03.02.2017 21:23, Shaun Reitan пишет:
Ya, that’s where i originally started with this was building a bios
(actually started with coreboot + grub2) but the issue i found was
that
grub doesn't seam to be able to see the disks. It can if i run the
qemu
system using full virt with harddrive emulation but if i try and use
virtio for better performance the disk is just missing. I'm guessing
grub probably needs virtio drivers simular to what was done with xen.
Yes, unfortunately qemu port currently does not support virtio devices.
At this point i'm a bit lost as to what i should try next. Sounds
like
i386-pc built at a kernel is probably the best solution however i
need
to figure out how to build an image that can search and load a
configfile from the disk. grub-mkstandalone says the image is too
large, i'm not sure how to strip it down.
--fonts= --locales= --themes= --install-modules="..."
This will omit all fonts, locales and themes and only add to memory
disk
modules you explicitly listed. I used it successfully more than once on
i386-pc.
So then, should i be using grub-mkimage with a memdisk that has
another
grub config? So i'd build the kernel with a configfile
(memdisk)/boot/grub/grub.cfg and inside that grub.cfg it would do the
searching? Would i be in normal mode then? I'm going to attempt to
test this out now, i just wanted to shoot off this email just in-case
your still up since it seams like were on opposite ends of the world
:)
--
Shaun
------ Original Message ------
From: "Andrei Borzenkov" <address@hidden>
To: "Shaun Reitan" <address@hidden>; "address@hidden"
<address@hidden>
Sent: 2017-02-02 07:15:41 PM
Subject: Re: Building grub2 for use as a kernel on qemu
02.02.2017 22:30, Shaun Reitan пишет:
I guess the question is, should i be using i386-qemu? For kicks i
just
built a image using
./grub-mkstandalone -O i386-qemu -o grub2.img boot/grub/grub.cfg
-d
grub-core
and qemu will use it, however when i connect to the VNC console
all i
see is a bunch of colorful giberish.
QEMU platform is intended to run on "bare metal" replacing BIOS,
i.e.
qemu-system-x86_64 -bios grub2.img
You will need to include at_keyboard in image to get console input.
--
Shaun
------ Original Message ------
From: "Andrei Borzenkov" <address@hidden>
To: "Shaun Reitan" <address@hidden>; "address@hidden"
<address@hidden>
Sent: 2017-02-02 12:01:58 AM
Subject: Re: Building grub2 for use as a kernel on qemu
On Thu, Feb 2, 2017 at 6:25 AM, Andrei Borzenkov
<address@hidden>
wrote:
...
grub-mkimage -O i386-pc -c grub.cfg -o grub2.img at_keyboard
configfile
biosdisk ext2 linux serial halt minicmd terminal all_video cat
echo
gzio
search linux16 normal disk test true fat memdisk tar ls sleep
-p
/usr/src/grub/grub-core/
...
Use grub-mkstandalone to create image that includes internal
memory
disk
and place your config on this memory disk. Do not include your
modules
in image itself. By default grub-mkstandalone adds all
available
modules; if size is an issue (but this is really a couple of
megabytes,
so I do not expect it), you can restrict module list and other
components - see help output.
Sorry, missed that you use i386-pc platform, not i386-qemu. Then
size
of boot image does matter, you may want to at least exclude
themes and
translations (if any). Full standalone image that includes all
bells
and whistles for GUI boot does not fit in available memory on
this
platform.
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