working with release documentation, you don't get the full HTML files (such as the one you're viewing now, if you're reading this page in a web browser), so either read the Markdown files directly, or compile them to HTML using the Untitled Static Site Generator (which is what the Libreboot project uses to generate HTML from those files).
NOTE: av.libreboot.org
is hardcoded as the domain name where images are
pointed to, in lbwww.git
, so you will need to replace these references in
your local version, unless you're happy to just continue using those.
Git
Libreboot's build system uses Git, extensively. You should perform the steps below, even if you're using a release archive.
Before you use the build system, please know: the build system itself uses Git extensively, when downloading software like coreboot and patching it.
You should make sure to initialize your Git properly, before you begin or else the build system will not work properly. Do this:
git config --global user.name "John Doe"
git config --global user.email johndoe@example.com
Change the name and email address to whatever you want, when doing this.
You may also want to follow more of the steps here: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Getting-Started-First-Time-Git-Setup
Python
You should ensure that the python
command runs python 3, on your system.
Python2 is unused by lbmk or anything that it pulls down as modules.
If building on Debian/Ubuntu based systems, you can achieve that via:
sudo apt install python-is-python3
On Fedora, you can use the following
sudo dnf install python-unversioned-command
How to compile Libreboot
Actual development/testing is always done using lbmk directly, and this includes when building from source. Here are some instructions to get you started:
First, install build dependencies
Libreboot includes a script that automatically installs build dependencies according to the selected linux distro. The currently supported distros are: Debian/Ubuntu/Linux Mint/Pop!_OS, Fedora, Arch Linux/Parabola or Void Linux.
Some examples (run them as root, use use e.g. sudo
, doas
):
./build dependencies ubuntu
or
./build dependencies debian
or
./build dependencies fedora38
or
./build dependencies arch
NOTE: In case of Ubuntu 20.04 LTS or derived distros for that specific release, use the dedicated configuration file:
./build dependencies ubuntu2004
Check: config/dependencies/
for list of supported distros.
Technically, any Linux distribution can be used to build libreboot. However, you will have to write your own script for installing build dependencies.
Next, build ROM images
Libreboot MaKe (lbmk) automatically runs all necessary commands; for
example, ./build roms
will automatically run ./build grub
if the required GRUB payload (under elf/grub/
) does not exist.
As a result, you can now (after installing the correct build dependencies) run just a single command, from a fresh Git clone, to build all ROM images:
./build roms all
or even just build specific ROM images, e.g.:
./build roms x60
or get a list of supported build targets:
./build roms list
Or maybe just build payloads?
If you wish to build payloads, you can also do that. For example:
./build grub
./update trees -b seabios
./update trees -b u-boot
Previous steps will be performed automatically. However, you can still run individual parts of the build system manually, if you choose. This may be beneficial when you're making changes, and you wish to test a specific part of lbmk.
Want to modify Libreboot?
Check the lbmk maintenance manual for guidance. You may for example want to modify a config, e.g.:
./update trees -m coreboot x200_8mb
Or perhaps add a new board! The maintenance manual will teach you how the Libreboot build system (lbmk) works!
Post-compilation steps
So you compiled your Libreboot image? Congratulations!
Before you flash, please make sure that you dumped two copies of the original
firmware just in case (verifying the hashes of each dump, to ensure that they
match), using the -r
option in flashrom.
There are some additional considerations:
Regarding binary blobs
Firstly, you should read the Libreboot Binary Blob Reduction Policy: https://libreboot.org/news/policy.html
A lot of mainboards in Libreboot will boot entirely with free software, but there are certain newer mainboards supported in Libreboot that need binary blobs added to them, mostly for minor initialisation tasks.
They are automatically inserted during the build process, but then deleted during the release process; images built directly from lbmk can be flashed without further modification, but release images need to have these files re-inserted (e.g. KBC1126 EC firmware on HP EliteBooks). Please read this page for context: https://libreboot.org/docs/install/ivy_has_common.html
The scripts under directory script/vendor/
are the ones that do this.
Specifically, script/vendor/download
. The benefit of this is that you
do not need to extract anything from the original vendor image (e.g. Lenovo
UEFI image).
To know if this was performed on your board, you can read the Freedom Status page which documents which files are used (if any), on which boards: https://libreboot.org/freedom-status.html
There are specific files that you must know about, so they will be covered next:
Regarding CPU microcode
Libreboot release archives provide ROMs with or without CPU microcode updates,
but the newest revisions of lbmk (from lbmk.git
) only build ROM images that
contain microcode updates, by default. Libreboot's build system contains a script
that will generate release archives, and this is used to provide Libreboot
releases; this script is what provides the images with microcode removed,
alongside the default ones generated by lbmk during the build.
Please read: https://libreboot.org/freedom-status.html#cpu-microcode
The linked page has info, and includes instructions about how to manually remove them, if you wish to do so. Removal of CPU microcode updates (on Intel/AMD processors) will result in unpredictable security/stability issues, so beware.
Further context is provided in the Libreboot Binary Blob Reduction Policy: https://libreboot.org/news/policy.html
We recommend that you do not delete these updates, but you have the freedom
to choose. Additionally: we have only tested certain mainboards under this
configuration. To know which ones they are, do this in lbmk.git
:
cd config/coreboot/
git grep microcode_required
Example entry:
e6400_4mb/target.cfg:microcode_required="n"
If it says ="n"
, that means it has been tested. That does not mean it will
be stable, it's just that we're reasonably sure it will at least boot most
of the time, but you should expect random instability e.g. kernel panics.
If a given mainboard excludes microcode_required
in target.cfg
, or if
it says microcode_required="y"
, then the release ROMs will only contain
microcode updates. Manual removal (as above) is still possible, but it has
not been tested and is not recommended.
NOTE: ARM-based chromebooks (that Libreboot supports) don't use microcode at all. This section is only revelant for x86 (Intel/AMD).
Regarding Nvidia GPU ROM (Dell Latitude E6400)
Dell Latitude E6400 comes in two variants: Nvidia graphics, or Intel graphics. More information is available on the page: https://libreboot.org/docs/hardware/e6400.html
The intel graphics model can boot with coreboot's native video initialisation, which is free software. The Nvidia model (comes with Nvidia GPU) requires proprietary code called a VGA Option ROM to initialise the video display in early boot.
Libreboot automatically fetches this during the build process, inserting it into the very same ROM image that can be flashed on either model, but the VGA ROM will only be executed if you actually have the Nvidia GPU on your board.
ALSO: Libreboot 20230625 did not support Nvidia models at all (only Intel). In releases, only Libreboot 20231021 and newer will support it.
Pre-built ROM images from release archives since 20231021 will not contain this file by default, but it will be present if you compiled directly from lbmk. To remove it, do this:
./cbutils/default/cbfstool libreboot.rom remove -n pci10de,06eb.rom
The cbfstool binary was compiled when your image (target e6400_4mb
) was
compiled, which can alter the file system within your coreboot image.
Obviously, removing this VGA ROM will mean that the ROM image will only work correctly on Intel GPU variants of E6400, but you probably knew that already!
(If you're using a release archive instead, you can re-insert the VGA ROM by following these instructions)