boot(8) - NetBSD Manual Pages

BOOT(8)               NetBSD/x86 System Manager's Manual               BOOT(8)


NAME
boot -- system bootstrapping procedures
DESCRIPTION
IA-32 computers (the IBM PC and its clones) that can run NetBSD/i386 or NetBSD/amd64 can use any of the following boot procedures, depending on what the hardware and BIOS support: boot bootstrap NetBSD from the system BIOS x86/dosboot(8) bootstrap NetBSD from MS-DOS x86/pxeboot(8) network bootstrap NetBSD from a TCP/IP LAN with DHCP, TFTP, and NFS. Power fail and crash recovery Normally, the system will reboot itself at power-up or after crashes. An automatic consistency check of the file systems will be performed, and unless this fails, the system will resume multi-user operations. Cold starts The 386 PC AT clones attempt to boot the floppy disk drive A (otherwise known as drive 0) first, and failing that, attempt to boot the hard disk C (otherwise known as hard disk controller 1, drive 0). The NetBSD boot- blocks are loaded and started either by the BIOS, or by a boot selector program (such as OS-BS, BOOTEASY, the OS/2 Boot Menu or NetBSD's boot-selecting master boot record - see x86/mbr(8)). Normal Operation Once running, a banner similar to the following will appear: >> NetBSD BIOS Boot, revision 3.0 >> (user@buildhost, builddate) >> Memory: 637/15360 k Press return to boot now, any other key for boot menu booting hd0a:netbsd - starting in 5 After a countdown, the system image listed will be loaded. In the exam- ple above, it will be ``hd0a:netbsd'' which is the file /netbsd on parti- tion ``a'' of the NetBSD MBR partition of the first hard disk known to the BIOS (which is an IDE or similar device - see the BUGS section). Pressing a key within the time limit, or before the boot program starts, will enter interactive mode. When using a short or 0 timeout, it is often useful to interrupt the boot by holding down a shift key, as some BIOSes and BIOS extensions will drain the keystroke buffer at various points during POST. If present, the file /boot.cfg will be used to configure the behaviour of the boot loader including setting the timeout, choosing a console device, altering the banner text and displaying a menu allowing boot commands to be easily chosen. See boot.cfg(5). Boot Protocol The NetBSD/x86 boot loader can boot a kernel using either the native NetBSD boot protocol, or the ``multiboot'' protocol (which is compatible with some other operating systems). In the native NetBSD boot protocol, options are passed from the boot loader to the kernel via flag bits in the boothowto variable (see boothowto(9)). In the multiboot protocol, options are passed from the boot loader to the kernel as strings. Diagnostic Output If the first stage boot fails to load the boot, it will print a terse message indicating the reason for the failure. The possible error mes- sages and their cause are listed in x86/mbr(8). If the first stage boot succeeds, the banner will be shown and the error messages should be self-explanatory. Interactive mode In interactive mode, the boot loader will present a prompt, allowing input of these commands: boot [device:][filename] [-1234abcdmqsvxz] The default device will be set to the disk that the boot loader was loaded from. To boot from an alternate disk, the full name of the device should be given at the prompt. device is of the form xd [N[x]] where xd is the device from which to boot, N is the unit number, and x is the partition letter. The following list of supported devices may vary from installa- tion to installation: hd Hard disks as numbered by the BIOS. This includes ST506, IDE, ESDI, RLL disks on a WD100[2367] or looka- like controller(s), and SCSI disks on SCSI controllers recognized by the BIOS. fd Floppy drives as numbered by the BIOS. The default filename is netbsd; if the boot loader fails to successfully open that image, it then tries netbsd.gz (expected to be a kernel image compressed by gzip), followed by netbsd.old, netbsd.old.gz, onetbsd, and finally onetbsd.gz. Alternate system images can be loaded by just specifying the name of the image. Options are: -1 Sets the machine-dependent flag RB_MD1 in boothowto. In NetBSD/x86, this disables multiprocessor boot; the kernel will boot in uniprocessor mode. -2 Sets the machine-dependent flag RB_MD2 in boothowto. In NetBSD/x86, this disables ACPI. -3 Sets the machine-dependent flag RB_MD3 in boothowto. In NetBSD/x86, this has no effect. -4 Sets the machine-dependent flag RB_MD4 in boothowto. In NetBSD/x86, this has no effect. -a Sets the RB_ASKNAME flag in boothowto. This causes the kernel to prompt for the root file system device, the sys- tem crash dump device, and the path to init(8). -b Sets the RB_HALT flag in boothowto. This causes subse- quent reboot attempts to halt instead of rebooting. -c Sets the RB_USERCONF flag in boothowto. This causes the kernel to enter the userconf(4) device configuration man- ager as soon as possible during the boot. userconf(4) allows devices to be enabled or disabled, and allows device locators (such as hardware addresses or bus num- bers) to be modified before the kernel attempts to attach the devices. -d Sets the RB_KDB flag in boothowto. Requests the kernel to enter debug mode, in which it waits for a connection from a kernel debugger; see ddb(4). -m Sets the RB_MINIROOT flag in boothowto. Informs the ker- nel that a mini-root file system is present in memory. -q Sets the AB_QUIET flag in boothowto. Boot the system in quiet mode. -s Sets the RB_SINGLE flag in boothowto. Boot the system in single-user mode. -v Sets the AB_VERBOSE flag in boothowto. Boot the system in verbose mode. -x Sets the AB_DEBUG flag in boothowto. Boot the system with debug messages enabled. -z Sets the AB_SILENT flag in boothowto. Boot the system in silent mode. consdev dev Immediately switch the console to the specified device dev and reprint the banner. dev must be one of pc, com0, com1, com2, com3, com0kbd, com1kbd, com2kbd, com3kbd, or auto. See Console Selection Policy in x86/boot_console(8). dev [device] Set the default drive and partition for subsequent file system operations. Without an argument, print the current setting. device is of the form specified in boot. fs file Load a file system image from the specified file, and request the kernel to use it as the root file system. The makefs(8) utility may be used to create suitable file system images. help Print an overview about commands and arguments. load module [arguments] Load the specified kernel module, and pass it the specified arguments. If the module name is not an absolute path, /stand/ <arch>/<osversion>/modules/<module>/<module>.kmod is used. Possible uses of the load command include loading a memory disk image before booting a kernel, or loading a Xen DOM0 kernel before booting the Xen hypervisor. See boot.cfg(5) for exam- ples. In addition to the boot options specified above, the Xen DOM0 kernel accepts (arguments being separated with spaces): bootdev=dev (or root=dev) Override the default boot device. dev can be a unit name (``wd0''), or an interface name (``bge0'', ``wm0'', ...) for cases where the root file system has to be loaded from network (see the BUGS section in x86/pxeboot(8)). console=dev Console used by DOM0 kernel during boot. dev accepts the same values as the ones given for the consdev command. See Console Selection Policy in x86/boot_console(8). ip=my_ip:serv_ip:gw_ip:mask:host:iface Specify various parameters for a network boot (IPs are in dot notation), each one separated by a colon: my_ip address of the host serv_ip address of the NFS server gw_ip address of the gateway mask network mask host address of the host iface interface (e.g., ``xennet0'' or ``eth0'') nfsroot=address:rootpath Boot the system with root on NFS. address is the address of the NFS server, and rootpath is the remote mount point for the root file system. pciback.hide=pcidevs Pass a list of PCI IDs for use with the PCI backend driver, pciback(4). pcidevs is formed of multiple IDs (in bus:device.function notation), each ID being surrounded with brackets. PCI domain IDs are currently ignored. See pciback(4). ls [path] Print a directory listing of path, containing inode number, filename, and file type. path can contain a device specifica- tion. menu Display the boot menu and initiate a countdown, similarly to what would have happened if interactive mode had not been entered. modules {on | off | enabled | disabled} The values enabled, on will enable module loading for boot and multiboot, whereas disabled, off will turn off the feature. multiboot kernel [arguments] Boot the specified kernel, using the ``multiboot'' protocol instead of the native NetBSD boot protocol. The kernel is specified in the same way as with the boot command. The multiboot protocol may be used in the following cases: NetBSD/Xen kernels The Xen DOM0 kernel must be loaded as a module using the load command, and the Xen hypervisor must be booted using the multiboot command. Options for the DOM0 ker- nel (such as ``-s'' for single user mode) must be passed as options to the load command. Options for the hypervisor (such as ``dom0_mem=256M'' to reserve 256 MB of memory for DOM0) must be passed as options to the multiboot command. See boot.cfg(5) for examples on how to boot NetBSD/Xen. NetBSD multiboot kernels A NetBSD kernel that was built with options MULTIBOOT (see x86/multiboot(8)) may be booted with either the boot or multiboot command, passing the same arguments in either case. Non-NetBSD kernels A kernel for a non-NetBSD operating system that expects to be booted using the multiboot protocol (such as by the GNU ``GRUB'' boot loader) may be booted using the multiboot command. See the foreign operating system's documentation for the available arguments. quit Reboot the system. rndseed file Load the specified file and request the kernel to use it as a seed for the rnd(4) random number generator. The file should be in the private format used by rndctl(8), and should have been saved by `rndctl -S' shortly before the previous shutdown. See the random_seed and random_file variables in rc.conf(5), and the /etc/rc.d/random_seed script, for a way to manage the seed file. Using the same seed file on more then one host, or for more than one boot on the same host, will reduce the qual- ity of random numbers and may impact system security. userconf command Pass command command to userconf(4) at boot time. These com- mands are processed before the interactive userconf(4) shell is executed, if requested. splash file Load a graphical image from the specified file and request the kernel to use it as a splash screen. The file should contain an image in one of these formats: JPEG (baseline only, not pro- gressive), PNG (8-bit only), TGA, BMP (non-1bpp, non-RLE), GIF, PSD (composited view only), or PIC. vesa {modenum | on | off | enabled | disabled | list} Initialise the video card to the specified resolution and bit depth. The modenum should be in the form of 0x100, 800x600, 800x600x32. The values enabled, on put the display into the default mode, and disabled, off returns the display into stan- dard vga mode. The value list lists all supported modes. In an emergency, the bootstrap methods described in the NetBSD installa- tion notes for the x86 architectures can be used to boot from floppy or other media, or over the network. Locating the root file system The kernel uses information from the bootloader to locate the file system to mount as root. There are three methods: BTINFO_ROOTDEVICE from boot.cfg(5) or multiboot. The bootloader passes the root device name as driver, unit, and partition (like sd0a). This will be automatically substituted by a dk(4) wedge if one is discovered. The bootloader passes a wedge name as "wedge:" followed by the name. The kernel will search for a dk(4) device with that name. BTINFO_BOOTWEDGE determined by bootblock The bootloader passes start offset and length of a hard disk partition and a offset, size and hash of a "boot area". Then kernel searches all disks and wedges for a block sequence at that offset with a matching hash. If one is found, the kernel will look for a wedge on that device at the same offset. An additional partition number is provided if the bootloader also passed a BTINFO_BOOTDISK record. This (or partition 'a') will be used by the kernel as a fallback if there is no match- ing wedge. BTINFO_BOOTDISK determined by bootblock This uses the device number passed by the BIOS that distin- guishes between floppy, hard drive and CD-ROM boot. Floppy The kernel searches for the fd(4) device with the correct unit, the partition number is used to select a specific disk format. See fd(4) for details. Hard drive The bootloader passed a partition number and disklabel data (offset, type, checksum, packname). The kernel searches all disks for a matching disklabel. If one is found, the kernel will use that device and partition num- ber. CDROM The BIOS does not distinguish between multiple CD devices. The kernel searches for the first cd(4) device. So you can only boot from unit 0.
FILES
/boot boot program code loaded by the primary boot- strap /boot.cfg optional configuration file /netbsd system code /netbsd.gz gzip-compressed system code /usr/mdec/boot master copy of the boot program (copy to /boot) /usr/mdec/bootxx_fstype primary bootstrap for file system type fstype, copied to the start of the NetBSD partition by installboot(8).
SEE ALSO
ddb(4), fd(4), pciback(4), userconf(4), boot.cfg(5), halt(8), installboot(8), reboot(8), rescue(8), shutdown(8), x86/boot_console(8), x86/dosboot(8), x86/mbr(8), x86/multiboot(8), x86/pxeboot(8), boothowto(9)
BUGS
The kernel file name must be specified before, not after, the boot options. Any filename specified after the boot options, e.g.: boot -d netbsd.test is ignored, and the default kernel is booted. Hard disks are always accessed by BIOS functions. Unit numbers are BIOS device numbers which might differ from numbering in the NetBSD kernel or physical parameters (e.g., SCSI slave numbers). There isn't any distinc- tion between ``sd'' and ``wd'' devices at the bootloader level. This is less a bug of the bootloader code than a shortcoming of the PC architec- ture. The default disk device's name printed in the starting message is derived from the ``type'' field of the NetBSD disklabel (if it is a hard disk). NetBSD 8.0 February 17, 2017 NetBSD 8.0

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