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BUILDING.txt
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BUILDING.txt
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From rEFIt to rEFInd
====================
rEFInd is derived from rEFIt (http://refit.sourceforge.net), but the two
programs support different build environments. rEFIt was created with
Intel's EFI Application Toolkit
(http://www.intel.com/technology/efi/toolkit_overview.htm) or TianoCore's
EFI Toolkit (https://efi-toolkit.tianocore.org), along with Microsoft's
Visual C compiler.
Compiling the source code provided on the rEFIt site under Linux never
worked for me, although the documentation claimed it would. Apparently
other Linux developers have run into the same problem; Debian provides a
rEFIt package (http://packages.debian.org/sid/refit) that includes
extensive patches to enable the program to compile under Linux using the
GNU-EFI package (http://sourceforge.net/projects/gnu-efi/). Although
GNU-EFI is less sophisticated than recent versions of TianoCore's toolkit,
GNU-EFI is my preferred environment because versions of TianoCore that can
build under Linux use a very different set of include files and support a
somewhat different set of system calls than are used by rEFIt/rEFInd. Thus,
converting to a new TianoCore toolkit would entail a lot of work. Using an
older version would require building under Windows and using old versions
of Microsoft's Visual C. I neither have this toolchain nor do I want to use
it. For this reason, I used Debian's patched version of rEFIt as a starting
point in forking rEFInd.
I've dropped ancillary programs, such as the ext2fs driver module and
gptsync program, from rEFInd. You can still use these tools with rEFInd,
but you'll need to install them separately.
The patched version of rEFIt that I used as a starting point disabled the
program's ability to load EFI drivers because of limitations in the GNU-EFI
library. A combination of improvements in recent versions of the library
and implementing a (now apparently abandoned) EFI function directly in
rEFInd has enabled me to add this support back to rEFInd 0.2.7 and later.
Requirements
============
To compile rEFInd, you'll need the following:
* A Linux installation. Note that this installation does NOT need to be
EFI-based. It can be 32- or 64-bit, but unless you use a cross-compiler
(which I've not tested), it must be the appropriate bit width for your
EFI implementation. (Normally that means 64-bit.) If you don't normally
run Linux, you can run it in a VirtualBox or similar virtual machine.
* A standard set of Linux development tools, based on GCC.
* The GNU-EFI package (http://sourceforge.net/projects/gnu-efi/). You can
install this from a package called "gnu-efi"; however, rEFInd relies on
features that were added in (I think) 3.0l to provide driver-loading
capabilities. The versions I've used and that work are 3.0p and 3.0q. As
of 5/2012, most Linux distributions seem to deliver rather elderly
versions of GNU-EFI, so you may need to download the latest source code,
compile it, and install it locally. Since rEFInd version 0.2.7, the
Makefiles assume this (see below).
It's possible that you could use a non-Linux platform to compile rEFInd. To
the best of my knowledge, the rEFInd code doesn't rely on anything
Linux-specific in its build requirements, and GNU-EFI's Sourceforge page
indicates that it works under Windows and OS X, too. Thus, you may be able
to compile it on these platforms, but I've not tested it in this way. Under
Windows, you would need to either create a project or Makefile for your
non-GCC compiler or use a GCC port, such as MinGW (http://www.mingw.org).
You'd probably need to adjust the Makefile in the latter case.
Compiling rEFInd
================
With your development system set up, you can compile rEFInd as follows:
1) Download and uncompress the rEFInd source code archive. (If you're
reading this file, you've probably already done this task.)
2) Open a Linux shell prompt
3) Change into the archive's main directory. You should see several files
including this BUILDING.txt file and several subdirectories such as
"refind", "libeg", and "include".
4) Type "make". With any luck, rEFInd will compile without error, leaving
the "refind_ia32.efi" or "refind_x64.efi" file, depending on your
platform, in the "refind" subdirectory.
If rEFInd doesn't compile correctly, you'll need to track down the source
of the problem. Double-check that you've got all the necessary development
tools installed, including GCC, make, and GNU-EFI. You may also need to
adjust the Makefile or Make.common file for your system. The most likely
thing you'll need to change is the path to the various GNU-EFI include
files and libraries. Since rEFInd 0.2.7, the default Make.common file
includes the following definitions:
EFIINC = /usr/local/include/efi
GNUEFILIB = /usr/local/lib
EFILIB = /usr/local/lib
EFICRT0 = /usr/local/lib
If you've installed GNU-EFI from a distribution's package, you may need to
remove "local" from those paths, and perhaps change references to "lib" to
"lib64". As noted earlier, though, as of 5/2012, most distributions provide
out-of-date GNU-EFI implementations that will not work with rEFInd 0.2.7
and later.
When I tried to compile rEFInd under Ubuntu 12.04 (i386), even with a
locally-compiled GNU-EFI 3.0p or 3.0q, I got errors like this:
main.o: In function `StartLegacy.isra.0':
main.c:(.text+0x8b1): undefined reference to `__stack_chk_fail_local'
lib.o: In function `ScanVolumeBootcode.part.3':
lib.c:(.text+0xf2f): undefined reference to `__stack_chk_fail_local'
lib.o: In function `ScanExtendedPartition.isra.4':
The solution was to recompile GNU-EFI with the -fno-stack-protector GCC
flag. In GNU-EFI, this can be added to the CFLAGS line in Make.defaults.
Installing rEFInd
=================
With rEFInd compiled, you can install it. The easiest way to do this is
with the install.sh script, which works on both Linux and Mac OS X.
Alternatively, you can type "make install" to install using this script.
Note that this installation copies files to the ESP and uses "efibootmgr"
(on Linux) or "bless" (on OS X) to add rEFInd to the firmware's boot loader
list. The docs/refind/installing.html file provides more details on this
script and its use.
If install.sh doesn't work for you or if you prefer to do the job manually,
you may. On a UEFI-based system, you'll want to copy files on the ESP as
follows:
* Create a directory for rEFInd, such as EFI/refind.
* Copy refind/refind_ia32.efi or refind_x64.efi to the ESP's EFI/refind
directory.
* Copy refind.conf-sample to the EFI/refind directory as refind.conf.
* Copy the icons subdirectory, including all its files, to EFI/refind.
You'll then need to activate rEFInd in your EFI. This can be done with
tools such as "efibootmgr" under Linux or "bless" under OS X. See the
docs/refind/installing.html file for details.
Note to Distribution Maintainers
================================
The install.sh script, and therefore the "install" target in the Makefile,
installs the program directly to the ESP and it modifies the *CURRENT
COMPUTER's* NVRAM. Thus, you should *NOT* use this target as part of the
build process for your binary packages (RPMs, Debian packages, etc.).
(Gentoo could use it in an ebuild, though....) You COULD, however, copy the
files to a directory somewhere (/usr/share/refind or whatever) and then
call install.sh as part of the binary package installation process.
Placing the files in /boot/efi/EFI/{distname}/refind and then having a
post-install script call efibootmgr is probably the better way to go,
though.