- Why I did it
To fix BIOS firmware update after fresh image installation from ONiE
- How I did it
Initialized empty GRUB environment file after ONiE installation
- How to verify it
1. Install image from ONiE
2. Run BIOS firmware upgrade
Signed-off-by: Nazarii Hnydyn <nazariig@nvidia.com>
Why I did it
This is a fix for PR [kernel] Change grub cmdline to set c-states to 0 for "Intel" CPUs by shlomibitton · Pull Request #6051 · sonic-net/sonic-buildimage (github.com)
The original PR will disable intel idle driver but it cannot limit the max c-state to 1 due to system will fall back to acpi idle driver.
Currently intel_idle.max_cstate=0 is already present, which will disable intel idle driver. With the added option, common idle driver will be disabled as well, so there will not be idle management. This is to prevent a bug that can be triggered by idle instruction on intel platform.
How I did it
Add the option to installer file beside intel_idle.max_cstate=0
…1.11 by using efivar tool instead
#### Why I did it
solution to BUG below/
https://github.com/sonic-net/sonic-buildimage/issues/14316
bug report also in this issue:
backport: secureboot support #14246
#### How I did it
When installing an image secure boot is checking if the UEFI have the secure boot flag enabled or disabled using a tool name `mokutil` this tool its not exist in ONIE version older than 2021.11 so its crasshing the install.
To fix that we add a coded that checking secure boot enabled/disabled by using efivar tool that should exist in any UEFI system
#### How to verify it
Install the image in a device with ONIE version older than 2021.11 and check that the installation and boot succeed (all docker up).
- Why I did it
Add Secure Boot support to SONiC OS.
Secure Boot (SB) is a verification mechanism for ensuring that code launched by a computer's UEFI firmware is trusted. It is designed to protect a system against malicious code being loaded and executed early in the boot process before the operating system has been loaded.
- How I did it
Added a signing process to sign the following components:
shim, grub, Linux kernel, and kernel modules when doing the build, and when feature is enabled in build time according to the HLD explanations (the feature is disabled by default).
- How to verify it
There are self-verifications of each boot component when building the image, in addition, there is an existing end-to-end test in sonic-mgmt repo that checks that the boot succeeds when loading a secure system (details below).
How to build a sonic image with secure boot feature: (more description in HLD)
Required to use the following build flags from rules/config:
SECURE_UPGRADE_MODE="dev"
SECURE_UPGRADE_DEV_SIGNING_KEY="/path/to/private/key.pem"
SECURE_UPGRADE_DEV_SIGNING_CERT="/path/to/cert/key.pem"
After setting those flags should build the sonic-buildimage.
Before installing the image, should prepared the setup (switch device) with the follow:
check that the device support UEFI
stored pub keys in UEFI DB
enabled Secure Boot flag in UEFI
How to run a test that verify the Secure Boot flow:
The existing test "test_upgrade_path" under "sonic-mgmt/tests/upgrade_path/test_upgrade_path", is enough to validate proper boot
You need to specify the following arguments:
Base_image_list your_secure_image
Taget_image_list your_second_secure_image
Upgrade_type cold
And run the test, basically the test will install the base image given in the parameter and then upgrade to target image by doing cold reboot and validates all the services are up and working correctly
#### Why I did it
The %%EXTRA_CMDLINE_LINUX%% is not replaced to the real value, it has impact on the kernel parameter settings.
See the log sonic-vs.img.gz.log in the latest master build. In the grub.cfg, the %%EXTRA_CMDLINE_LINUX%% is set in the linux command line.
```
Installing for i386-pc platform.
Installation finished. No error reported.
Switch CPU vendor is: GenuineIntel
Switch CPU cstates are: disabled
EXTRA_CMDLINE_LINUX=%%EXTRA_CMDLINE_LINUX%%
Installed SONiC base image SONiC-OS successfully
ONIE: NOS install successful: file://dev/vdb/onie-installer.bin
```
Refactors the SONiC Installer to support greater flexibility in building for a given architecture and bootloader.
#### Why I did it
Currently the SONiC installer assumes that if a platform is ARM based that it uses the `uboot` bootloader and uses the `grub` bootloader otherwise. This is not a correct assumption to make as ARM is not strictly tied to uboot and x86 is not strictly tied to grub.
#### How I did it
To implement this I introduce the following changes:
* Remove the different arch folders from the `installer/` directory
* Merge the generic components of the ARM and x86 installer into `installer/installer.sh`
* Refactor x86 + grub specific functions into `installer/default_platform.conf`
* Modify installer to call `default_platform.conf` file and also call `platform/[platform]/patform.conf` file as well to override as needed
* Update references to the installer in the `build_image.sh` script
* Add `TARGET_BOOTLOADER` variable that is by default `uboot` for ARM devices and `grub` for x86 unless overridden in `platform/[platform]/rules.mk`
* Update bootloader logic in `build_debian.sh` to be based on `TARGET_BOOTLOADER` instead of `TARGET_ARCH` and to reference the grub package in a generic manner
#### How to verify it
This has been tested on a ARM test platform as well as on Mellanox amd64 switches as well to ensure there was no impact.
#### Description for the changelog
[arm] Refactor installer and build to allow arm builds targeted at grub platforms
#### Link to config_db schema for YANG module changes
N/A