[Bug 1642298] Re: UEFI Xenial install sets computer to boot from hard disk
David Britton
david.britton at canonical.com
Fri Jul 7 20:44:12 UTC 2017
Some Testing Scenarios and concerns before we agree that this change
should be made in curtin:
1) After this change, after curtin boots first time, is EFI boot order
a)pxe b)local disk
2) This doesn't appear scoped to grub2-efi, but modifies
grub2/update_nvram, what effect does this have on other bios/firmware
environments that rely on grub?
3) Does a new kernel install work correctly?
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1642298
Title:
UEFI Xenial install sets computer to boot from hard disk
Status in curtin:
Confirmed
Status in MAAS:
Invalid
Status in grub2 package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in grub2 source package in Trusty:
Triaged
Status in grub2 source package in Xenial:
Triaged
Status in grub2 source package in Yakkety:
Triaged
Bug description:
[Impact]
Typically when you install Ubuntu on an EFI system, it installs a new default EFI boot entry that makes the system reboot directly into the OS. During MAAS installs, curtin is careful to disable that behavior. MAAS requires the default boot entry to remain PXE, so that it can direct the system to boot from disk or network as necessary. curtin does this by passing --no-nvram to grub-install when installing the bootloader.
*Update*: newer curtin releases actually allow the creation of a new
boot entry, but updates the boot menu to make PXE the default. That
change is orthogonal to this bug.
***However***, this doesn't stop a new default boot entry from being
added after deploy. If the user installs a grub package update or
manually runs 'grub-install', booting from disk will become the
default, and MAAS will lose control of the system.
[Proposed Solution (er... glorified workaround)]
The GRUB package in zesty now has support for setting the --no-nvram flag *persistently*. This is implemented via a debconf template (grub2/update_nvram). If curtin sets this flag to "false" during install, post-deploy grub updates will also pass the --no-nvram flag when running grub-install.
This isn't a perfect solution - users can still call grub-install
manually and omit this flag.
[Test Case]
- MAAS deploy an EFI system.
- After deploy, login and run 'sudo apt --reinstall install grub-efi-$(dpkg --print-architecture)
- Reboot and observe that the system does not PXE boot.
[Regression Risk]
- The GRUB implementation does not change the defaults of the package. The user would need to opt-in to the "grub2/update_nvram=false". This option is also only presented to users who specifically request a low debconf priority (e.g. expert mode installs).
- XXX curtin risk XXX
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