install this from a package called "gnu-efi"; however, rEFInd relies on
features that were added in (I think) 3.0l to provide driver-loading
capabilities. The versions I've used and that work are 3.0p, 3.0q,
- 3.0r, and 3.0s, with the caveat that 3.0s works when I installed it via
- a Gentoo package, but not when I installed it by compiling the source
- code locally. Through mid-to-late 2012, most Linux distributions
- delivered rather elderly versions of GNU-EFI, but many are catching up
- by late 2012. You should check your GNU-EFI version number; you may
- need to download the latest source code, compile it, and install it
- locally. Between rEFInd version 0.2.7 and 0.6.1, the Makefiles assumed
- a locally-compiled GNU-EFI package, but older and more recent versions
- assume GNU-EFI installation in typical locations for
- distribution-provided packages. The legacy BIOS boot support on
- UEFI-based PCs doesn't work when GNU-EFI is compiled under GNU-EFI, so
- as of rEFInd 0.4.6, GNU-EFI is no longer the primary build environment,
- although it's easier to set up on a Linux system.
+ 3.0r, 3.0s, and 3.0u, with a caveat: The new time-sensitive
+ default_selection feature causes rEFInd to hang when using 3.0s and
+ earlier. 3.0u works fine for this (tested with compilation on three
+ computers). I don't know if 3.0t would work. Through mid-to-late 2012,
+ most Linux distributions delivered rather elderly versions of GNU-EFI,
+ but many are catching up by late 2012. You should check your GNU-EFI
+ version number; you may need to download the latest source code,
+ compile it, and install it locally. Between rEFInd version 0.2.7 and
+ 0.6.1, the Makefiles assumed a locally-compiled GNU-EFI package, but
+ older and more recent versions assume GNU-EFI installation in typical
+ locations for distribution-provided packages. The legacy BIOS boot
+ support on UEFI-based PCs doesn't work when rEFInd is compiled under
+ GNU-EFI, so as of rEFInd 0.4.6, GNU-EFI is no longer the primary build
+ environment, although it's easier to set up on a Linux system.
Of the two toolkits, I prefer to use TianoCore because it produces binaries
that can boot BIOS/legacy-mode OSes and because the TianoCore-produced
procedure. The installation documentation also omits at least one step and
is a bit unclear about others. Here's how I installed the toolkit:
-1) Download UDK2010.SR1.UP1 from
+1) Download UDK2010.SR1.UP1.P1 from
https://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/tianocore/index.php?title=UDK2010.
2) Type "mkdir /usr/local/UDK2010". You can use another directory, but the
Makefile for rEFInd's EFI drivers assumes this location. You'll need to
- edit the EDK2BASE line in the Make.common file if you install somewhere
+ edit the EDK2BASE line in the Make.tiano file if you install somewhere
else.
3) Type "cd /usr/local/UDK2010".
-3) Unzip the downloaded file (UDK2010.SR1.UP1.Complete.MyWorkSpace.zip) in
- the current directory (/usr/local/UDK2010). This creates a handful of
+4) Unzip the downloaded file (UDK2010.SR1.UP1.P1.Complete.MyWorkSpace.zip)
+ in the current directory (/usr/local/UDK2010). This creates a handful of
files, including a tarball and a couple of .zip files.
-4) Type "unzip UDK2010.SR1.UP1.MyWorkSpace.zip". This extracts the
+5) Type "unzip UDK2010.SR1.UP1.MyWorkSpace.zip". This extracts the
platform-neutral portion of the development kit.
-5) Type "cd MyWorkSpace".
+6) Type "cd MyWorkSpace".
-6) Type "tar xvf ../BaseTools\(Unix\).tar". This extracts the
+7) Type "tar xvf ../BaseTools\(Unix\).tar". This extracts the
Linux/Unix-specific portions of the toolkit.
-7) Follow the build instructions at
+8) Follow the build instructions at
https://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/tianocore/index.php?title=Using_EDK_II_with_Native_GCC_4.4;
however, a few changes are required, as detailed below....
-8) Type "source edksetup.sh BaseTools". This sets up some environment
+9) Type "source edksetup.sh BaseTools". This sets up some environment
variables, so subsequent steps (NOT including compiling the rEFInd EFI
drivers) must be typed in the shell you use for this step.
-9) Edit Conf/target.txt and change the following:
- - ACTIVE_PLATFORM = MdePkg/MdePkg.dsc
- - TARGET = RELEASE (DEBUG might work, but I've not tested it).
- - TARGET_ARCH = X64 (on x86-64; leave this as IA32 on x86). If you plan
- to build both architectures on an x86-64 system, you can set this to
- "IA32 X64".
- - TOOL_CHAIN_TAG = GCC46 (or other value depending on your GCC version;
- type "gcc -v" to learn your GCC version number). Note that GCC 4.7
- doesn't have its own entry, so use GCC46 for GCC 4.7.
- The TianoCore Makefiles read some of these variables from this file
- and use them when accessing directories, so be sure to type these
- entries in the case specified.
-
-10) The documentation refers to editing Conf/tools_def.txt in addition to
+10) Edit Conf/target.txt and change the following:
+ - ACTIVE_PLATFORM = MdePkg/MdePkg.dsc
+ - TARGET = RELEASE (DEBUG might work, but I've not tested it).
+ - TARGET_ARCH = X64 (on x86-64; leave this as IA32 on x86). If you plan
+ to build both architectures on an x86-64 system, you can set this to
+ "IA32 X64".
+ - TOOL_CHAIN_TAG = GCC46 (or other value depending on your GCC version;
+ type "gcc -v" to learn your GCC version number). Note that GCC 4.7
+ and 4.8 don't have their own entries, so use GCC46 for them.
+ The TianoCore Makefiles read some of these variables from this file
+ and use them when accessing directories, so be sure to type these
+ entries in the case specified.
+
+11) The documentation refers to editing Conf/tools_def.txt in addition to
Conf/target.txt, but doesn't specify what to change in
Conf/tools_def.txt. I haven't found it necessary to make any changes in
Conf/tools_def.txt EXCEPT when using GCC 4.7 on a Fedora 17 system.
to:
*_GCC46_X64_ASM_FLAGS = DEF(GCC46_ASM_FLAGS) -m64
-11) Type "make -C /usr/local/UDK2010/MyWorkSpace/BaseTools/Source/C".
+12) Type "make -C /usr/local/UDK2010/MyWorkSpace/BaseTools/Source/C".
(This step is not documented on the EDK Web page.) Note that this
requires the g++ compiler and UUID development libraries.
-10) Type "build" to build the main set of EDK2 files. This process is
+13) Type "build" to build the main set of EDK2 files. This process is
likely to take a few minutes.
If you installed in a location other than the one I've specified, you must
4) Type "make gnuefi" to build with GNU-EFI, or either "make" alone or
"make tiano" to build with TianoCore EDK2. With any luck, rEFInd will
compile without error, leaving the "refind_ia32.efi" or "refind_x64.efi"
- file, depending on your platform, in the "refind" subdirectory. If you
- want to build IA32 binaries on an x86-64 (X64) system, type "ARCH=ia32
- make". This works only if you're using the TianoCore build kit, and only
- if you set TARGET_ARCH to either "IA32" or "IA32 X64" in target.txt when
- you set up the TianoCore toolkit. If you plan to build both
- architectures, be sure to copy the .efi file for the first build out of
- the refind subdirectory before building the second architecture.
+ file, depending on your platform, in the "refind" subdirectory. This same
+ step builds the "gptsync_x64.efi" or "gptsync_ia32.efi" program file, in
+ the "gptsync" subdirectory. If you want to build IA32 binaries on an
+ x86-64 (X64) system, type "ARCH=ia32 make". This works only if you're
+ using the TianoCore build kit, and only if you set TARGET_ARCH to either
+ "IA32" or "IA32 X64" in target.txt when you set up the TianoCore toolkit.
+ If you plan to build both architectures, be sure to copy the .efi file
+ for the first build out of the refind subdirectory before building the
+ second architecture.
5) The default build process does NOT build the filesystem drivers. If you
want to build them, you must type "make fs" in the main rEFInd source
default Make.common file includes the following definitions:
EFIINC = /usr/include/efi
-GNUEFILIB = /usr/lib
-EFILIB = /usr/lib
-EFICRT0 = /usr/lib
+GNUEFILIB = /usr/lib64
+EFILIB = /usr/lib64
+EFICRT0 = /usr/lib64
If you've installed GNU-EFI from source code, you may need to add "local"
to those paths, as in "/usr/local/include/efi". You might need to change
-references to "lib" to "lib64" on some systems. Recall that you need at
-least GNU-EFI version 3.0l to build rEFInd, and until very recently, most
-distributions provided out-of-date versions of this package.
+references to "lib64" to "lib32" or "lib" on some systems. Recall that you
+need at least GNU-EFI version 3.0l to build rEFInd, and until very
+recently, most distributions provided out-of-date versions of this package.
If you're using TianoCore's EDK2, as noted earlier, you may need to adjust
the EDK2BASE variable in Make.tiano and filesystems/Make.tiano.