Leenders, Peter
2014-Dec-08 15:44 UTC
[syslinux] Using of pxelinux configfiles for both BIOS and UEFI boot
Hello Gene, thank you for your answer> > - Is there a standard approach to use different vesamenu.c32 (and other architecture depending ) files in the pxelinux.cfg/default file depending on the boot architecture - especially for BIOS/Legacy and EFI64?> I'd say there's no standard but there are choices. Check out this page I wrote up.> http://www.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php/PXELINUX-Multi-Arch>> > - Is it e.g. possible to set and use variables depending on the boot architecture in the default menu pxelinux.cfg/default to address different vesamenu.c32 files?> Not quite. INCLUDE and PATH with a different initial config per architecture (which I apparently didn't finish). Ensure each architecture gets a different initial config file that's two lines:> PATH bios > INCLUDE common-config> PATH efi32 > INCLUDE common-config> PATH efi64 > INCLUDE common-configThis look promising, if I could separate the config files for the different boot architectures Bios and UEFI. I have 2 different boot files in 2 different locations, but after startup they both refer to the tftproot/pxlinux.cfg/default config file. The DHCP Option 209 may solve this if the ZENworks tftp server support this option with different values depending on the architecture. Unfortuanelly til now I didn?t found out if there is a support for this option.> > For belonging ldlinux module the extensions (*.c32, *.e32 and *.e64) allows to use UEFI and BIOS parallel. Unfortunately this concept is not working for the other modules like vesamenu and depending modules. Is there a plan to extent this concept to the other modules?>I believe that there was debate and the decision was common name extension.Meanwhile I found a workaround for my problem by using different extensions depending on the architecture by patching the binaries. Since using different com32 module in multi arch environments is problematic not only in my environment ? I think loud: Can this be an approach to handle this problems in a simple an clearly laid out way. It would be simple to handle multi-arch com32 files on a simple tftp server without using not always supported dhcp options or complicated config files? It?s just a renaming of binaries and of the dependencies in the source code and 1 extension for each boot architecture. E.g. *.c32 for bios and *.e64 for UEFI. Maybe the mentioned debate can be reopened since multi boot architecture are more common today? Peter
Ady
2014-Dec-08 17:41 UTC
[syslinux] Using of pxelinux configfiles for both BIOS and UEFI boot
> Maybe the mentioned debate can be reopened since multi boot > architecture are more common today? >Please, let's _not_ reopen this debate, yet again. Every time someone tries network booting with mixed architectures / firmwares with Syslinux for the first time, we get to this discussion of using different filename extensions. Let's not waste time again. There are at least 2 basic reasons to keep the same ".c32": _ prior configuration files are re-usable, as-is, for whichever architecture supported by Syslinux; _ in-common configuration files are used as-is. To be clear, I am providing these 2 reasons for general information only, and this should not be interpreted as an open door for additional debate from my part. Of course, anyone is free to re-debate this until feeling nauseous, and my opinion is as valid as anyone's. I am just pointing out, as clear as I can, that this matter was discussed many times already, and the resolution has been implemented since version 6.00(-pre). FWIW, the ldlinux.{c32,e32,e64} modules _can_ be used in the same directory if so desired, together with {l,}pxelinux.0, bootx64.efi and bootia32.efi. So all this matter is only relevant when using additional modules. Using dhcp options 209 and 210 should allow for 3 different initial configuration files, according to the architecture / firmware of the client. Together with those 2 dhcp options, the (optional) usage of Syslinux directives such as: PATH INCLUDE CONFIG and the cmd.c32 module, there is enough flexibility for different types of users / cases. If there is some case that is not covered, perhaps that's a matter of (lack of) documentation, and someone with experience might be able to provide / suggest / analyze specific alternatives. Let's focus on such particular case / situation. Regards, Ady.
Gene Cumm
2014-Dec-09 14:03 UTC
[syslinux] Using of pxelinux configfiles for both BIOS and UEFI boot
On Mon, Dec 8, 2014 at 10:44 AM, Leenders, Peter <Peter.Leenders at computacenter.com> wrote:> This look promising, if I could separate the config files for the different > boot architectures Bios and UEFI. I have 2 different boot files in 2 > different locations, but after startup they both refer to the > tftproot/pxlinux.cfg/default config file. The DHCP Option 209 may solve this > if the ZENworks tftp server support this option with different values > depending on the architecture. Unfortuanelly til now I didn?t found out if > there is a support for this option.No need. Again, you have choices. http://www.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php/PXELINUX#Hardcoded_options -- -Gene
Ady
2014-Dec-09 15:11 UTC
[syslinux] Using of pxelinux configfiles for both BIOS and UEFI boot
> On Mon, Dec 8, 2014 at 10:44 AM, Leenders, Peter > <Peter.Leenders at computacenter.com> wrote: > > > This look promising, if I could separate the config files for the different > > boot architectures Bios and UEFI. I have 2 different boot files in 2 > > different locations, but after startup they both refer to the > > tftproot/pxlinux.cfg/default config file. The DHCP Option 209 may solve this > > if the ZENworks tftp server support this option with different values > > depending on the architecture. Unfortuanelly til now I didn?t found out if > > there is a support for this option. > > No need. Again, you have choices. > > http://www.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php/PXELINUX#Hardcoded_options > > -- > -Gene > > _______________________________________________ > Syslinux mailing list > Submissions to Syslinux at zytor.com > Unsubscribe or set options at: > http://www.zytor.com/mailman/listinfo/syslinuxA couple of comments that might be relevant: _ You mentioned you "have 2 different boot files in 2 different locations". You should be able to use 2 different boot files with 2 respective configuration files, all in one-and-the-same root location. In other words: dhcp option 209 (pxelinux.configfile) would point to 2 different config files, while option 210 (pxelinux.pathprefix) _can_ be the same for both types of firmware. _ pxelinux-options was broken since 4.00, so you need version 6.03 (or newer). Regards, Ady.
Ady
2014-Dec-11 16:46 UTC
[syslinux] Using of pxelinux configfiles for both BIOS and UEFI boot
> On Mon, Dec 8, 2014 at 10:44 AM, Leenders, Peter > <Peter.Leenders at computacenter.com> wrote: > > > This look promising, if I could separate the config files for the different > > boot architectures Bios and UEFI. I have 2 different boot files in 2 > > different locations, but after startup they both refer to the > > tftproot/pxlinux.cfg/default config file. The DHCP Option 209 may solve this > > if the ZENworks tftp server support this option with different values > > depending on the architecture. Unfortuanelly til now I didn?t found out if > > there is a support for this option. > > No need. Again, you have choices. > > http://www.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php/PXELINUX#Hardcoded_options > > -- > -Gene > > _______________________________________________ > Syslinux mailing list > Submissions to Syslinux at zytor.com > Unsubscribe or set options at: > http://www.zytor.com/mailman/listinfo/syslinuxI could be wrong about this, but... I think that it could still be possible to get multiple architectures / firmwares mixed together while using c32 modules, without dhcp options, and perhaps even without applying pxelinux-options. If I understood correctly, this tftp server can choose between 2 boot files, depending on BIOS/UEFI client, and the problem is choosing a different config file. According to prior pcap reports, syslinux.efi searches for syslinux.cfg (too), while (l)pxelinux.0 will be searching for "default". This means that using something *similar* to: pxelinux.cfg/default: PATH bios CONFIG common-config.cfg ::bios # the bios modules should be located in the bios subdir and pxelinux.cfg/syslinux.cfg PATH efi64 CONFIG common-config.cfg ::efi64 # the efi64 modules should be located in the efi64 subdir could / perhaps / might / work. It would also depend on how the path notation is expressed in "common-config.cfg", considering that the CONFIG directive is changing the working directory. This might very well fail too, but perhaps this idea triggers some additional feedback from someone else. Regards, Ady.
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