xref: /titanic_50/usr/src/grub/grub-0.97/docs/grub.info-3 (revision 1b8adde7ba7d5e04395c141c5400dc2cffd7d809)
1*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis is grub.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from grub.texi.
2*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
3*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiINFO-DIR-SECTION Kernel
4*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiSTART-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
5*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* GRUB: (grub).                 The GRand Unified Bootloader
6*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* grub-install: (grub)Invoking grub-install.    Install GRUB on your drive
7*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* grub-md5-crypt: (grub)Invoking grub-md5-crypt.        Encrypt a password
8*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski                                                        in MD5 format
9*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* grub-terminfo: (grub)Invoking grub-terminfo.  Generate a terminfo
10*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski                                                command from a
11*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski                                                terminfo name
12*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* grub-set-default: (grub)Invoking grub-set-default.    Set a default boot
13*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski                                                        entry
14*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* mbchk: (grub)Invoking mbchk.  Check for the format of a Multiboot kernel
15*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiEND-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
16*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
17*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Copyright (C) 1999,2000,2001,2002,2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
18*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
19*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
20*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimanual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
21*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipreserved on all copies.
22*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
23*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
24*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithis manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also
25*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithat the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms
26*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiof a permission notice identical to this one.
27*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
28*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
29*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimanual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
30*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiversions.
31*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
32*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
33*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: install,  Next: ioprobe,  Prev: initrd,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
34*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
35*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinstall
36*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski-------
37*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
38*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: install [`--force-lba'] [`--stage2=os_stage2_file']
39*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          stage1_file [`d'] dest_dev stage2_file [addr] [`p']
40*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          [config_file] [real_config_file]
41*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This command is fairly complex, and you should not use this command
42*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     unless you are familiar with GRUB. Use `setup' (*note setup::)
43*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     instead.
44*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
45*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     In short, it will perform a full install presuming the Stage 2 or
46*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Stage 1.5(1) (*note install-Footnote-1::) is in its final install
47*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     location.
48*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
49*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     In slightly more detail, it will load STAGE1_FILE, validate that
50*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     it is a GRUB Stage 1 of the right version number, install in it a
51*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     blocklist for loading STAGE2_FILE as a Stage 2. If the option `d'
52*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     is present, the Stage 1 will always look for the actual disk
53*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     STAGE2_FILE was installed on, rather than using the booting drive.
54*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The Stage 2 will be loaded at address ADDR, which must be `0x8000'
55*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     for a true Stage 2, and `0x2000' for a Stage 1.5. If ADDR is not
56*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     present, GRUB will determine the address automatically. It then
57*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     writes the completed Stage 1 to the first block of the device
58*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     DEST_DEV. If the options `p' or CONFIG_FILE are present, then it
59*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     reads the first block of stage2, modifies it with the values of
60*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the partition STAGE2_FILE was found on (for `p') or places the
61*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     string CONFIG_FILE into the area telling the stage2 where to look
62*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     for a configuration file at boot time. Likewise, if
63*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     REAL_CONFIG_FILE is present and STAGE2_FILE is a Stage 1.5, then
64*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the Stage 2 CONFIG_FILE is patched with the configuration file
65*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     name REAL_CONFIG_FILE. This command preserves the DOS BPB (and for
66*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     hard disks, the partition table) of the sector the Stage 1 is to
67*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     be installed into.
68*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
69*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     *Caution:* Several buggy BIOSes don't pass a booting drive
70*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     properly when booting from a hard disk drive. Therefore, you will
71*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     unfortunately have to specify the option `d', whether your Stage2
72*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     resides at the booting drive or not, if you have such a BIOS. We
73*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     know these are defective in this way:
74*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
75*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
76*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          Fujitsu LifeBook 400 BIOS version 31J0103A
77*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
78*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
79*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          HP Vectra XU 6/200 BIOS version GG.06.11
80*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
81*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     *Caution2:* A number of BIOSes don't return a correct LBA support
82*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     bitmap even if they do have the support. So GRUB provides a
83*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     solution to ignore the wrong bitmap, that is, the option
84*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     `--force-lba'. Don't use this option if you know that your BIOS
85*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     doesn't have LBA support.
86*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
87*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     *Caution3:* You must specify the option `--stage2' in the grub
88*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     shell, if you cannot unmount the filesystem where your stage2 file
89*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     resides. The argument should be the file name in your operating
90*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     system.
91*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
92*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
93*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: install-Footnotes,  Up: install
94*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
95*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   (1) They're loaded the same way, so we will refer to the Stage 1.5
96*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskias a Stage 2 from now on.
97*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
98*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
99*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: ioprobe,  Next: kernel,  Prev: install,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
100*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
101*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiioprobe
102*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski-------
103*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
104*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: ioprobe drive
105*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Probe I/O ports used for the drive DRIVE. This command will list
106*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the I/O ports on the screen. For technical information, *Note
107*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Internals::.
108*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
109*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
110*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: kernel,  Next: lock,  Prev: ioprobe,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
111*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
112*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskikernel
113*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski------
114*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
115*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: kernel [`--type=type'] [`--no-mem-option'] file ...
116*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Attempt to load the primary boot image (Multiboot a.out or ELF,
117*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Linux zImage or bzImage, FreeBSD a.out, NetBSD a.out, etc.) from
118*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     FILE. The rest of the line is passed verbatim as the "kernel
119*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     command-line". Any modules must be reloaded after using this
120*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     command.
121*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
122*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This command also accepts the option `--type' so that you can
123*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     specify the kernel type of FILE explicitly. The argument TYPE must
124*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     be one of these: `netbsd', `freebsd', `openbsd', `linux',
125*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     `biglinux', and `multiboot'. However, you need to specify it only
126*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     if you want to load a NetBSD ELF kernel, because GRUB can
127*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     automatically determine a kernel type in the other cases, quite
128*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     safely.
129*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
130*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The option `--no-mem-option' is effective only for Linux. If the
131*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     option is specified, GRUB doesn't pass the option `mem=' to the
132*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     kernel.  This option is implied for Linux kernels 2.4.18 and newer.
133*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
134*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
135*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: lock,  Next: makeactive,  Prev: kernel,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
136*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
137*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilock
138*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski----
139*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
140*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: lock
141*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Prevent normal users from executing arbitrary menu entries. You
142*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     must use the command `password' if you really want this command to
143*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     be useful (*note password::).
144*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
145*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This command is used in a menu, as shown in this example:
146*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
147*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          title This entry is too dangerous to be executed by normal users
148*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          lock
149*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          root (hd0,a)
150*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          kernel /no-security-os
151*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
152*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     See also *Note Security::.
153*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
154*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
155*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: makeactive,  Next: map,  Prev: lock,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
156*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
157*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimakeactive
158*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski----------
159*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
160*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: makeactive
161*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Set the active partition on the root disk to GRUB's root device.
162*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This command is limited to _primary_ PC partitions on a hard disk.
163*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
164*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
165*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: map,  Next: md5crypt,  Prev: makeactive,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
166*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
167*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimap
168*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski---
169*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
170*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: map to_drive from_drive
171*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Map the drive FROM_DRIVE to the drive TO_DRIVE. This is necessary
172*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     when you chain-load some operating systems, such as DOS, if such
173*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     an OS resides at a non-first drive. Here is an example:
174*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
175*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          grub> map (hd0) (hd1)
176*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          grub> map (hd1) (hd0)
177*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
178*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The example exchanges the order between the first hard disk and the
179*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     second hard disk. See also *Note DOS/Windows::.
180*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
181*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
182*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: md5crypt,  Next: module,  Prev: map,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
183*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
184*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimd5crypt
185*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski--------
186*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
187*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: md5crypt
188*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Prompt to enter a password, and encrypt it in MD5 format. The
189*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     encrypted password can be used with the command `password' (*note
190*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     password::). See also *Note Security::.
191*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
192*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
193*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: module,  Next: modulenounzip,  Prev: md5crypt,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
194*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
195*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimodule
196*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski------
197*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
198*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: module file ...
199*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Load a boot module FILE for a Multiboot format boot image (no
200*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     interpretation of the file contents are made, so the user of this
201*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     command must know what the kernel in question expects). The rest
202*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     of the line is passed as the "module command-line", like the
203*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     `kernel' command. You must load a Multiboot kernel image before
204*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     loading any module. See also *Note modulenounzip::.
205*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
206*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
207*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: modulenounzip,  Next: pause,  Prev: module,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
208*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
209*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimodulenounzip
210*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski-------------
211*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
212*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: modulenounzip file ...
213*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The same as `module' (*note module::), except that automatic
214*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     decompression is disabled.
215*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
216*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
217*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: pause,  Next: quit,  Prev: modulenounzip,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
218*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
219*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipause
220*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski-----
221*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
222*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: pause message ...
223*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print the MESSAGE, then wait until a key is pressed. Note that
224*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     placing <^G> (ASCII code 7) in the message will cause the speaker
225*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     to emit the standard beep sound, which is useful when prompting
226*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the user to change floppies.
227*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
228*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
229*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: quit,  Next: reboot,  Prev: pause,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
230*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
231*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiquit
232*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski----
233*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
234*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: quit
235*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Exit from the grub shell `grub' (*note Invoking the grub shell::).
236*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This command can be used only in the grub shell.
237*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
238*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
239*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: reboot,  Next: read,  Prev: quit,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
240*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
241*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskireboot
242*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski------
243*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
244*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: reboot
245*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Reboot the computer.
246*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
247*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
248*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: read,  Next: root,  Prev: reboot,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
249*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
250*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiread
251*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski----
252*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
253*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: read addr
254*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Read a 32-bit value from memory at address ADDR and display it in
255*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     hex format.
256*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
257*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
258*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: root,  Next: rootnoverify,  Prev: read,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
259*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
260*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiroot
261*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski----
262*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
263*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: root device [hdbias]
264*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Set the current "root device" to the device DEVICE, then attempt
265*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     to mount it to get the partition size (for passing the partition
266*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     descriptor in `ES:ESI', used by some chain-loaded boot loaders),
267*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the BSD drive-type (for booting BSD kernels using their native
268*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     boot format), and correctly determine the PC partition where a BSD
269*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     sub-partition is located. The optional HDBIAS parameter is a
270*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     number to tell a BSD kernel how many BIOS drive numbers are on
271*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     controllers before the current one. For example, if there is an
272*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     IDE disk and a SCSI disk, and your FreeBSD root partition is on
273*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the SCSI disk, then use a `1' for HDBIAS.
274*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
275*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     See also *Note rootnoverify::.
276*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
277*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
278*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: rootnoverify,  Next: savedefault,  Prev: root,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
279*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
280*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskirootnoverify
281*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski------------
282*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
283*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: rootnoverify device [hdbias]
284*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Similar to `root' (*note root::), but don't attempt to mount the
285*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     partition. This is useful for when an OS is outside of the area of
286*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the disk that GRUB can read, but setting the correct root device
287*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     is still desired. Note that the items mentioned in `root' above
288*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     which derived from attempting the mount will _not_ work correctly.
289*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
290*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
291*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: savedefault,  Next: setup,  Prev: rootnoverify,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
292*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
293*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisavedefault
294*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski-----------
295*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
296*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: savedefault num
297*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Save the current menu entry or NUM if specified as a default
298*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     entry. Here is an example:
299*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
300*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          default saved
301*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          timeout 10
302*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
303*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          title GNU/Linux
304*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          root (hd0,0)
305*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          kernel /boot/vmlinuz root=/dev/sda1 vga=ext
306*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          initrd /boot/initrd
307*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          savedefault
308*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
309*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          title FreeBSD
310*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          root (hd0,a)
311*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          kernel /boot/loader
312*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          savedefault
313*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
314*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     With this configuration, GRUB will choose the entry booted
315*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     previously as the default entry.
316*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
317*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     You can specify `fallback' instead of a number. Then, next
318*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     fallback entry is saved. Next fallback entry is chosen from
319*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     fallback entries. Normally, this will be the first entry in
320*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     fallback ones.
321*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
322*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     See also *Note default:: and *Note Invoking grub-set-default::.
323*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
324*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
325*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: setup,  Next: testload,  Prev: savedefault,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
326*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
327*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisetup
328*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski-----
329*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
330*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: setup [`--force-lba'] [`--stage2=os_stage2_file']
331*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          [`--prefix=dir'] install_device [image_device]
332*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Set up the installation of GRUB automatically. This command uses
333*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the more flexible command `install' (*note install::) in the
334*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     backend and installs GRUB into the device INSTALL_DEVICE. If
335*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     IMAGE_DEVICE is specified, then find the GRUB images (*note
336*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Images::) in the device IMAGE_DEVICE, otherwise use the current
337*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     "root device", which can be set by the command `root'. If
338*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     INSTALL_DEVICE is a hard disk, then embed a Stage 1.5 in the disk
339*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     if possible.
340*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
341*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The option `--prefix' specifies the directory under which GRUB
342*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     images are put. If it is not specified, GRUB automatically
343*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     searches them in `/boot/grub' and `/grub'.
344*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
345*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The options `--force-lba' and `--stage2' are just passed to
346*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     `install' if specified. *Note install::, for more information.
347*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
348*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
349*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: testload,  Next: testvbe,  Prev: setup,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
350*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
351*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskitestload
352*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski--------
353*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
354*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: testload file
355*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Read the entire contents of FILE in several different ways and
356*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     compare them, to test the filesystem code. The output is somewhat
357*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     cryptic, but if no errors are reported and the final `i=X,
358*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     filepos=Y' reading has X and Y equal, then it is definitely
359*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     consistent, and very likely works correctly subject to a
360*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     consistent offset error. If this test succeeds, then a good next
361*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     step is to try loading a kernel.
362*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
363*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
364*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: testvbe,  Next: uppermem,  Prev: testload,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
365*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
366*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskitestvbe
367*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski-------
368*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
369*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: testvbe mode
370*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Test the VESA BIOS EXTENSION mode MODE. This command will switch
371*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     your video card to the graphics mode, and show an endless
372*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     animation. Hit any key to return. See also *Note vbeprobe::.
373*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
374*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
375*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: uppermem,  Next: vbeprobe,  Prev: testvbe,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
376*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
377*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiuppermem
378*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski--------
379*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
380*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: uppermem kbytes
381*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Force GRUB to assume that only KBYTES kilobytes of upper memory
382*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     are installed. Any system address range maps are discarded.
383*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
384*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     *Caution:* This should be used with great caution, and should only
385*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     be necessary on some old machines. GRUB's BIOS probe can pick up
386*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     all RAM on all new machines the author has ever heard of. It can
387*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     also be used for debugging purposes to lie to an OS.
388*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
389*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
390*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: vbeprobe,  Prev: uppermem,  Up: Command-line and menu entry commands
391*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
392*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskivbeprobe
393*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski--------
394*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
395*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski - Command: vbeprobe [mode]
396*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Probe VESA BIOS EXTENSION information. If the mode MODE is
397*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     specified, show only the information about MODE. Otherwise, this
398*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     command lists up available VBE modes on the screen. See also *Note
399*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     testvbe::.
400*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
401*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
402*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Troubleshooting,  Next: Invoking the grub shell,  Prev: Commands,  Up: Top
403*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
404*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiError messages reported by GRUB
405*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski*******************************
406*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
407*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   This chapter describes error messages reported by GRUB when you
408*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiencounter trouble. *Note Invoking the grub shell::, if your problem is
409*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecific to the grub shell.
410*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
411*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Menu:
412*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
413*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Stage1 errors::               Errors reported by the Stage 1
414*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Stage1.5 errors::             Errors reported by the Stage 1.5
415*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Stage2 errors::               Errors reported by the Stage 2
416*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
417*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
418*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Stage1 errors,  Next: Stage1.5 errors,  Up: Troubleshooting
419*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
420*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiErrors reported by the Stage 1
421*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski==============================
422*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
423*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The general way that the Stage 1 handles errors is to print an error
424*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistring and then halt. Pressing `<CTRL>-<ALT>-<DEL>' will reboot.
425*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
426*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The following is a comprehensive list of error messages for the
427*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiStage 1:
428*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
429*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiHard Disk Error
430*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The stage2 or stage1.5 is being read from a hard disk, and the
431*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     attempt to determine the size and geometry of the hard disk failed.
432*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
433*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFloppy Error
434*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The stage2 or stage1.5 is being read from a floppy disk, and the
435*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     attempt to determine the size and geometry of the floppy disk
436*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     failed. It's listed as a separate error since the probe sequence
437*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     is different than for hard disks.
438*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
439*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiRead Error
440*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     A disk read error happened while trying to read the stage2 or
441*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     stage1.5.
442*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
443*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiGeom Error
444*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The location of the stage2 or stage1.5 is not in the portion of
445*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the disk supported directly by the BIOS read calls.  This could
446*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     occur because the BIOS translated geometry has been changed by the
447*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     user or the disk is moved to another machine or controller after
448*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     installation, or GRUB was not installed using itself (if it was,
449*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the Stage 2 version of this error would have been seen during that
450*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     process and it would not have completed the install).
451*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
452*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
453*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Stage1.5 errors,  Next: Stage2 errors,  Prev: Stage1 errors,  Up: Troubleshooting
454*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
455*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiErrors reported by the Stage 1.5
456*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski================================
457*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
458*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The general way that the Stage 1.5 handles errors is to print an
459*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskierror number in the form `Error NUM' and then halt. Pressing
460*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`<CTRL>-<ALT>-<DEL>' will reboot.
461*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
462*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The error numbers correspond to the errors reported by Stage 2.
463*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski*Note Stage2 errors::.
464*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
465*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
466*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Stage2 errors,  Prev: Stage1.5 errors,  Up: Troubleshooting
467*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
468*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiErrors reported by the Stage 2
469*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski==============================
470*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
471*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The general way that the Stage 2 handles errors is to abort the
472*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperation in question, print an error string, then (if possible) either
473*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicontinue based on the fact that an error occurred or wait for the user
474*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito deal with the error.
475*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
476*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The following is a comprehensive list of error messages for the
477*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiStage 2 (error numbers for the Stage 1.5 are listed before the colon in
478*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskieach description):
479*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
480*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski1 : Filename must be either an absolute filename or blocklist
481*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if a file name is requested which doesn't
482*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     fit the syntax/rules listed in the *Note Filesystem::.
483*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
484*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski2 : Bad file or directory type
485*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if a file requested is not a regular file,
486*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     but something like a symbolic link, directory, or FIFO.
487*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
488*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski3 : Bad or corrupt data while decompressing file
489*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the run-length decompression code gets an
490*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     internal error. This is usually from a corrupt file.
491*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
492*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski4 : Bad or incompatible header in compressed file
493*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the file header for a supposedly
494*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     compressed file is bad.
495*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
496*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski5 : Partition table invalid or corrupt
497*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the sanity checks on the integrity of the
498*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     partition table fail. This is a bad sign.
499*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
500*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski6 : Mismatched or corrupt version of stage1/stage2
501*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the install command points to
502*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     incompatible or corrupt versions of the stage1 or stage2. It can't
503*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     detect corruption in general, but this is a sanity check on the
504*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     version numbers, which should be correct.
505*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
506*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski7 : Loading below 1MB is not supported
507*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the lowest address in a kernel is below
508*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the 1MB boundary. The Linux zImage format is a special case and
509*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     can be handled since it has a fixed loading address and maximum
510*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     size.
511*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
512*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8 : Kernel must be loaded before booting
513*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if GRUB is told to execute the boot sequence
514*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     without having a kernel to start.
515*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
516*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski9 : Unknown boot failure
517*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the boot attempt did not succeed for
518*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     reasons which are unknown.
519*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
520*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski10 : Unsupported Multiboot features requested
521*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned when the Multiboot features word in the
522*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Multiboot header requires a feature that is not recognized. The
523*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     point of this is that the kernel requires special handling which
524*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     GRUB is probably unable to provide.
525*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
526*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski11 : Unrecognized device string
527*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if a device string was expected, and the
528*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     string encountered didn't fit the syntax/rules listed in the *Note
529*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Filesystem::.
530*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
531*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski12 : Invalid device requested
532*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if a device string is recognizable but does
533*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     not fall under the other device errors.
534*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
535*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski13 : Invalid or unsupported executable format
536*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the kernel image being loaded is not
537*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     recognized as Multiboot or one of the supported native formats
538*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     (Linux zImage or bzImage, FreeBSD, or NetBSD).
539*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
540*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski14 : Filesystem compatibility error, cannot read whole file
541*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Some of the filesystem reading code in GRUB has limits on the
542*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     length of the files it can read. This error is returned when the
543*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     user runs into such a limit.
544*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
545*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski15 : File not found
546*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the specified file name cannot be found,
547*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     but everything else (like the disk/partition info) is OK.
548*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
549*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski16 : Inconsistent filesystem structure
550*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned by the filesystem code to denote an internal
551*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     error caused by the sanity checks of the filesystem structure on
552*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     disk not matching what it expects. This is usually caused by a
553*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     corrupt filesystem or bugs in the code handling it in GRUB.
554*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
555*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski17 : Cannot mount selected partition
556*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the partition requested exists, but the
557*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     filesystem type cannot be recognized by GRUB.
558*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
559*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski18 : Selected cylinder exceeds maximum supported by BIOS
560*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned when a read is attempted at a linear block
561*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     address beyond the end of the BIOS translated area. This generally
562*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     happens if your disk is larger than the BIOS can handle (512MB for
563*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     (E)IDE disks on older machines or larger than 8GB in general).
564*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
565*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski19 : Linux kernel must be loaded before initrd
566*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the initrd command is used before
567*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     loading a Linux kernel.
568*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
569*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski20 : Multiboot kernel must be loaded before modules
570*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the module load command is used before
571*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     loading a Multiboot kernel. It only makes sense in this case
572*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     anyway, as GRUB has no idea how to communicate the presence of
573*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     such modules to a non-Multiboot-aware kernel.
574*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
575*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski21 : Selected disk does not exist
576*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the device part of a device- or full
577*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     file name refers to a disk or BIOS device that is not present or
578*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     not recognized by the BIOS in the system.
579*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
580*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski22 : No such partition
581*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if a partition is requested in the device
582*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     part of a device- or full file name which isn't on the selected
583*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     disk.
584*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
585*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski23 : Error while parsing number
586*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if GRUB was expecting to read a number and
587*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     encountered bad data.
588*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
589*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski24 : Attempt to access block outside partition
590*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if a linear block address is outside of the
591*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     disk partition. This generally happens because of a corrupt
592*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     filesystem on the disk or a bug in the code handling it in GRUB
593*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     (it's a great debugging tool).
594*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
595*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski25 : Disk read error
596*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if there is a disk read error when trying to
597*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     probe or read data from a particular disk.
598*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
599*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski26 : Too many symbolic links
600*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if the link count is beyond the maximum
601*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     (currently 5), possibly the symbolic links are looped.
602*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
603*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski27 : Unrecognized command
604*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if an unrecognized command is entered on the
605*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     command-line or in a boot sequence section of a configuration file
606*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     and that entry is selected.
607*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
608*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski28 : Selected item cannot fit into memory
609*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if a kernel, module, or raw file load
610*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     command is either trying to load its data such that it won't fit
611*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     into memory or it is simply too big.
612*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
613*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski29 : Disk write error
614*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if there is a disk write error when trying
615*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     to write to a particular disk. This would generally only occur
616*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     during an install of set active partition command.
617*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
618*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski30 : Invalid argument
619*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if an argument specified to a command is
620*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     invalid.
621*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
622*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski31 : File is not sector aligned
623*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error may occur only when you access a ReiserFS partition by
624*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     block-lists (e.g. the command `install'). In this case, you should
625*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     mount the partition with the `-o notail' option.
626*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
627*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski32 : Must be authenticated
628*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if you try to run a locked entry. You should
629*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     enter a correct password before running such an entry.
630*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
631*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski33 : Serial device not configured
632*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if you try to change your terminal to a
633*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     serial one before initializing any serial device.
634*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
635*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski34 : No spare sectors on the disk
636*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This error is returned if a disk doesn't have enough spare space.
637*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This happens when you try to embed Stage 1.5 into the unused
638*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     sectors after the MBR, but the first partition starts right after
639*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the MBR or they are used by EZ-BIOS.
640*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
641*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
642*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Invoking the grub shell,  Next: Invoking grub-install,  Prev: Troubleshooting,  Up: Top
643*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
644*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiInvoking the grub shell
645*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski***********************
646*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
647*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   This chapter documents the grub shell `grub'. Note that the grub
648*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskishell is an emulator; it doesn't run under the native environment, so it
649*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisometimes does something wrong. Therefore, you shouldn't trust it too
650*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimuch. If there is anything wrong with it, don't hesitate to try the
651*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinative GRUB environment, especially when it guesses a wrong map between
652*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiBIOS drives and OS devices.
653*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
654*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Menu:
655*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
656*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Basic usage::                 How to use the grub shell
657*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Installation under UNIX::     How to install GRUB via `grub'
658*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Device map::                  The map between BIOS drives and OS devices
659*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
660*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
661*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Basic usage,  Next: Installation under UNIX,  Up: Invoking the grub shell
662*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
663*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIntroduction into the grub shell
664*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski================================
665*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
666*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   You can use the command `grub' for installing GRUB under your
667*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating systems and for a testbed when you add a new feature into GRUB
668*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskior when fixing a bug. `grub' is almost the same as the Stage 2, and, in
669*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifact, it shares the source code with the Stage 2 and you can use the
670*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisame commands (*note Commands::) in `grub'. It is emulated by replacing
671*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiBIOS calls with UNIX system calls and libc functions.
672*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
673*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The command `grub' accepts the following options:
674*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
675*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--help'
676*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print a summary of the command-line options and exit.
677*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
678*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--version'
679*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print the version number of GRUB and exit.
680*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
681*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--verbose'
682*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print some verbose messages for debugging purpose.
683*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
684*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--device-map=FILE'
685*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Use the device map file FILE. The format is described in *Note
686*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Device map::.
687*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
688*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--no-floppy'
689*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Do not probe any floppy drive. This option has no effect if the
690*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     option `--device-map' is specified (*note Device map::).
691*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
692*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--probe-second-floppy'
693*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Probe the second floppy drive. If this option is not specified,
694*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     the grub shell does not probe it, as that sometimes takes a long
695*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     time. If you specify the device map file (*note Device map::), the
696*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     grub shell just ignores this option.
697*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
698*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--config-file=FILE'
699*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Read the configuration file FILE instead of `/boot/grub/menu.lst'.
700*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The format is the same as the normal GRUB syntax. See *Note
701*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Filesystem::, for more information.
702*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
703*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--boot-drive=DRIVE'
704*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Set the stage2 BOOT_DRIVE to DRIVE. This argument should be an
705*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     integer (decimal, octal or hexadecimal).
706*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
707*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--install-partition=PAR'
708*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Set the stage2 INSTALL_PARTITION to PAR. This argument should be
709*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     an integer (decimal, octal or hexadecimal).
710*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
711*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--no-config-file'
712*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Do not use the configuration file even if it can be read.
713*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
714*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--no-curses'
715*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Do not use the screen handling interface by the curses even if it
716*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     is available.
717*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
718*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--batch'
719*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     This option has the same meaning as `--no-config-file --no-curses'.
720*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
721*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--read-only'
722*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Disable writing to any disk.
723*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
724*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--hold'
725*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Wait until a debugger will attach. This option is useful when you
726*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     want to debug the startup code.
727*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
728*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
729*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Installation under UNIX,  Next: Device map,  Prev: Basic usage,  Up: Invoking the grub shell
730*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
731*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiHow to install GRUB via `grub'
732*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski==============================
733*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
734*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The installation procedure is the same as under the "native" Stage
735*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski2. *Note Installation::, for more information. The command
736*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`grub'-specific information is described here.
737*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
738*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   What you should be careful about is "buffer cache". `grub' makes use
739*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiof raw devices instead of filesystems that your operating systems
740*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiserve, so there exists a potential problem that some cache
741*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinconsistency may corrupt your filesystems. What we recommend is:
742*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
743*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   * If you can unmount drives to which GRUB may write any amount of
744*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     data, unmount them before running `grub'.
745*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
746*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   * If a drive cannot be unmounted but can be mounted with the
747*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     read-only flag, mount it in read-only mode. That should be secure.
748*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
749*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   * If a drive must be mounted with the read-write flag, make sure
750*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     that no activity is being done on it while the command `grub' is
751*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     running.
752*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
753*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   * Reboot your operating system as soon as possible. This is probably
754*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     not required if you follow the rules above, but reboot is the most
755*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     secure way.
756*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
757*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   In addition, enter the command `quit' when you finish the
758*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinstallation. That is _very important_ because `quit' makes the buffer
759*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicache consistent. Do not push <C-c>.
760*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
761*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   If you want to install GRUB non-interactively, specify `--batch'
762*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioption in the command-line. This is a simple example:
763*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
764*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     #!/bin/sh
765*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
766*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     # Use /usr/sbin/grub if you are on an older system.
767*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     /sbin/grub --batch <<EOT 1>/dev/null 2>/dev/null
768*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     root (hd0,0)
769*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     setup (hd0)
770*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     quit
771*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     EOT
772*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
773*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
774*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Device map,  Prev: Installation under UNIX,  Up: Invoking the grub shell
775*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
776*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe map between BIOS drives and OS devices
777*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski==========================================
778*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
779*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   When you specify the option `--device-map' (*note Basic usage::),
780*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe grub shell creates the "device map file" automatically unless it
781*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskialready exists. The file name `/boot/grub/device.map' is preferred.
782*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
783*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   If the device map file exists, the grub shell reads it to map BIOS
784*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidrives to OS devices. This file consists of lines like this:
785*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
786*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     DEVICE FILE
787*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
788*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   DEVICE is a drive specified in the GRUB syntax (*note Device
789*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisyntax::), and FILE is an OS file, which is normally a device file.
790*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
791*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The reason why the grub shell gives you the device map file is that
792*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiit cannot guess the map between BIOS drives and OS devices correctly in
793*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisome environments. For example, if you exchange the boot sequence
794*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibetween IDE and SCSI in your BIOS, it gets the order wrong.
795*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
796*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Thus, edit the file if the grub shell makes a mistake. You can put
797*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiany comments in the file if needed, as the grub shell assumes that a
798*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiline is just a comment if the first character is `#'.
799*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
800*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
801*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Invoking grub-install,  Next: Invoking grub-md5-crypt,  Prev: Invoking the grub shell,  Up: Top
802*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
803*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiInvoking grub-install
804*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski*********************
805*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
806*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The program `grub-install' installs GRUB on your drive using the
807*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskigrub shell (*note Invoking the grub shell::). You must specify the
808*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidevice name on which you want to install GRUB, like this:
809*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
810*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     grub-install INSTALL_DEVICE
811*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
812*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The device name INSTALL_DEVICE is an OS device name or a GRUB device
813*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiname.
814*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
815*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   `grub-install' accepts the following options:
816*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
817*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--help'
818*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print a summary of the command-line options and exit.
819*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
820*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--version'
821*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print the version number of GRUB and exit.
822*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
823*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--force-lba'
824*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Force GRUB to use LBA mode even for a buggy BIOS. Use this option
825*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     only if your BIOS doesn't work properly in LBA mode even though it
826*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     supports LBA mode.
827*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
828*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--root-directory=DIR'
829*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Install GRUB images under the directory DIR instead of the root
830*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     directory. This option is useful when you want to install GRUB
831*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     into a separate partition or a removable disk. Here is an example
832*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     in which you have a separate "boot" partition which is mounted on
833*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     `/boot':
834*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
835*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          grub-install --root-directory=/boot hd0
836*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
837*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--grub-shell=FILE'
838*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Use FILE as the grub shell. You can append arbitrary options to
839*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     FILE after the file name, like this:
840*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
841*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski          grub-install --grub-shell="grub --read-only" /dev/fd0
842*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
843*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--recheck'
844*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Recheck the device map, even if `/boot/grub/device.map' already
845*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     exists. You should use this option whenever you add/remove a disk
846*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     into/from your computer.
847*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
848*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
849*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Invoking grub-md5-crypt,  Next: Invoking grub-terminfo,  Prev: Invoking grub-install,  Up: Top
850*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
851*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiInvoking grub-md5-crypt
852*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski***********************
853*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
854*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The program `grub-md5-crypt' encrypts a password in MD5 format.
855*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis is just a frontend of the grub shell (*note Invoking the grub
856*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskishell::). Passwords encrypted by this program can be used with the
857*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicommand `password' (*note password::).
858*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
859*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   `grub-md5-crypt' accepts the following options:
860*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
861*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--help'
862*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print a summary of the command-line options and exit.
863*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
864*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--version'
865*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print the version information and exit.
866*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
867*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--grub-shell=FILE'
868*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Use FILE as the grub shell.
869*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
870*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
871*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Invoking grub-terminfo,  Next: Invoking grub-set-default,  Prev: Invoking grub-md5-crypt,  Up: Top
872*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
873*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiInvoking grub-terminfo
874*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski**********************
875*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
876*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The program `grub-terminfo' generates a terminfo command from a
877*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiterminfo name (*note terminfo::). The result can be used in the
878*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiconfiguration file, to define escape sequences. Because GRUB assumes
879*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithat your terminal is vt100-compatible by default, this would be useful
880*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskionly if your terminal is uncommon (such as vt52).
881*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
882*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   `grub-terminfo' accepts the following options:
883*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
884*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--help'
885*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print a summary of the command-line options and exit.
886*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
887*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--version'
888*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print the version information and exit.
889*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
890*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   You must specify one argument to this command. For example:
891*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
892*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     grub-terminfo vt52
893*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
894*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
895*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Invoking grub-set-default,  Next: Invoking mbchk,  Prev: Invoking grub-terminfo,  Up: Top
896*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
897*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiInvoking grub-set-default
898*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski*************************
899*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
900*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The program `grub-set-default' sets the default boot entry for GRUB.
901*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis automatically creates a file named `default' under your GRUB
902*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidirectory (i.e. `/boot/grub'), if it is not present. This file is used
903*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito determine the default boot entry when GRUB boots up your system when
904*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiyou use `default saved' in your configuration file (*note default::),
905*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiand to save next default boot entry when you use `savedefault' in a
906*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboot entry (*note savedefault::).
907*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
908*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   `grub-set-default' accepts the following options:
909*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
910*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--help'
911*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print a summary of the command-line options and exit.
912*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
913*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--version'
914*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print the version information and exit.
915*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
916*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--root-directory=DIR'
917*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Use the directory DIR instead of the root directory (i.e. `/') to
918*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     define the location of the default file. This is useful when you
919*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     mount a disk which is used for another system.
920*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
921*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   You must specify a single argument to `grub-set-default'. This
922*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiargument is normally the number of a default boot entry. For example,
923*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiif you have this configuration file:
924*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
925*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     default saved
926*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     timeout 10
927*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
928*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     title GNU/Hurd
929*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     root (hd0,0)
930*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     ...
931*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
932*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     title GNU/Linux
933*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     root (hd0,1)
934*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     ...
935*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
936*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   and if you want to set the next default boot entry to GNU/Linux, you
937*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimay execute this command:
938*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
939*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     grub-set-default 1
940*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
941*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Because the entry for GNU/Linux is `1'. Note that entries are
942*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicounted from zero. So, if you want to specify GNU/Hurd here, then you
943*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskishould specify `0'.
944*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
945*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   This feature is very useful if you want to test a new kernel or to
946*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimake your system quite robust. *Note Making your system robust::, for
947*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimore hints about how to set up a robust system.
948*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
949*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
950*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Invoking mbchk,  Next: Obtaining and Building GRUB,  Prev: Invoking grub-set-default,  Up: Top
951*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
952*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiInvoking mbchk
953*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski**************
954*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
955*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The program `mbchk' checks for the format of a Multiboot kernel. We
956*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskirecommend using this program before booting your own kernel by GRUB.
957*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
958*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   `mbchk' accepts the following options:
959*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
960*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--help'
961*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print a summary of the command-line options and exit.
962*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
963*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--version'
964*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Print the version number of GRUB and exit.
965*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
966*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`--quiet'
967*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Suppress all normal output.
968*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
969*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
970*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Obtaining and Building GRUB,  Next: Reporting bugs,  Prev: Invoking mbchk,  Up: Top
971*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
972*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiHow to obtain and build GRUB
973*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski****************************
974*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
975*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     *Caution:* GRUB requires binutils-2.9.1.0.23 or later because the
976*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     GNU assembler has been changed so that it can produce real 16bits
977*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     machine code between 2.9.1 and 2.9.1.0.x. See
978*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     `http://sources.redhat.com/binutils/', to obtain information on
979*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     how to get the latest version.
980*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
981*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   GRUB is available from the GNU alpha archive site
982*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/grub' or any of its mirrors. The file will be
983*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinamed grub-version.tar.gz. The current version is 0.95, so the file you
984*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskishould grab is:
985*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
986*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   `ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/grub/grub-0.95.tar.gz'
987*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
988*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   To unbundle GRUB use the instruction:
989*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
990*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     zcat grub-0.95.tar.gz | tar xvf -
991*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
992*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   which will create a directory called `grub-0.95' with all the
993*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisources. You can look at the file `INSTALL' for detailed instructions
994*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskion how to build and install GRUB, but you should be able to just do:
995*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
996*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     cd grub-0.95
997*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     ./configure
998*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     make install
999*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1000*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   This will install the grub shell `grub' (*note Invoking the grub
1001*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskishell::), the Multiboot checker `mbchk' (*note Invoking mbchk::), and
1002*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe GRUB images. This will also install the GRUB manual.
1003*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1004*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Also, the latest version is available from the CVS. See
1005*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`http://savannah.gnu.org/cvs/?group=grub' for more information.
1006*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1007*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1008*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Reporting bugs,  Next: Future,  Prev: Obtaining and Building GRUB,  Up: Top
1009*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1010*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiReporting bugs
1011*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski**************
1012*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1013*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   These are the guideline for how to report bugs. Take a look at this
1014*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilist below before you submit bugs:
1015*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1016*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski  1. Before getting unsettled, read this manual through and through.
1017*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Also, see the GNU GRUB FAQ
1018*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     (http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/grub-faq.html).
1019*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1020*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski  2. Always mention the information on your GRUB. The version number
1021*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     and the configuration are quite important. If you build it
1022*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     yourself, write the options specified to the configure script and
1023*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     your operating system, including the versions of gcc and binutils.
1024*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1025*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski  3. If you have trouble with the installation, inform us of how you
1026*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     installed GRUB. Don't omit error messages, if any. Just `GRUB hangs
1027*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     up when it boots' is not enough.
1028*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1029*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The information on your hardware is also essential. These are
1030*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     especially important: the geometries and the partition tables of
1031*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     your hard disk drives and your BIOS.
1032*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1033*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski  4. If GRUB cannot boot your operating system, write down _everything_
1034*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     you see on the screen. Don't paraphrase them, like `The foo OS
1035*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     crashes with GRUB, even though it can boot with the bar boot
1036*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     loader just fine'. Mention the commands you executed, the messages
1037*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     printed by them, and information on your operating system
1038*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     including the version number.
1039*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1040*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski  5. Explain what you wanted to do. It is very useful to know your
1041*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     purpose and your wish, and how GRUB didn't satisfy you.
1042*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1043*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski  6. If you can investigate the problem yourself, please do. That will
1044*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     give you and us much more information on the problem. Attaching a
1045*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     patch is even better.
1046*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1047*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     When you attach a patch, make the patch in unified diff format, and
1048*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     write ChangeLog entries. But, even when you make a patch, don't
1049*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     forget to explain the problem, so that we can understand what your
1050*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     patch is for.
1051*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1052*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski  7. Write down anything that you think might be related. Please
1053*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     understand that we often need to reproduce the same problem you
1054*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     encounterred in our environment. So your information should be
1055*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     sufficient for us to do the same thing--Don't forget that we
1056*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     cannot see your computer directly. If you are not sure whether to
1057*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     state a fact or leave it out, state it!  Reporting too many things
1058*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     is much better than omitting something important.
1059*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1060*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   If you follow the guideline above, submit a report to the Bug
1061*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiTracking System (http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=grub).
1062*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAlternatively, you can submit a report via electronic mail to
1063*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski<bug-grub@gnu.org>, but we strongly recommend that you use the Bug
1064*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiTracking System, because e-mail can be passed over easily.
1065*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1066*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Once we get your report, we will try to fix the bugs.
1067*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1068*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1069*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Future,  Next: Internals,  Prev: Reporting bugs,  Up: Top
1070*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1071*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiWhere GRUB will go
1072*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski******************
1073*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1074*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   We started the next generation of GRUB, GRUB 2. This will include
1075*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinternationalization, dynamic module loading, real memory management,
1076*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimultiple architecture support, a scripting language, and many other
1077*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinice feature. If you are interested in the development of GRUB 2, take
1078*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskia look at the homepage (http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/grub.html).
1079*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1080*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1081*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Internals,  Next: Index,  Prev: Future,  Up: Top
1082*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1083*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiHacking GRUB
1084*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski************
1085*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1086*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   This chapter documents the user-invisible aspect of GRUB.
1087*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1088*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   As a general rule of software development, it is impossible to keep
1089*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe descriptions of the internals up-to-date, and it is quite hard to
1090*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidocument everything. So refer to the source code, whenever you are not
1091*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisatisfied with this documentation.  Please assume that this gives just
1092*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskihints to you.
1093*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1094*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Menu:
1095*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1096*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Memory map::                  The memory map of various components
1097*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Embedded data::               Embedded variables in GRUB
1098*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Filesystem interface::        The generic interface for filesystems
1099*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Command interface::           The generic interface for built-ins
1100*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Bootstrap tricks::            The bootstrap mechanism used in GRUB
1101*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* I/O ports detection::         How to probe I/O ports used by INT 13H
1102*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Memory detection::            How to detect all installed RAM
1103*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Low-level disk I/O::          INT 13H disk I/O interrupts
1104*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* MBR::                         The structure of Master Boot Record
1105*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Partition table::             The format of partition tables
1106*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Submitting patches::          Where and how you should send patches
1107*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1108*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1109*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Memory map,  Next: Embedded data,  Up: Internals
1110*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1111*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe memory map of various components
1112*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski====================================
1113*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1114*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   GRUB consists of two distinct components, called "stages", which are
1115*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloaded at different times in the boot process. Because they run
1116*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimutual-exclusively, sometimes a memory area overlaps with another
1117*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimemory area. And, even in one stage, a single memory area can be used
1118*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifor various purposes, because their usages are mutually exclusive.
1119*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1120*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Here is the memory map of the various components:
1121*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1122*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0 to 4K-1
1123*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     BIOS and real mode interrupts
1124*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1125*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0x07BE to 0x07FF
1126*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Partition table passed to another boot loader
1127*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1128*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidown from 8K-1
1129*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Real mode stack
1130*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1131*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0x2000 to ?
1132*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The optional Stage 1.5 is loaded here
1133*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1134*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0x2000 to 0x7FFF
1135*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Command-line buffer for Multiboot kernels and modules
1136*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1137*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0x7C00 to 0x7DFF
1138*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Stage 1 is loaded here by BIOS or another boot loader
1139*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1140*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0x7F00 to 0x7F42
1141*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     LBA drive parameters
1142*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1143*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0x8000 to ?
1144*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Stage2 is loaded here
1145*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1146*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe end of Stage 2 to 416K-1
1147*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Heap, in particular used for the menu
1148*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1149*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidown from 416K-1
1150*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Protected mode stack
1151*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1152*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski416K to 448K-1
1153*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Filesystem buffer
1154*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1155*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski448K to 479.5K-1
1156*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Raw device buffer
1157*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1158*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski479.5K to 480K-1
1159*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     512-byte scratch area
1160*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1161*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski480K to 512K-1
1162*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Buffers for various functions, such as password, command-line, cut
1163*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     and paste, and completion.
1164*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1165*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe last 1K of lower memory
1166*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Disk swapping code and data
1167*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1168*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   See the file `stage2/shared.h', for more information.
1169*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1170*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1171*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Embedded data,  Next: Filesystem interface,  Prev: Memory map,  Up: Internals
1172*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1173*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiEmbedded variables in GRUB
1174*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski==========================
1175*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1176*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   Stage 1 and Stage 2 have embedded variables whose locations are
1177*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiwell-defined, so that the installation can patch the binary file
1178*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidirectly without recompilation of the stages.
1179*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1180*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   In Stage 1, these are defined:
1181*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1182*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x3E'
1183*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The version number (not GRUB's, but the installation mechanism's).
1184*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1185*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x40'
1186*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The boot drive. If it is 0xFF, use a drive passed by BIOS.
1187*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1188*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x41'
1189*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The flag for if forcing LBA.
1190*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1191*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x42'
1192*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The starting address of Stage 2.
1193*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1194*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x44'
1195*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The first sector of Stage 2.
1196*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1197*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x48'
1198*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The starting segment of Stage 2.
1199*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1200*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x1FE'
1201*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The signature (`0xAA55').
1202*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1203*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   See the file `stage1/stage1.S', for more information.
1204*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1205*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   In the first sector of Stage 1.5 and Stage 2, the block lists are
1206*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskirecorded between `firstlist' and `lastlist'. The address of `lastlist'
1207*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis determined when assembling the file `stage2/start.S'.
1208*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1209*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The trick here is that it is actually read backward, and the first
1210*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8-byte block list is not read here, but after the pointer is decremented
1211*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8 bytes, then after reading it, it decrements again, reads, and so on,
1212*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiuntil it is finished. The terminating condition is when the number of
1213*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisectors to be read in the next block list is zero.
1214*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1215*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The format of a block list can be seen from the example in the code
1216*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskijust before the `firstlist' label. Note that it is always from the
1217*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibeginning of the disk, but _not_ relative to the partition boundaries.
1218*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1219*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   In the second sector of Stage 1.5 and Stage 2, these are defined:
1220*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1221*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x6'
1222*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The version number (likewise, the installation mechanism's).
1223*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1224*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x8'
1225*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The installed partition.
1226*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1227*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0xC'
1228*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The saved entry number.
1229*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1230*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x10'
1231*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The identifier.
1232*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1233*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x11'
1234*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The flag for if forcing LBA.
1235*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1236*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x12'
1237*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The version string (GRUB's).
1238*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1239*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`0x12' + "the length of the version string"
1240*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The name of a configuration file.
1241*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1242*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   See the file `stage2/asm.S', for more information.
1243*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1244*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1245*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Filesystem interface,  Next: Command interface,  Prev: Embedded data,  Up: Internals
1246*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1247*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe generic interface for filesystems
1248*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski=====================================
1249*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1250*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   For any particular partition, it is presumed that only one of the
1251*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski"normal" filesystems such as FAT, FFS, or ext2fs can be used, so there
1252*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis a switch table managed by the functions in `disk_io.c'. The notation
1253*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis that you can only "mount" one at a time.
1254*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1255*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The block list filesystem has a special place in the system. In
1256*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiaddition to the "normal" filesystem (or even without one mounted), you
1257*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskican access disk blocks directly (in the indicated partition) via the
1258*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiblock list notation. Using the block list filesystem doesn't effect any
1259*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiother filesystem mounts.
1260*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1261*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The variables which can be read by the filesystem backend are:
1262*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1263*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`current_drive'
1264*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The current BIOS drive number (numbered from 0, if a floppy, and
1265*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     numbered from 0x80, if a hard disk).
1266*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1267*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`current_partition'
1268*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The current partition number.
1269*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1270*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`current_slice'
1271*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The current partition type.
1272*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1273*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`saved_drive'
1274*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The "drive" part of the root device.
1275*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1276*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`saved_partition'
1277*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The "partition" part of the root device.
1278*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1279*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`part_start'
1280*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The current partition starting address, in sectors.
1281*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1282*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`part_length'
1283*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The current partition length, in sectors.
1284*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1285*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`print_possibilities'
1286*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     True when the `dir' function should print the possible completions
1287*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     of a file, and false when it should try to actually open a file of
1288*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     that name.
1289*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1290*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`FSYS_BUF'
1291*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Filesystem buffer which is 32K in size, to use in any way which the
1292*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     filesystem backend desires.
1293*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1294*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The variables which need to be written by a filesystem backend are:
1295*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1296*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`filepos'
1297*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The current position in the file, in sectors.
1298*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1299*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     *Caution:* the value of FILEPOS can be changed out from under the
1300*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     filesystem code in the current implementation. Don't depend on it
1301*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     being the same for later calls into the backend code!
1302*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1303*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`filemax'
1304*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The length of the file.
1305*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1306*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`disk_read_func'
1307*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     The value of DISK_READ_HOOK _only_ during reading of data for the
1308*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     file, not any other fs data, inodes, FAT tables, whatever, then
1309*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     set to `NULL' at all other times (it will be `NULL' by default).
1310*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     If this isn't done correctly, then the `testload' and `install'
1311*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     commands won't work correctly.
1312*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1313*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The functions expected to be used by the filesystem backend are:
1314*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1315*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`devread'
1316*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     Only read sectors from within a partition. Sector 0 is the first
1317*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     sector in the partition.
1318*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1319*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`grub_read'
1320*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     If the backend uses the block list code, then `grub_read' can be
1321*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     used, after setting BLOCK_FILE to 1.
1322*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1323*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`print_a_completion'
1324*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     If PRINT_POSSIBILITIES is true, call `print_a_completion' for each
1325*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski     possible file name. Otherwise, the file name completion won't work.
1326*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1327*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The functions expected to be defined by the filesystem backend are
1328*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidescribed at least moderately in the file `filesys.h'. Their usage is
1329*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifairly evident from their use in the functions in `disk_io.c', look for
1330*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe use of the FSYS_TABLE array.
1331*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1332*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   *Caution:* The semantics are such that then `mount'ing the
1333*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifilesystem, presume the filesystem buffer `FSYS_BUF' is corrupted, and
1334*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski(re-)load all important contents. When opening and reading a file,
1335*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipresume that the data from the `mount' is available, and doesn't get
1336*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicorrupted by the open/read (i.e. multiple opens and/or reads will be
1337*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidone with only one mount if in the same filesystem).
1338*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1339*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1340*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFile: grub.info,  Node: Command interface,  Next: Bootstrap tricks,  Prev: Filesystem interface,  Up: Internals
1341*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1342*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe generic interface for built-ins
1343*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski===================================
1344*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1345*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   GRUB built-in commands are defined in a uniformal interface, whether
1346*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithey are menu-specific or can be used anywhere. The definition of a
1347*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibuiltin command consists of two parts: the code itself and the table of
1348*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe information.
1349*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1350*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The code must be a function which takes two arguments, a command-line
1351*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistring and flags, and returns an `int' value. The "flags" argument
1352*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecifies how the function is called, using a bit mask. The return
1353*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskivalue must be zero if successful, otherwise non-zero. So it is normally
1354*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskienough to return ERRNUM.
1355*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1356*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The table of the information is represented by the structure `struct
1357*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibuiltin', which contains the name of the command, a pointer to the
1358*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifunction, flags, a short description of the command and a long
1359*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidescription of the command. Since the descriptions are used only for
1360*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskihelp messages interactively, you don't have to define them, if the
1361*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicommand may not be called interactively (such as `title').
1362*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1363*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski   The table is finally registered in the table BUILTIN_TABLE, so that
1364*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`run_script' and `enter_cmdline' can find the command. See the files
1365*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski`cmdline.c' and `builtins.c', for more details.
1366*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski
1367