If we do 'ls' in grub, the LVM volumes looks like that: '(lvm/[...])'
and while in certain conditions, the parenthesis are not necessary, in
the case of the code that does the regexp, it is required.
I vaguely remember having made the original tests with Trisquel 10,
and if we select LVM in Trisquel 10 both in the graphical and
netinstall installers, it ends up creating a BIOS boot partition (code
ef02), an UEFI partition (code ef00) in the case of the graphical
installer, and an LVM physical volume. I then migrated the automatic
test to Trisquel 11 before sending it.
But with the Trisquel 11 automatic test, we end up with a boot
partition, so the test will always succeed regardless of weather or
not GRUB is capable of booting from LVM partitions.
This was also tested on real hardware with Trisquel 10 installed with
the graphical installer.
The most likely explanation is that the GRUB config file being tested
also differed from the one in git, especially because both the
automatic tests and the manual tests were tested with both a
non-working GRUB configuration and a working one.
In addition using the new configuration file on a computer that was
using an old Libreboot version probably from around 2016 was made to
boot again using this new configuration file, and this looks even
more strange.
A possible explanation could be that the GRUB version is different,
though the given computer is not available for further testing, so
it's not possible to confirm that hypothesis.
Reported-by: Adrien Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
neox: private bug report and the information on how to fix it.
Signed-off-by: Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli <GNUtoo@cyberdimension.org>
Tested-by: Adrien 'neox' Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
Acked-by: Adrien 'neox' Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
This was not caught because the dev variable is used earlier and so it
produces no error.
In addition the commit 860b00bf1e
("ressources/grub, website: add LVM2 support (fix bug #65663 "No
support for LVM2").") where this issue was introduced was not tested
with LVM partitions that are encrypted.
Signed-off-by: Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli <GNUtoo@cyberdimension.org>
Acked-by: Adrien 'neox' Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
While the grub configuration file format is very different from real
shell scripts, the similarities are enough to make it pass shellcheck
with very few adjustements.
The advantage of using shellcheck here is that we can still detect
some issues such as variables that are referenced but not assigned.
For instance if we add 'echo "$test"' in the beginning of the
configuration file we then have:
In resources/grub/config/grub.cfg line 24:
echo "$test"
^---^ SC2154 (warning): test is referenced but not assigned
(for output from commands, use "$(test ...)" ).
Signed-off-by: Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli <GNUtoo@cyberdimension.org>
Acked-by: Adrien 'neox' Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
The GNU Boot project merged several repositories in its main git
repository, each with their separate histories. So far we have:
- the documentation/website that came from Libreboot
- the documentation/website pictures that also came from Libreboot
- the build system that also came from Libreboot (it's called lbmk there).
- some website autotools build system that was made from scratch by me.
The grub.cfg we use comes from the build system repository (lbmk). I
extracted the copyrights from the git commits of this repository.
However the first commit of lbmk (which we also have in our main GNU
Boot repository) is the following:
commit 89517ed6b9
Author: [Leah Rowe]
Date: [2021]
libreboot!
this is forked from the "libre" branch in osboot, which is itself a libre,
deblobbed fork of osboot, a blobbed up fork of libreboot
libreboot needed to be purged clean. this is the new libreboot development
repository. the old one has been abandoned
So I had to continue and look at the libre branch of osboot and
extract the copyrights from its commits as well.
Then I downloaded osbmk (https://notabug.org/osboot/osbmk) and
continued to look.
And here too we need to go beyond the first commit again, because
osbmk is based on 'Libreboot 20160907':
commit df76c3eb63dd8f4979d78ca262218eedb93512ed
Author: [Leah Rowe]
Date: [2020]
Fork Libreboot 20160907 build system. Large parts have been re-written.
This build system builds ROMs for X230, but they are so far untested.
Use at your own risk!
I still need to write documentation and do testing.
SOON: T60 with ATI GPU
We can find Libreboot 20160907 in
https://notabug.org/libreboot/obsolete-repository-preserved-for-historical-purposes
And then we end up with this commit:
commit cee90ae0fce6d6aee8d78969b60c952c8890abd6
Author: [Leah Rowe]
Date: [2014]
Libreboot release 6 beta 1.
Before that Libreboot only had tarball releases and the very first
tarball release was based on build scripts/Makefiles made by me, and
the git repository having the GRUB configuration can be found in
Libreboot 20131212 in X60/build-makefiles.
commit 80c37b9093be8325bf9ca8271ae4c6dba8fe81d6
Author: [GNUtoo]
Date: [2013]
Initial commit.
For now we only build the grub payload.
Signed-off-by: [GNUtoo]
And the intial grub.cfg was made by hand by me.
While I was at it I also updated the name/email combination in the
copyright header for the ones currently used.
Signed-off-by: Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli <GNUtoo@cyberdimension.org>
Acked-by: Adrien 'neox' Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
The "Load Operating System (incl. fully encrypted disks) [o]" GRUB
entry tries to load grub configuration files from the hard disk or SSD
partitions. It tries various files in /boot, /grub, /grub2,
/boot/grub, /boot/grub2.
For consistency we at least need to make it search for the
gnuboot_grub.cfg in these directories as well. Since this is GNU Boot,
the gnuboot_grub.cfg takes precedence over files made for other boot
software distributions.
For libreboot_grub.cfg, it was not replaced because it is still
mentioned in the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Adrien 'neox' Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
GNUtoo: reworked code and commit message.
Signed-off-by: Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli <GNUtoo@cyberdimension.org>
Acked-by: Adrien 'neox' Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
hardcode everything. in practise, the new logic will work just the same in
almost all cases, for most people, but it works around performance issues in
grub. cleanup of grub.cfg will be done in the next commit
On many boards, grub takes a very long time to
search for a grub.cfg file on the disk.
The problem is the search_grub function which
takes a long time to complete.
I (vitali64) studied the grub.cfg from 2016 and
the grub.cfg from 2021 and optimized the
grub.cfg. It should be faster now.
tianocore is a liability for the libreboot project. it's a bloated mess, and
unreliable, broken on many boards, and basically impossible to audit.
i don't trust tianocore, so i'm removing it.
There is already a separate menuentry for USB, and most people don't boot their
installed system from USB anyway. This will result in faster boot speeds.
mitigate missing characters in unifont for border/arrow characters. this saves
space because now it is no longer necessary to add a custom font
the background added has the libreboot logo on it, and it's 10kb in size unlike
the old gnulove background that was hundreds of KB
this is a compromise. i was going to do 30 for desktops, 1 for laptops.
however, some laptop users complain about the 1 second timeout being too fast.
10 seconds should just about please everyone.
this is forked from the "libre" branch in osboot, which is itself a libre,
deblobbed fork of osboot, a blobbed up fork of libreboot
libreboot needed to be purged clean. this is the new libreboot development
repository. the old one has been abandoned