[Bug 1366546] Re: Ubuntu doesn't provide \EFI\BOOT\BOOTX64.EFI for UEFI systems

Chris Rainey ckrzen at gmail.com
Wed Jan 2 16:18:18 UTC 2019


We appreciate that this bug may be old and you might not be interested
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** Changed in: grub2 (Ubuntu)
       Status: Triaged => Incomplete

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Title:
  Ubuntu doesn't provide \EFI\BOOT\BOOTX64.EFI for UEFI systems

Status in grub2 package in Ubuntu:
  Incomplete
Status in shim package in Ubuntu:
  Invalid
Status in ubiquity package in Ubuntu:
  Invalid

Bug description:
  Ubuntu (desktop/server platform AMD64) as of 14.04 just installs
  shim.efi and grubx64.efi in \EFI\ubuntu\ on the EFI System Partition
  (ESP). This is unreliable as more and more laptops are introduced to
  the market where manufacturers choose to reduce (cripple) the firmware
  functionality to boot only from \EFI\BOOT\BOOTX64.EFI. To make the
  situation worse legacy boot is also *not implementent* anymore in the
  firmware. Mostly mainstream consumer oriented and low budget devices
  are affected.

  Ubuntu should backup contents of \EFI\BOOT\ (these are just normal
  files on FAT32, zipping or taring the directory should be suffcient,
  another run of the installer however should detect an existing backup
  of the original and not overwrite the backup of the original) and
  install a UEFI loader to \EFI\BOOT\BOOTX64.EFI that can boot at least
  Windows and Ubuntu.

  My suggestion would be to use gummiboot [1] in conjunction with
  PreLoader+HashTool [2] as this will allow functional UEFI Secure Boot
  (preloader will provide keys to shim to close the gap in gummiboot)
  and being of low complexity or low resource footprint.

  Contents to be installed to the ESP:

  \EFI\BOOT\BOOTX64.EFI
  > This is a renamed PreLoader.efi.
  \EFI\BOOT\HashTool.efi
  \EFI\BOOT\loader.efi
  > This is a renamed gummiboot.efi to be easily picked up by HashTool (loader.efi is the default).

  content of gummiboot configuration file: \loader\entries\ubuntu-grub-shim.conf
      title          Ubuntu GRUB (Secure Boot)
      efi            \EFI\ubuntu\shimx64.efi

  content of gummiboot configuration file: \loader\entries\ubuntu-grub.conf
      title          Ubuntu GRUB
      efi            \EFI\ubuntu\grubx64.efi

  content of gummiboot configuration file: \loader\loader.conf
      default        Ubuntu GRUB (Secure Boot)
      timeout        4

  If UEFI Secure Boot is enabled, PreLoader will run HashTool on first
  boot to enroll the hash of gummiboot. The TUI dialogs are simple and
  straight forward, but the user should be informed that this might
  happen when installation on a Secure Boot enabled target has been
  completed. Please have a look the ASCII art representation of the TUI
  dialogs [3].

  Notes:
  - gummiboot is not currently packaged in Ubuntu or Debian AFAIK. While having gummiboot packaged as a full GRUB replacement [4] would be nice, we need only the loader binary (gummiboot.efi) to fix this bug.
  - An existing Windows UEFI loader on the ESP is automatically detected and doesn't need to be configured.
  - Replacing an exsiting \EFI\BOOT\BOOTX64.EFI is similar to overwriting the MBR, it's nasty but the most simple solution for the corresponding design.

  I need to emphasize this:
  - Legacy boot is not available on these machines.
  - Users with affected laptops don't understand the issue they run into. -> They can't install/boot Ubuntu anymore, while no other OS vendor did anything particular evil (till now).
    - Giving users instructions which requires little knowledge of how to use the terminal is too difficult to follow for them (they find it nearly impossible and not very ubuntu-like)
    - The community has a lot of users who don't know the difference between booting with UEFI or legacy BIOS, thus suggesting false troubleshooting or tools that don't work or add more confusion to the situation.
    - Telling users to buy fully functional or non-crippled hardware has always been difficult.
  - This a major issue that should be fixed with the next LTS 14.04.x release update or probably an emeregency update of the live media. Waiting more than one year may result in Ubuntu becoming less and less attractive to novice users.

  I'm looking forward to work with you on this issue and provide further
  information where possible.

  [1]: http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/gummiboot/
  [2]: http://blog.hansenpartnership.com/linux-foundation-secure-boot-system-released/
  [3]: http://askubuntu.com/a/520351/40581
  [4]: http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/BootLoaderSpec/

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