[Bug 1341944] Re: 32-Bit UEFI bootloader support needed
Larry Lamb
larryl at arisystems.com
Mon Nov 24 16:25:31 UTC 2014
So... it would be really nice if someone that was able to make this work
post the steps used to find success. As others have posted-- these atom
machines are not going away. I just purchased an ASUS X205TA for $139
and others will sell for $99 very soon. These are great machines for
field work with battery life exceeding 11 hours even using Windows 8.1.
While I have loaded numerous 64-bit servers-- I have not messed with
changing the grub loader and could use a nice step-by-step instruction
doc. My preference would be a guide for Mint Linux but I assume that
adapting from one base to another would not be impossible. As for an
individual compile I assume that takes away the updates from the
repositories and in either case care would need to be taken to avoid
grub updates. I would even be willing to make a contribution to the
person that gets this to work for everyone. Again-- these atom processrs
are not going away and are very attractive based on price and
portability. Rebuttal? Takers?
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Foundations Bugs, which is subscribed to grub2 in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1341944
Title:
32-Bit UEFI bootloader support needed
Status in “grub2” package in Ubuntu:
Confirmed
Bug description:
As of now, Ubuntu and other major Linux distributions do not support
the use of a 32-bit EFI bootloader on UEFI machines. This has become
extremely problematic due to the popularity of Intel Atom-based
tablets and compact laptops. Atom-based devices are generally limited
in storage space (32GB or 64GB eMMC is common), and as a result these
devices almost universally ship with Windows 8.1 32-bit installed
(winsxs consumes a significant amount of storage space in order to
support 32-bit binaries in a 64-bit environment). By design, UEFI must
use the same architecture used by the bootloader.
While most modern computers indeed use a 64-bit UEFI implementation
due to the fact that new computers generally ship with a 64-bit
operating system (be it OS X or Windows 8.1), Atom-based devices do
*not* use a 64-bit operating system or UEFI implementation. This is by
design.
Intel released a new Atom iteration (Bay Trail) in late 2013 and has
indicated that they will continue to develop and release Atom CPUs due
to consumer market demand. At the time of this filing there are a
number of Atom-based tablets and compact laptops/netbooks being
actively sold and marketed by major OEMs including Dell, HP, ASUS, and
Acer. None of these devices have 64-bit UEFI firmware. It is also
important to note that these Atom CPUs are 64-bit, but explicitly
require a 32-bit UEFI bootloader.
The current Linux kernel in Ubuntu 14.04 does support booting the
64-bit signed kernel from a 32-bit Grub EFI bootloader. I can confirm
this on at least two 32-bit UEFI devices, the ASUS Transformer T100TA
and the Acer Aspire Switch 10. Unfortunately, the lack of official
32-bit EFI bootloader support in Ubuntu makes accomplishing this far
from trivial and beyond the capacity of many users new to Linux as an
alternative to Microsoft Windows.
This bug is currently marked as a security vulnerability due to the
fact that as of now, it is necessary to compile Grub2 32-bit EFI
manually in order to boot Linux. This negates the digital signature
check that allows keeping Secure Boot enabled on modern UEFI-based
machines.
Considering the above, it is very important to include a 32-bit UEFI
bootloader as an update to Grub2 in Trusty and all future releases of
Ubuntu.
To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/grub2/+bug/1341944/+subscriptions
More information about the foundations-bugs
mailing list