1 \input texinfo 2 @c -*-texinfo-*- 3 @c %**start of header 4 @setfilename grub.info 5 @settitle GRUB Manual 6 @c %**end of header 7 8 @include version.texi 9 10 @c Unify all our little indices for now. 11 @syncodeindex fn cp 12 @syncodeindex vr cp 13 @syncodeindex ky cp 14 @syncodeindex pg cp 15 @syncodeindex tp cp 16 17 @footnotestyle separate 18 @paragraphindent 3 19 @finalout 20 21 @dircategory Kernel 22 @direntry 23 * GRUB: (grub). The GRand Unified Bootloader 24 * grub-install: (grub)Invoking grub-install. Install GRUB on your drive 25 * grub-md5-crypt: (grub)Invoking grub-md5-crypt. Encrypt a password 26 in MD5 format 27 * grub-terminfo: (grub)Invoking grub-terminfo. Generate a terminfo 28 command from a 29 terminfo name 30 * grub-set-default: (grub)Invoking grub-set-default. Set a default boot 31 entry 32 * mbchk: (grub)Invoking mbchk. Check for the format of a Multiboot kernel 33 @end direntry 34 35 @setchapternewpage odd 36 37 @ifinfo 38 Copyright @copyright{} 1999,2000,2001,2002,2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 39 40 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of 41 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice 42 are preserved on all copies. 43 44 @ignore 45 Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the 46 results, provided the printed document carries a copying permission 47 notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph 48 (this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual). 49 50 @end ignore 51 52 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this 53 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that 54 the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a 55 permission notice identical to this one. 56 57 Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual 58 into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions. 59 @end ifinfo 60 61 @titlepage 62 @sp 10 63 @title the GRUB manual 64 @subtitle The GRand Unified Bootloader, version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}. 65 @author Gordon Matzigkeit 66 @author Yoshinori K. Okuji 67 @c The following two commands start the copyright page. 68 @page 69 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll 70 Copyright @copyright{} 1999,2000,2001,2002,2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 71 72 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of 73 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice 74 are preserved on all copies. 75 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this 76 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire 77 resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission 78 notice identical to this one. 79 80 Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual 81 into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, 82 except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved 83 by Free Software Foundation. 84 @end titlepage 85 86 @c Output the table of contents at the beginning. 87 @contents 88 89 @finalout 90 @headings double 91 92 @ifnottex 93 @node Top 94 @top GRUB manual 95 96 This is the documentation of GNU GRUB, the GRand Unified Bootloader, 97 a flexible and powerful boot loader program for @sc{pc}s. 98 99 This edition documents version @value{VERSION}. 100 @end ifnottex 101 102 @menu 103 * Introduction:: Capturing the spirit of GRUB 104 * Naming convention:: Names of your drives in GRUB 105 * Installation:: Installing GRUB on your drive 106 * Booting:: How to boot different operating systems 107 * Configuration:: Writing your own configuration file 108 * Network:: Downloading OS images from a network 109 * Serial terminal:: Using GRUB via a serial line 110 * Preset Menu:: Embedding a configuration file into GRUB 111 * Security:: Improving the security 112 * Images:: GRUB image files 113 * Filesystem:: Filesystem syntax and semantics 114 * Interface:: The menu and the command-line 115 * Commands:: The list of available builtin commands 116 * Troubleshooting:: Error messages produced by GRUB 117 * Invoking the grub shell:: How to use the grub shell 118 * Invoking grub-install:: How to use the GRUB installer 119 * Invoking grub-md5-crypt:: How to generate a cryptic password 120 * Invoking grub-terminfo:: How to generate a terminfo command 121 * Invoking grub-set-default:: How to set a default boot entry 122 * Invoking mbchk:: How to use the Multiboot checker 123 * Obtaining and Building GRUB:: How to obtain and build GRUB 124 * Reporting bugs:: Where you should send a bug report 125 * Future:: Some future plans on GRUB 126 * Internals:: Hacking GRUB 127 * Index:: 128 @end menu 129 130 131 @node Introduction 132 @chapter Introduction to GRUB 133 134 @menu 135 * Overview:: What exactly GRUB is and how to use it 136 * History:: From maggot to house fly 137 * Features:: GRUB features 138 * Role of a boot loader:: The role of a boot loader 139 @end menu 140 141 142 @node Overview 143 @section Overview 144 145 Briefly, a @dfn{boot loader} is the first software program that runs when 146 a computer starts. It is responsible for loading and transferring 147 control to an operating system @dfn{kernel} software (such as Linux or 148 GNU Mach). The kernel, in turn, initializes the rest of the operating 149 system (e.g. a GNU system). 150 151 GNU GRUB is a very powerful boot loader, which can load a wide variety 152 of free operating systems, as well as proprietary operating systems with 153 chain-loading@footnote{@dfn{chain-load} is the mechanism for loading 154 unsupported operating systems by loading another boot loader. It is 155 typically used for loading DOS or Windows.}. GRUB is designed to 156 address the complexity of booting a personal computer; both the 157 program and this manual are tightly bound to that computer platform, 158 although porting to other platforms may be addressed in the future. 159 160 One of the important features in GRUB is flexibility; GRUB understands 161 filesystems and kernel executable formats, so you can load an arbitrary 162 operating system the way you like, without recording the physical 163 position of your kernel on the disk. Thus you can load the kernel 164 just by specifying its file name and the drive and partition where the 165 kernel resides. 166 167 When booting with GRUB, you can use either a command-line interface 168 (@pxref{Command-line interface}), or a menu interface (@pxref{Menu 169 interface}). Using the command-line interface, you type the drive 170 specification and file name of the kernel manually. In the menu 171 interface, you just select an OS using the arrow keys. The menu is 172 based on a configuration file which you prepare beforehand 173 (@pxref{Configuration}). While in the menu, you can switch to the 174 command-line mode, and vice-versa. You can even edit menu entries 175 before using them. 176 177 In the following chapters, you will learn how to specify a drive, a 178 partition, and a file name (@pxref{Naming convention}) to GRUB, how to 179 install GRUB on your drive (@pxref{Installation}), and how to boot your 180 OSes (@pxref{Booting}), step by step. 181 182 Besides the GRUB boot loader itself, there is a @dfn{grub shell} 183 @command{grub} (@pxref{Invoking the grub shell}) which can be run when 184 you are in your operating system. It emulates the boot loader and can 185 be used for installing the boot loader. 186 187 188 @node History 189 @section History of GRUB 190 191 GRUB originated in 1995 when Erich Boleyn was trying to boot the GNU 192 Hurd with the University of Utah's Mach 4 microkernel (now known as GNU 193 Mach). Erich and Brian Ford designed the Multiboot Specification 194 (@pxref{Top, Multiboot Specification, Motivation, multiboot, The Multiboot 195 Specification}), because they were determined not to add to the large 196 number of mutually-incompatible PC boot methods. 197 198 Erich then began modifying the FreeBSD boot loader so that it would 199 understand Multiboot. He soon realized that it would be a lot easier 200 to write his own boot loader from scratch than to keep working on the 201 FreeBSD boot loader, and so GRUB was born. 202 203 Erich added many features to GRUB, but other priorities prevented him 204 from keeping up with the demands of its quickly-expanding user base. In 205 1999, Gordon Matzigkeit and Yoshinori K. Okuji adopted GRUB as an 206 official GNU package, and opened its development by making the latest 207 sources available via anonymous CVS. @xref{Obtaining and Building 208 GRUB}, for more information. 209 210 211 @node Features 212 @section GRUB features 213 214 The primary requirement for GRUB is that it be compliant with the 215 @dfn{Multiboot Specification}, which is described in @ref{Top, Multiboot 216 Specification, Motivation, multiboot, The Multiboot Specification}. 217 218 The other goals, listed in approximate order of importance, are: 219 220 @itemize @bullet{} 221 @item 222 Basic functions must be straightforward for end-users. 223 224 @item 225 Rich functionality to support kernel experts and designers. 226 227 @item 228 Backward compatibility for booting FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and 229 Linux. Proprietary kernels (such as DOS, Windows NT, and OS/2) are 230 supported via a chain-loading function. 231 @end itemize 232 233 Except for specific compatibility modes (chain-loading and the Linux 234 @dfn{piggyback} format), all kernels will be started in much the same 235 state as in the Multiboot Specification. Only kernels loaded at 1 megabyte 236 or above are presently supported. Any attempt to load below that 237 boundary will simply result in immediate failure and an error message 238 reporting the problem. 239 240 In addition to the requirements above, GRUB has the following features 241 (note that the Multiboot Specification doesn't require all the features 242 that GRUB supports): 243 244 @table @asis 245 @item Recognize multiple executable formats 246 Support many of the @dfn{a.out} variants plus @dfn{ELF}. Symbol 247 tables are also loaded. 248 249 @item Support non-Multiboot kernels 250 Support many of the various free 32-bit kernels that lack Multiboot 251 compliance (primarily FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and 252 Linux). Chain-loading of other boot loaders is also supported. 253 254 @item Load multiples modules 255 Fully support the Multiboot feature of loading multiple modules. 256 257 @item Load a configuration file 258 Support a human-readable text configuration file with preset boot 259 commands. You can also load another configuration file dynamically and 260 embed a preset configuration file in a GRUB image file. The list of 261 commands (@pxref{Commands}) are a superset of those supported on the 262 command-line. An example configuration file is provided in 263 @ref{Configuration}. 264 265 @item Provide a menu interface 266 A menu interface listing preset boot commands, with a programmable 267 timeout, is available. There is no fixed limit on the number of boot 268 entries, and the current implementation has space for several hundred. 269 270 @item Have a flexible command-line interface 271 A fairly flexible command-line interface, accessible from the menu, 272 is available to edit any preset commands, or write a new boot command 273 set from scratch. If no configuration file is present, GRUB drops to 274 the command-line. 275 276 The list of commands (@pxref{Commands}) are a subset of those supported 277 for configuration files. Editing commands closely resembles the Bash 278 command-line (@pxref{Command Line Editing, Bash, Command Line Editing, 279 features, Bash Features}), with @key{TAB}-completion of commands, 280 devices, partitions, and files in a directory depending on context. 281 282 @item Support multiple filesystem types 283 Support multiple filesystem types transparently, plus a useful explicit 284 blocklist notation. The currently supported filesystem types are 285 @dfn{BSD FFS}, @dfn{DOS FAT16 and FAT32}, @dfn{Minix fs}, @dfn{Linux 286 ext2fs}, @dfn{ReiserFS}, @dfn{JFS}, @dfn{XFS}, and @dfn{VSTa 287 fs}. @xref{Filesystem}, for more information. 288 289 @item Support automatic decompression 290 Can decompress files which were compressed by @command{gzip}. This 291 function is both automatic and transparent to the user (i.e. all 292 functions operate upon the uncompressed contents of the specified 293 files). This greatly reduces a file size and loading time, a 294 particularly great benefit for floppies.@footnote{There are a few 295 pathological cases where loading a very badly organized ELF kernel might 296 take longer, but in practice this never happen.} 297 298 It is conceivable that some kernel modules should be loaded in a 299 compressed state, so a different module-loading command can be specified 300 to avoid uncompressing the modules. 301 302 @item Access data on any installed device 303 Support reading data from any or all floppies or hard disk(s) recognized 304 by the BIOS, independent of the setting of the root device. 305 306 @item Be independent of drive geometry translations 307 Unlike many other boot loaders, GRUB makes the particular drive 308 translation irrelevant. A drive installed and running with one 309 translation may be converted to another translation without any adverse 310 effects or changes in GRUB's configuration. 311 312 @item Detect all installed @sc{ram} 313 GRUB can generally find all the installed @sc{ram} on a PC-compatible 314 machine. It uses an advanced BIOS query technique for finding all 315 memory regions. As described on the Multiboot Specification (@pxref{Top, 316 Multiboot Specification, Motivation, multiboot, The Multiboot 317 Specification}), not all kernels make use of this information, but GRUB 318 provides it for those who do. 319 320 @item Support Logical Block Address mode 321 In traditional disk calls (called @dfn{CHS mode}), there is a geometry 322 translation problem, that is, the BIOS cannot access over 1024 323 cylinders, so the accessible space is limited to at least 508 MB and to 324 at most 8GB. GRUB can't universally solve this problem, as there is no 325 standard interface used in all machines. However, several newer machines 326 have the new interface, Logical Block Address (@dfn{LBA}) mode. GRUB 327 automatically detects if LBA mode is available and uses it if 328 available. In LBA mode, GRUB can access the entire disk. 329 330 @item Support network booting 331 GRUB is basically a disk-based boot loader but also has network 332 support. You can load OS images from a network by using the @dfn{TFTP} 333 protocol. 334 335 @item Support remote terminals 336 To support computers with no console, GRUB provides remote terminal 337 support, so that you can control GRUB from a remote host. Only serial 338 terminal support is implemented at the moment. 339 @end table 340 341 342 @node Role of a boot loader 343 @section The role of a boot loader 344 345 The following is a quotation from Gordon Matzigkeit, a GRUB fanatic: 346 347 @quotation 348 Some people like to acknowledge both the operating system and kernel when 349 they talk about their computers, so they might say they use 350 ``GNU/Linux'' or ``GNU/Hurd''. Other people seem to think that the 351 kernel is the most important part of the system, so they like to call 352 their GNU operating systems ``Linux systems.'' 353 354 I, personally, believe that this is a grave injustice, because the 355 @emph{boot loader} is the most important software of all. I used to 356 refer to the above systems as either ``LILO''@footnote{The LInux LOader, 357 a boot loader that everybody uses, but nobody likes.} or ``GRUB'' 358 systems. 359 360 Unfortunately, nobody ever understood what I was talking about; now I 361 just use the word ``GNU'' as a pseudonym for GRUB. 362 363 So, if you ever hear people talking about their alleged ``GNU'' systems, 364 remember that they are actually paying homage to the best boot loader 365 around@dots{} GRUB! 366 @end quotation 367 368 We, the GRUB maintainers, do not (usually) encourage Gordon's level of 369 fanaticism, but it helps to remember that boot loaders deserve 370 recognition. We hope that you enjoy using GNU GRUB as much as we did 371 writing it. 372 373 374 @node Naming convention 375 @chapter Naming convention 376 377 The device syntax used in GRUB is a wee bit different from what you may 378 have seen before in your operating system(s), and you need to know it so 379 that you can specify a drive/partition. 380 381 Look at the following examples and explanations: 382 383 @example 384 (fd0) 385 @end example 386 387 First of all, GRUB requires that the device name be enclosed with 388 @samp{(} and @samp{)}. The @samp{fd} part means that it is a floppy 389 disk. The number @samp{0} is the drive number, which is counted from 390 @emph{zero}. This expression means that GRUB will use the whole floppy 391 disk. 392 393 @example 394 (hd0,1) 395 @end example 396 397 Here, @samp{hd} means it is a hard disk drive. The first integer 398 @samp{0} indicates the drive number, that is, the first hard disk, while 399 the second integer, @samp{1}, indicates the partition number (or the 400 @sc{pc} slice number in the BSD terminology). Once again, please note 401 that the partition numbers are counted from @emph{zero}, not from 402 one. This expression means the second partition of the first hard disk 403 drive. In this case, GRUB uses one partition of the disk, instead of the 404 whole disk. 405 406 @example 407 (hd0,4) 408 @end example 409 410 This specifies the first @dfn{extended partition} of the first hard disk 411 drive. Note that the partition numbers for extended partitions are 412 counted from @samp{4}, regardless of the actual number of primary 413 partitions on your hard disk. 414 415 @example 416 (hd1,a) 417 @end example 418 419 This means the BSD @samp{a} partition of the second hard disk. If you 420 need to specify which @sc{pc} slice number should be used, use something 421 like this: @samp{(hd1,0,a)}. If the @sc{pc} slice number is omitted, 422 GRUB searches for the first @sc{pc} slice which has a BSD @samp{a} 423 partition. 424 425 Of course, to actually access the disks or partitions with GRUB, you 426 need to use the device specification in a command, like @samp{root 427 (fd0)} or @samp{unhide (hd0,2)}. To help you find out which number 428 specifies a partition you want, the GRUB command-line 429 (@pxref{Command-line interface}) options have argument 430 completion. This means that, for example, you only need to type 431 432 @example 433 root ( 434 @end example 435 436 followed by a @key{TAB}, and GRUB will display the list of drives, 437 partitions, or file names. So it should be quite easy to determine the 438 name of your target partition, even with minimal knowledge of the 439 syntax. 440 441 Note that GRUB does @emph{not} distinguish IDE from SCSI - it simply 442 counts the drive numbers from zero, regardless of their type. Normally, 443 any IDE drive number is less than any SCSI drive number, although that 444 is not true if you change the boot sequence by swapping IDE and SCSI 445 drives in your BIOS. 446 447 Now the question is, how to specify a file? Again, consider an 448 example: 449 450 @example 451 (hd0,0)/vmlinuz 452 @end example 453 454 This specifies the file named @samp{vmlinuz}, found on the first 455 partition of the first hard disk drive. Note that the argument 456 completion works with file names, too. 457 458 That was easy, admit it. Now read the next chapter, to find out how to 459 actually install GRUB on your drive. 460 461 462 @node Installation 463 @chapter Installation 464 465 In order to install GRUB as your boot loader, you need to first 466 install the GRUB system and utilities under your UNIX-like operating 467 system (@pxref{Obtaining and Building GRUB}). You can do this either 468 from the source tarball, or as a package for your OS. 469 470 After you have done that, you need to install the boot loader on a 471 drive (floppy or hard disk). There are two ways of doing that - either 472 using the utility @command{grub-install} (@pxref{Invoking 473 grub-install}) on a UNIX-like OS, or by running GRUB itself from a 474 floppy. These are quite similar, however the utility might probe a 475 wrong BIOS drive, so you should be careful. 476 477 Also, if you install GRUB on a UNIX-like OS, please make sure that you 478 have an emergency boot disk ready, so that you can rescue your computer 479 if, by any chance, your hard drive becomes unusable (unbootable). 480 481 GRUB comes with boot images, which are normally put in the directory 482 @file{/usr/lib/grub/i386-pc}. If you do not use grub-install, then 483 you need to copy the files @file{stage1}, @file{stage2}, and 484 @file{*stage1_5} to the directory @file{/boot/grub}, and run the 485 @command{grub-set-default} (@pxref{Invoking grub-set-default}) if you 486 intend to use @samp{default saved} (@pxref{default}) in your 487 configuration file. Hereafter, the directory where GRUB images are 488 initially placed (normally @file{/usr/lib/grub/i386-pc}) will be 489 called the @dfn{image directory}, and the directory where the boot 490 loader needs to find them (usually @file{/boot/grub}) will be called 491 the @dfn{boot directory}. 492 493 @menu 494 * Creating a GRUB boot floppy:: 495 * Installing GRUB natively:: 496 * Installing GRUB using grub-install:: 497 * Making a GRUB bootable CD-ROM:: 498 @end menu 499 500 501 @node Creating a GRUB boot floppy 502 @section Creating a GRUB boot floppy 503 504 To create a GRUB boot floppy, you need to take the files @file{stage1} 505 and @file{stage2} from the image directory, and write them to the first 506 and the second block of the floppy disk, respectively. 507 508 @strong{Caution:} This procedure will destroy any data currently stored 509 on the floppy. 510 511 On a UNIX-like operating system, that is done with the following 512 commands: 513 514 @example 515 @group 516 # @kbd{cd /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc} 517 # @kbd{dd if=stage1 of=/dev/fd0 bs=512 count=1} 518 1+0 records in 519 1+0 records out 520 # @kbd{dd if=stage2 of=/dev/fd0 bs=512 seek=1} 521 153+1 records in 522 153+1 records out 523 # 524 @end group 525 @end example 526 527 The device file name may be different. Consult the manual for your OS. 528 529 530 @node Installing GRUB natively 531 @section Installing GRUB natively 532 533 @strong{Caution:} Installing GRUB's stage1 in this manner will erase the 534 normal boot-sector used by an OS. 535 536 GRUB can currently boot GNU Mach, Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD 537 directly, so using it on a boot sector (the first sector of a 538 partition) should be okay. But generally, it would be a good idea to 539 back up the first sector of the partition on which you are installing 540 GRUB's stage1. This isn't as important if you are installing GRUB on 541 the first sector of a hard disk, since it's easy to reinitialize it 542 (e.g. by running @samp{FDISK /MBR} from DOS). 543 544 If you decide to install GRUB in the native environment, which is 545 definitely desirable, you'll need to create a GRUB boot disk, and 546 reboot your computer with it. Otherwise, see @ref{Installing GRUB using 547 grub-install}. 548 549 Once started, GRUB will show the command-line interface 550 (@pxref{Command-line interface}). First, set the GRUB's @dfn{root 551 device}@footnote{Note that GRUB's root device doesn't necessarily mean 552 your OS's root partition; if you need to specify a root partition for 553 your OS, add the argument into the command @command{kernel}.} to the 554 partition containing the boot directory, like this: 555 556 @example 557 grub> @kbd{root (hd0,0)} 558 @end example 559 560 If you are not sure which partition actually holds this directory, use the 561 command @command{find} (@pxref{find}), like this: 562 563 @example 564 grub> @kbd{find /boot/grub/stage1} 565 @end example 566 567 This will search for the file name @file{/boot/grub/stage1} and show the 568 devices which contain the file. 569 570 Once you've set the root device correctly, run the command 571 @command{setup} (@pxref{setup}): 572 573 @example 574 grub> @kbd{setup (hd0)} 575 @end example 576 577 This command will install the GRUB boot loader on the Master Boot 578 Record (MBR) of the first drive. If you want to put GRUB into the boot 579 sector of a partition instead of putting it in the MBR, specify the 580 partition into which you want to install GRUB: 581 582 @example 583 grub> @kbd{setup (hd0,0)} 584 @end example 585 586 If you install GRUB into a partition or a drive other than the first 587 one, you must chain-load GRUB from another boot loader. Refer to the 588 manual for the boot loader to know how to chain-load GRUB. 589 590 After using the setup command, you will boot into GRUB without the 591 GRUB floppy. See the chapter @ref{Booting} to find out how to boot 592 your operating systems from GRUB. 593 594 595 @node Installing GRUB using grub-install 596 @section Installing GRUB using grub-install 597 598 @strong{Caution:} This procedure is definitely less safe, because 599 there are several ways in which your computer can become 600 unbootable. For example, most operating systems don't tell GRUB how to 601 map BIOS drives to OS devices correctly---GRUB merely @dfn{guesses} 602 the mapping. This will succeed in most cases, but not 603 always. Therefore, GRUB provides you with a map file called the 604 @dfn{device map}, which you must fix if it is wrong. @xref{Device 605 map}, for more details. 606 607 If you still do want to install GRUB under a UNIX-like OS (such 608 as @sc{gnu}), invoke the program @command{grub-install} (@pxref{Invoking 609 grub-install}) as the superuser (@dfn{root}). 610 611 The usage is basically very simple. You only need to specify one 612 argument to the program, namely, where to install the boot loader. The 613 argument can be either a device file (like @samp{/dev/hda}) or a 614 partition specified in GRUB's notation. For example, under Linux the 615 following will install GRUB into the MBR of the first IDE disk: 616 617 @example 618 # @kbd{grub-install /dev/hda} 619 @end example 620 621 Likewise, under GNU/Hurd, this has the same effect: 622 623 @example 624 # @kbd{grub-install /dev/hd0} 625 @end example 626 627 If it is the first BIOS drive, this is the same as well: 628 629 @example 630 # @kbd{grub-install '(hd0)'} 631 @end example 632 633 Or you can omit the parentheses: 634 635 @example 636 # @kbd{grub-install hd0} 637 @end example 638 639 But all the above examples assume that GRUB should use images under 640 the root directory. If you want GRUB to use images under a directory 641 other than the root directory, you need to specify the option 642 @option{--root-directory}. The typical usage is that you create a GRUB 643 boot floppy with a filesystem. Here is an example: 644 645 @example 646 @group 647 # @kbd{mke2fs /dev/fd0} 648 # @kbd{mount -t ext2 /dev/fd0 /mnt} 649 # @kbd{grub-install --root-directory=/mnt fd0} 650 # @kbd{umount /mnt} 651 @end group 652 @end example 653 654 Another example is when you have a separate boot partition 655 which is mounted at @file{/boot}. Since GRUB is a boot loader, it 656 doesn't know anything about mountpoints at all. Thus, you need to run 657 @command{grub-install} like this: 658 659 @example 660 # @kbd{grub-install --root-directory=/boot /dev/hda} 661 @end example 662 663 By the way, as noted above, it is quite difficult to guess BIOS drives 664 correctly under a UNIX-like OS. Thus, @command{grub-install} will prompt 665 you to check if it could really guess the correct mappings, after the 666 installation. The format is defined in @ref{Device map}. Please be 667 quite careful. If the output is wrong, it is unlikely that your 668 computer will be able to boot with no problem. 669 670 Note that @command{grub-install} is actually just a shell script and the 671 real task is done by the grub shell @command{grub} (@pxref{Invoking the 672 grub shell}). Therefore, you may run @command{grub} directly to install 673 GRUB, without using @command{grub-install}. Don't do that, however, 674 unless you are very familiar with the internals of GRUB. Installing a 675 boot loader on a running OS may be extremely dangerous. 676 677 678 @node Making a GRUB bootable CD-ROM 679 @section Making a GRUB bootable CD-ROM 680 681 GRUB supports the @dfn{no emulation mode} in the El Torito 682 specification@footnote{El Torito is a specification for bootable CD 683 using BIOS functions.}. This means that you can use the whole CD-ROM 684 from GRUB and you don't have to make a floppy or hard disk image file, 685 which can cause compatibility problems. 686 687 For booting from a CD-ROM, GRUB uses a special Stage 2 called 688 @file{stage2_eltorito}. The only GRUB files you need to have in your 689 bootable CD-ROM are this @file{stage2_eltorito} and optionally a config file 690 @file{menu.lst}. You don't need to use @file{stage1} or @file{stage2}, 691 because El Torito is quite different from the standard boot process. 692 693 Here is an example of procedures to make a bootable CD-ROM 694 image. First, make a top directory for the bootable image, say, 695 @samp{iso}: 696 697 @example 698 $ @kbd{mkdir iso} 699 @end example 700 701 Make a directory for GRUB: 702 703 @example 704 $ @kbd{mkdir -p iso/boot/grub} 705 @end example 706 707 Copy the file @file{stage2_eltorito}: 708 709 @example 710 $ @kbd{cp /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc/stage2_eltorito iso/boot/grub} 711 @end example 712 713 If desired, make the config file @file{menu.lst} under @file{iso/boot/grub} 714 (@pxref{Configuration}), and copy any files and directories for the disc to the 715 directory @file{iso/}. 716 717 Finally, make a ISO9660 image file like this: 718 719 @example 720 $ @kbd{mkisofs -R -b boot/grub/stage2_eltorito -no-emul-boot \ 721 -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table -o grub.iso iso} 722 @end example 723 724 This produces a file named @file{grub.iso}, which then can be burned 725 into a CD (or a DVD). @kbd{mkisofs} has already set up the disc to boot 726 from the @kbd{boot/grub/stage2_eltorito} file, so there is no need to 727 setup GRUB on the disc. (Note that the @kbd{-boot-load-size 4} bit is 728 required for compatibility with the BIOS on many older machines.) 729 730 You can use the device @samp{(cd)} to access a CD-ROM in your 731 config file. This is not required; GRUB automatically sets the root device 732 to @samp{(cd)} when booted from a CD-ROM. It is only necessary to refer to 733 @samp{(cd)} if you want to access other drives as well. 734 735 736 @node Booting 737 @chapter Booting 738 739 GRUB can load Multiboot-compliant kernels in a consistent way, 740 but for some free operating systems you need to use some OS-specific 741 magic. 742 743 @menu 744 * General boot methods:: How to boot OSes with GRUB generally 745 * OS-specific notes:: Notes on some operating systems 746 * Making your system robust:: How to make your system robust 747 @end menu 748 749 750 @node General boot methods 751 @section How to boot operating systems 752 753 GRUB has two distinct boot methods. One of the two is to load an 754 operating system directly, and the other is to chain-load another boot 755 loader which then will load an operating system actually. Generally 756 speaking, the former is more desirable, because you don't need to 757 install or maintain other boot loaders and GRUB is flexible enough to 758 load an operating system from an arbitrary disk/partition. However, 759 the latter is sometimes required, since GRUB doesn't support all the 760 existing operating systems natively. 761 762 @menu 763 * Loading an operating system directly:: 764 * Chain-loading:: 765 @end menu 766 767 768 @node Loading an operating system directly 769 @subsection How to boot an OS directly with GRUB 770 771 Multiboot (@pxref{Top, Multiboot Specification, Motivation, multiboot, 772 The Multiboot Specification}) is the native format supported by GRUB. 773 For the sake of convenience, there is also support for Linux, FreeBSD, 774 NetBSD and OpenBSD. If you want to boot other operating systems, you 775 will have to chain-load them (@pxref{Chain-loading}). 776 777 Generally, GRUB can boot any Multiboot-compliant OS in the following 778 steps: 779 780 @enumerate 781 @item 782 Set GRUB's root device to the drive where the OS images are stored with 783 the command @command{root} (@pxref{root}). 784 785 @item 786 Load the kernel image with the command @command{kernel} (@pxref{kernel}). 787 788 @item 789 If you need modules, load them with the command @command{module} 790 (@pxref{module}) or @command{modulenounzip} (@pxref{modulenounzip}). 791 792 @item 793 Run the command @command{boot} (@pxref{boot}). 794 @end enumerate 795 796 Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD can be booted in a similar 797 manner. You load a kernel image with the command @command{kernel} and 798 then run the command @command{boot}. If the kernel requires some 799 parameters, just append the parameters to @command{kernel}, after the 800 file name of the kernel. Also, please refer to @ref{OS-specific notes}, 801 for information on your OS-specific issues. 802 803 804 @node Chain-loading 805 @subsection Load another boot loader to boot unsupported operating systems 806 807 If you want to boot an unsupported operating system (e.g. Windows 95), 808 chain-load a boot loader for the operating system. Normally, the boot 809 loader is embedded in the @dfn{boot sector} of the partition on which 810 the operating system is installed. 811 812 @enumerate 813 @item 814 Set GRUB's root device to the partition by the command 815 @command{rootnoverify} (@pxref{rootnoverify}): 816 817 @example 818 grub> @kbd{rootnoverify (hd0,0)} 819 @end example 820 821 @item 822 Set the @dfn{active} flag in the partition using the command 823 @command{makeactive}@footnote{This is not necessary for most of the 824 modern operating systems.} (@pxref{makeactive}): 825 826 @example 827 grub> @kbd{makeactive} 828 @end example 829 830 @item 831 Load the boot loader with the command @command{chainloader} 832 (@pxref{chainloader}): 833 834 @example 835 grub> @kbd{chainloader +1} 836 @end example 837 838 @samp{+1} indicates that GRUB should read one sector from the start of 839 the partition. The complete description about this syntax can be found 840 in @ref{Block list syntax}. 841 842 @item 843 Run the command @command{boot} (@pxref{boot}). 844 @end enumerate 845 846 However, DOS and Windows have some deficiencies, so you might have to 847 use more complicated instructions. @xref{DOS/Windows}, for more 848 information. 849 850 851 @node OS-specific notes 852 @section Some caveats on OS-specific issues 853 854 Here, we describe some caveats on several operating systems. 855 856 @menu 857 * GNU/Hurd:: 858 * GNU/Linux:: 859 * FreeBSD:: 860 * NetBSD:: 861 * OpenBSD:: 862 * DOS/Windows:: 863 * SCO UnixWare:: 864 * QNX:: 865 @end menu 866 867 868 @node GNU/Hurd 869 @subsection GNU/Hurd 870 871 Since GNU/Hurd is Multiboot-compliant, it is easy to boot it; there is 872 nothing special about it. But do not forget that you have to specify a 873 root partition to the kernel. 874 875 @enumerate 876 @item 877 Set GRUB's root device to the same drive as GNU/Hurd's. Probably the 878 command @code{find /boot/gnumach} or similar can help you 879 (@pxref{find}). 880 881 @item 882 Load the kernel and the module, like this: 883 884 @example 885 @group 886 grub> @kbd{kernel /boot/gnumach root=hd0s1} 887 grub> @kbd{module /boot/serverboot} 888 @end group 889 @end example 890 891 @item 892 Run the command @command{boot} (@pxref{boot}). 893 @end enumerate 894 895 896 @node GNU/Linux 897 @subsection GNU/Linux 898 899 It is relatively easy to boot GNU/Linux from GRUB, because it somewhat 900 resembles to boot a Multiboot-compliant OS. 901 902 @enumerate 903 @item 904 Set GRUB's root device to the same drive as GNU/Linux's. Probably the 905 command @code{find /vmlinuz} or similar can help you (@pxref{find}). 906 907 @item 908 Load the kernel: 909 910 @example 911 grub> @kbd{kernel /vmlinuz root=/dev/hda1} 912 @end example 913 914 If you need to specify some kernel parameters, just append them to the 915 command. For example, to set @option{vga} to @samp{ext}, do this: 916 917 @example 918 grub> @kbd{kernel /vmlinuz root=/dev/hda1 vga=ext} 919 @end example 920 921 See the documentation in the Linux source tree for complete 922 information on the available options. 923 924 @item 925 If you use an initrd, execute the command @command{initrd} 926 (@pxref{initrd}) after @command{kernel}: 927 928 @example 929 grub> @kbd{initrd /initrd} 930 @end example 931 932 @item 933 Finally, run the command @command{boot} (@pxref{boot}). 934 @end enumerate 935 936 @strong{Caution:} If you use an initrd and specify the @samp{mem=} 937 option to the kernel to let it use less than actual memory size, you 938 will also have to specify the same memory size to GRUB. To let GRUB know 939 the size, run the command @command{uppermem} @emph{before} loading the 940 kernel. @xref{uppermem}, for more information. 941 942 943 @node FreeBSD 944 @subsection FreeBSD 945 946 GRUB can load the kernel directly, either in ELF or a.out format. But 947 this is not recommended, since FreeBSD's bootstrap interface sometimes 948 changes heavily, so GRUB can't guarantee to pass kernel parameters 949 correctly. 950 951 Thus, we'd recommend loading the very flexible loader 952 @file{/boot/loader} instead. See this example: 953 954 @example 955 @group 956 grub> @kbd{root (hd0,a)} 957 grub> @kbd{kernel /boot/loader} 958 grub> @kbd{boot} 959 @end group 960 @end example 961 962 963 @node NetBSD 964 @subsection NetBSD 965 966 GRUB can load NetBSD a.out and ELF directly, follow these steps: 967 968 @enumerate 969 @item 970 Set GRUB's root device with @command{root} (@pxref{root}). 971 972 @item 973 Load the kernel with @command{kernel} (@pxref{kernel}). You should 974 append the ugly option @option{--type=netbsd}, if you want to load an 975 ELF kernel, like this: 976 977 @example 978 grub> @kbd{kernel --type=netbsd /netbsd-elf} 979 @end example 980 981 @item 982 Run @command{boot} (@pxref{boot}). 983 @end enumerate 984 985 For now, however, GRUB doesn't allow you to pass kernel parameters, so 986 it may be better to chain-load it instead. For more information, please 987 see @ref{Chain-loading}. 988 989 990 @node OpenBSD 991 @subsection OpenBSD 992 993 The booting instruction is exactly the same as for NetBSD 994 (@pxref{NetBSD}). 995 996 997 @node DOS/Windows 998 @subsection DOS/Windows 999 1000 GRUB cannot boot DOS or Windows directly, so you must chain-load them 1001 (@pxref{Chain-loading}). However, their boot loaders have some critical 1002 deficiencies, so it may not work to just chain-load them. To overcome 1003 the problems, GRUB provides you with two helper functions. 1004 1005 If you have installed DOS (or Windows) on a non-first hard disk, you 1006 have to use the disk swapping technique, because that OS cannot boot 1007 from any disks but the first one. The workaround used in GRUB is the 1008 command @command{map} (@pxref{map}), like this: 1009 1010 @example 1011 @group 1012 grub> @kbd{map (hd0) (hd1)} 1013 grub> @kbd{map (hd1) (hd0)} 1014 @end group 1015 @end example 1016 1017 This performs a @dfn{virtual} swap between your first and second hard 1018 drive. 1019 1020 @strong{Caution:} This is effective only if DOS (or Windows) uses BIOS 1021 to access the swapped disks. If that OS uses a special driver for the 1022 disks, this probably won't work. 1023 1024 Another problem arises if you installed more than one set of DOS/Windows 1025 onto one disk, because they could be confused if there are more than one 1026 primary partitions for DOS/Windows. Certainly you should avoid doing 1027 this, but there is a solution if you do want to do so. Use the partition 1028 hiding/unhiding technique. 1029 1030 If GRUB @dfn{hide}s a DOS (or Windows) partition (@pxref{hide}), DOS (or 1031 Windows) will ignore the partition. If GRUB @dfn{unhide}s a DOS (or 1032 Windows) partition (@pxref{unhide}), DOS (or Windows) will detect the 1033 partition. Thus, if you have installed DOS (or Windows) on the first 1034 and the second partition of the first hard disk, and you want to boot 1035 the copy on the first partition, do the following: 1036 1037 @example 1038 @group 1039 grub> @kbd{unhide (hd0,0)} 1040 grub> @kbd{hide (hd0,1)} 1041 grub> @kbd{rootnoverify (hd0,0)} 1042 grub> @kbd{chainloader +1} 1043 grub> @kbd{makeactive} 1044 grub> @kbd{boot} 1045 @end group 1046 @end example 1047 1048 1049 @node SCO UnixWare 1050 @subsection SCO UnixWare 1051 1052 It is known that the signature in the boot loader for SCO UnixWare is 1053 wrong, so you will have to specify the option @option{--force} to 1054 @command{chainloader} (@pxref{chainloader}), like this: 1055 1056 @example 1057 @group 1058 grub> @kbd{rootnoverify (hd1,0)} 1059 grub> @kbd{chainloader --force +1} 1060 grub> @kbd{makeactive} 1061 grub> @kbd{boot} 1062 @end group 1063 @end example 1064 1065 1066 @node QNX 1067 @subsection QNX 1068 1069 QNX seems to use a bigger boot loader, so you need to boot it up, like 1070 this: 1071 1072 @example 1073 @group 1074 grub> @kbd{rootnoverify (hd1,1)} 1075 grub> @kbd{chainloader +4} 1076 grub> @kbd{boot} 1077 @end group 1078 @end example 1079 1080 1081 @node Making your system robust 1082 @section How to make your system robust 1083 1084 When you test a new kernel or a new OS, it is important to make sure 1085 that your computer can boot even if the new system is unbootable. This 1086 is crucial especially if you maintain servers or remote systems. To 1087 accomplish this goal, you need to set up two things: 1088 1089 @enumerate 1090 @item 1091 You must maintain a system which is always bootable. For instance, if 1092 you test a new kernel, you need to keep a working kernel in a 1093 different place. And, it would sometimes be very nice to even have a 1094 complete copy of a working system in a different partition or disk. 1095 1096 @item 1097 You must direct GRUB to boot a working system when the new system 1098 fails. This is possible with the @dfn{fallback} system in GRUB. 1099 @end enumerate 1100 1101 The former requirement is very specific to each OS, so this 1102 documentation does not cover that topic. It is better to consult some 1103 backup tools. 1104 1105 So let's see the GRUB part. There are two possibilities: one of them 1106 is quite simple but not very robust, and the other is a bit complex to 1107 set up but probably the best solution to make sure that your system 1108 can start as long as GRUB itself is bootable. 1109 1110 @menu 1111 * Booting once-only:: 1112 * Booting fallback systems:: 1113 @end menu 1114 1115 1116 @node Booting once-only 1117 @subsection Booting once-only 1118 1119 You can teach GRUB to boot an entry only at next boot time. Suppose 1120 that your have an old kernel @file{old_kernel} and a new kernel 1121 @file{new_kernel}. You know that @file{old_kernel} can boot 1122 your system correctly, and you want to test @file{new_kernel}. 1123 1124 To ensure that your system will go back to the old kernel even if the 1125 new kernel fails (e.g. it panics), you can specify that GRUB should 1126 try the new kernel only once and boot the old kernel after that. 1127 1128 First, modify your configuration file. Here is an example: 1129 1130 @example 1131 @group 1132 default saved # This is important!!! 1133 timeout 10 1134 1135 title the old kernel 1136 root (hd0,0) 1137 kernel /old_kernel 1138 savedefault 1139 1140 title the new kernel 1141 root (hd0,0) 1142 kernel /new_kernel 1143 savedefault 0 # This is important!!! 1144 @end group 1145 @end example 1146 1147 Note that this configuration file uses @samp{default saved} 1148 (@pxref{default}) at the head and @samp{savedefault 0} 1149 (@pxref{savedefault}) in the entry for the new kernel. This means 1150 that GRUB boots a saved entry by default, and booting the entry for the 1151 new kernel saves @samp{0} as the saved entry. 1152 1153 With this configuration file, after all, GRUB always tries to boot the 1154 old kernel after it booted the new one, because @samp{0} is the entry 1155 of @code{the old kernel}. 1156 1157 The next step is to tell GRUB to boot the new kernel at next boot 1158 time. For this, execute @command{grub-set-default} (@pxref{Invoking 1159 grub-set-default}): 1160 1161 @example 1162 # @kbd{grub-set-default 1} 1163 @end example 1164 1165 This command sets the saved entry to @samp{1}, that is, to the new 1166 kernel. 1167 1168 This method is useful, but still not very robust, because GRUB stops 1169 booting, if there is any error in the boot entry, such that the new 1170 kernel has an invalid executable format. Thus, it it even better to 1171 use the @dfn{fallback} mechanism of GRUB. Look at next subsection for 1172 this feature. 1173 1174 1175 @node Booting fallback systems 1176 @subsection Booting fallback systems 1177 1178 GRUB supports a fallback mechanism of booting one or more other 1179 entries if a default boot entry fails. You can specify multiple 1180 fallback entries if you wish. 1181 1182 Suppose that you have three systems, @samp{A}, @samp{B} and 1183 @samp{C}. @samp{A} is a system which you want to boot by 1184 default. @samp{B} is a backup system which is supposed to boot 1185 safely. @samp{C} is another backup system which is used in case where 1186 @samp{B} is broken. 1187 1188 Then you may want GRUB to boot the first system which is bootable 1189 among @samp{A}, @samp{B} and @samp{C}. A configuration file can be 1190 written in this way: 1191 1192 @example 1193 @group 1194 default saved # This is important!!! 1195 timeout 10 1196 fallback 1 2 # This is important!!! 1197 1198 title A 1199 root (hd0,0) 1200 kernel /kernel 1201 savedefault fallback # This is important!!! 1202 1203 title B 1204 root (hd1,0) 1205 kernel /kernel 1206 savedefault fallback # This is important!!! 1207 1208 title C 1209 root (hd2,0) 1210 kernel /kernel 1211 savedefault 1212 @end group 1213 @end example 1214 1215 Note that @samp{default saved} (@pxref{default}), @samp{fallback 1 2} 1216 and @samp{savedefault fallback} are used. GRUB will boot a saved entry 1217 by default and save a fallback entry as next boot entry with this 1218 configuration. 1219 1220 When GRUB tries to boot @samp{A}, GRUB saves @samp{1} as next boot 1221 entry, because the command @command{fallback} specifies that @samp{1} 1222 is the first fallback entry. The entry @samp{1} is @samp{B}, so GRUB 1223 will try to boot @samp{B} at next boot time. 1224 1225 Likewise, when GRUB tries to boot @samp{B}, GRUB saves @samp{2} as 1226 next boot entry, because @command{fallback} specifies @samp{2} as next 1227 fallback entry. This makes sure that GRUB will boot @samp{C} after 1228 booting @samp{B}. 1229 1230 It is noteworthy that GRUB uses fallback entries both when GRUB 1231 itself fails in booting an entry and when @samp{A} or @samp{B} fails 1232 in starting up your system. So this solution ensures that your system 1233 is started even if GRUB cannot find your kernel or if your kernel 1234 panics. 1235 1236 However, you need to run @command{grub-set-default} (@pxref{Invoking 1237 grub-set-default}) when @samp{A} starts correctly or you fix @samp{A} 1238 after it crashes, since GRUB always sets next boot entry to a fallback 1239 entry. You should run this command in a startup script such as 1240 @file{rc.local} to boot @samp{A} by default: 1241 1242 @example 1243 # @kbd{grub-set-default 0} 1244 @end example 1245 1246 where @samp{0} is the number of the boot entry for the system 1247 @samp{A}. 1248 1249 If you want to see what is current default entry, you can look at the 1250 file @file{/boot/grub/default} (or @file{/grub/default} in 1251 some systems). Because this file is plain-text, you can just 1252 @command{cat} this file. But it is strongly recommended @strong{not to 1253 modify this file directly}, because GRUB may fail in saving a default 1254 entry in this file, if you change this file in an unintended 1255 manner. Therefore, you should use @command{grub-set-default} when you 1256 need to change the default entry. 1257 1258 1259 @node Configuration 1260 @chapter Configuration 1261 1262 You've probably noticed that you need to type several commands to boot your 1263 OS. There's a solution to that - GRUB provides a menu interface 1264 (@pxref{Menu interface}) from which you can select an item (using arrow 1265 keys) that will do everything to boot an OS. 1266 1267 To enable the menu, you need a configuration file, 1268 @file{menu.lst} under the boot directory. We'll analyze an example 1269 file. 1270 1271 The file first contains some general settings, the menu interface 1272 related options. You can put these commands (@pxref{Menu-specific 1273 commands}) before any of the items (starting with @command{title} 1274 (@pxref{title})). 1275 1276 @example 1277 @group 1278 # 1279 # Sample boot menu configuration file 1280 # 1281 @end group 1282 @end example 1283 1284 As you may have guessed, these lines are comments. Lines starting with a 1285 hash character (@samp{#}), and blank lines, are ignored by GRUB. 1286 1287 @example 1288 @group 1289 # By default, boot the first entry. 1290 default 0 1291 @end group 1292 @end example 1293 1294 The first entry (here, counting starts with number zero, not one!) will 1295 be the default choice. 1296 1297 @example 1298 @group 1299 # Boot automatically after 30 secs. 1300 timeout 30 1301 @end group 1302 @end example 1303 1304 As the comment says, GRUB will boot automatically in 30 seconds, unless 1305 interrupted with a keypress. 1306 1307 @example 1308 @group 1309 # Fallback to the second entry. 1310 fallback 1 1311 @end group 1312 @end example 1313 1314 If, for any reason, the default entry doesn't work, fall back to the 1315 second one (this is rarely used, for obvious reasons). 1316 1317 Note that the complete descriptions of these commands, which are menu 1318 interface specific, can be found in @ref{Menu-specific 1319 commands}. Other descriptions can be found in @ref{Commands}. 1320 1321 Now, on to the actual OS definitions. You will see that each entry 1322 begins with a special command, @command{title} (@pxref{title}), and the 1323 action is described after it. Note that there is no command 1324 @command{boot} (@pxref{boot}) at the end of each item. That is because 1325 GRUB automatically executes @command{boot} if it loads other commands 1326 successfully. 1327 1328 The argument for the command @command{title} is used to display a short 1329 title/description of the entry in the menu. Since @command{title} 1330 displays the argument as is, you can write basically anything there. 1331 1332 @example 1333 @group 1334 # For booting GNU/Hurd 1335 title GNU/Hurd 1336 root (hd0,0) 1337 kernel /boot/gnumach.gz root=hd0s1 1338 module /boot/serverboot.gz 1339 @end group 1340 @end example 1341 1342 This boots GNU/Hurd from the first hard disk. 1343 1344 @example 1345 @group 1346 # For booting GNU/Linux 1347 title GNU/Linux 1348 kernel (hd1,0)/vmlinuz root=/dev/hdb1 1349 @end group 1350 @end example 1351 1352 This boots GNU/Linux, but from the second hard disk. 1353 1354 @example 1355 @group 1356 # For booting Mach (getting kernel from floppy) 1357 title Utah Mach4 multiboot 1358 root (hd0,2) 1359 pause Insert the diskette now^G!! 1360 kernel (fd0)/boot/kernel root=hd0s3 1361 module (fd0)/boot/bootstrap 1362 @end group 1363 @end example 1364 1365 This boots Mach with a kernel on a floppy, but the root filesystem at 1366 hd0s3. It also contains a @command{pause} line (@pxref{pause}), which 1367 will cause GRUB to display a prompt and delay, before actually executing 1368 the rest of the commands and booting. 1369 1370 @example 1371 @group 1372 # For booting FreeBSD 1373 title FreeBSD 1374 root (hd0,2,a) 1375 kernel /boot/loader 1376 @end group 1377 @end example 1378 1379 This item will boot FreeBSD kernel loaded from the @samp{a} partition of 1380 the third @sc{pc} slice of the first hard disk. 1381 1382 @example 1383 @group 1384 # For booting OS/2 1385 title OS/2 1386 root (hd0,1) 1387 makeactive 1388 # chainload OS/2 bootloader from the first sector 1389 chainloader +1 1390 # This is similar to "chainload", but loads a specific file 1391 #chainloader /boot/chain.os2 1392 @end group 1393 @end example 1394 1395 This will boot OS/2, using a chain-loader (@pxref{Chain-loading}). 1396 1397 @example 1398 @group 1399 # For booting Windows NT or Windows95 1400 title Windows NT / Windows 95 boot menu 1401 root (hd0,0) 1402 makeactive 1403 chainloader +1 1404 # For loading DOS if Windows NT is installed 1405 # chainload /bootsect.dos 1406 @end group 1407 @end example 1408 1409 The same as the above, but for Windows. 1410 1411 @example 1412 @group 1413 # For installing GRUB into the hard disk 1414 title Install GRUB into the hard disk 1415 root (hd0,0) 1416 setup (hd0) 1417 @end group 1418 @end example 1419 1420 This will just (re)install GRUB onto the hard disk. 1421 1422 @example 1423 # Change the colors. 1424 title Change the colors 1425 color light-green/brown blink-red/blue 1426 @end example 1427 1428 In the last entry, the command @command{color} is used (@pxref{color}), 1429 to change the menu colors (try it!). This command is somewhat special, 1430 because it can be used both in the command-line and in the menu. GRUB 1431 has several such commands, see @ref{General commands}. 1432 1433 We hope that you now understand how to use the basic features of 1434 GRUB. To learn more about GRUB, see the following chapters. 1435 1436 1437 @node Network 1438 @chapter Downloading OS images from a network 1439 1440 Although GRUB is a disk-based boot loader, it does provide network 1441 support. To use the network support, you need to enable at least one 1442 network driver in the GRUB build process. For more information please 1443 see @file{netboot/README.netboot} in the source distribution. 1444 1445 @menu 1446 * General usage of network support:: 1447 * Diskless:: 1448 @end menu 1449 1450 1451 @node General usage of network support 1452 @section How to set up your network 1453 1454 GRUB requires a file server and optionally a server that will assign an 1455 IP address to the machine on which GRUB is running. For the former, only 1456 TFTP is supported at the moment. The latter is either BOOTP, DHCP or a 1457 RARP server@footnote{RARP is not advised, since it cannot serve much 1458 information}. It is not necessary to run both the servers on one 1459 computer. How to configure these servers is beyond the scope of this 1460 document, so please refer to the manuals specific to those 1461 protocols/servers. 1462 1463 If you decided to use a server to assign an IP address, set up the 1464 server and run @command{bootp} (@pxref{bootp}), @command{dhcp} 1465 (@pxref{dhcp}) or @command{rarp} (@pxref{rarp}) for BOOTP, DHCP or RARP, 1466 respectively. Each command will show an assigned IP address, a netmask, 1467 an IP address for your TFTP server and a gateway. If any of the 1468 addresses is wrong or it causes an error, probably the configuration of 1469 your servers isn't set up properly. 1470 1471 Otherwise, run @command{ifconfig}, like this: 1472 1473 @example 1474 grub> @kbd{ifconfig --address=192.168.110.23 --server=192.168.110.14} 1475 @end example 1476 1477 You can also use @command{ifconfig} in conjuction with @command{bootp}, 1478 @command{dhcp} or @command{rarp} (e.g. to reassign the server address 1479 manually). @xref{ifconfig}, for more details. 1480 1481 Finally, download your OS images from your network. The network can be 1482 accessed using the network drive @samp{(nd)}. Everything else is very 1483 similar to the normal instructions (@pxref{Booting}). 1484 1485 Here is an example: 1486 1487 @example 1488 @group 1489 grub> @kbd{bootp} 1490 Probing... [NE*000] 1491 NE2000 base ... 1492 Address: 192.168.110.23 Netmask: 255.255.255.0 1493 Server: 192.168.110.14 Gateway: 192.168.110.1 1494 1495 grub> @kbd{root (nd)} 1496 grub> @kbd{kernel /tftproot/gnumach.gz root=sd0s1} 1497 grub> @kbd{module /tftproot/serverboot.gz} 1498 grub> @kbd{boot} 1499 @end group 1500 @end example 1501 1502 1503 @node Diskless 1504 @section Booting from a network 1505 1506 It is sometimes very useful to boot from a network, especially when you 1507 use a machine which has no local disk. In this case, you need to obtain 1508 a kind of Net Boot @sc{rom}, such as a PXE @sc{rom} or a free software 1509 package like Etherboot. Such a Boot @sc{rom} first boots the machine, 1510 sets up the network card installed into the machine, and downloads a 1511 second stage boot image from the network. Then, the second image will 1512 try to boot an operating system actually from the network. 1513 1514 GRUB provides two second stage images, @file{nbgrub} and 1515 @file{pxegrub} (@pxref{Images}). These images are the same as the 1516 normal Stage 2, except that they set up a network automatically, and try 1517 to load a configuration file from the network, if specified. The usage 1518 is very simple: If the machine has a PXE @sc{rom}, use 1519 @file{pxegrub}. If the machine has an NBI loader such as Etherboot, use 1520 @file{nbgrub}. There is no difference between them except their 1521 formats. Since the way to load a second stage image you want to use 1522 should be described in the manual on your Net Boot @sc{rom}, please 1523 refer to the manual, for more information. 1524 1525 However, there is one thing specific to GRUB. Namely, how to specify a 1526 configuration file in a BOOTP/DHCP server. For now, GRUB uses the tag 1527 @samp{150}, to get the name of a configuration file. The following is an 1528 example with a BOOTP configuration: 1529 1530 @example 1531 @group 1532 .allhost:hd=/tmp:bf=null:\ 1533 :ds=145.71.35.1 145.71.32.1:\ 1534 :sm=255.255.254.0:\ 1535 :gw=145.71.35.1:\ 1536 :sa=145.71.35.5: 1537 1538 foo:ht=1:ha=63655d0334a7:ip=145.71.35.127:\ 1539 :bf=/nbgrub:\ 1540 :tc=.allhost:\ 1541 :T150="(nd)/tftpboot/menu.lst.foo": 1542 @end group 1543 @end example 1544 1545 Note that you should specify the drive name @code{(nd)} in the name of 1546 the configuration file. This is because you might change the root drive 1547 before downloading the configuration from the TFTP server when the 1548 preset menu feature is used (@pxref{Preset Menu}). 1549 1550 See the manual of your BOOTP/DHCP server for more information. The 1551 exact syntax should differ a little from the example. 1552 1553 1554 @node Serial terminal 1555 @chapter Using GRUB via a serial line 1556 1557 This chapter describes how to use the serial terminal support in GRUB. 1558 1559 If you have many computers or computers with no display/keyboard, it 1560 could be very useful to control the computers through serial 1561 communications. To connect one computer with another via a serial line, 1562 you need to prepare a null-modem (cross) serial cable, and you may need 1563 to have multiport serial boards, if your computer doesn't have extra 1564 serial ports. In addition, a terminal emulator is also required, such as 1565 minicom. Refer to a manual of your operating system, for more 1566 information. 1567 1568 As for GRUB, the instruction to set up a serial terminal is quite 1569 simple. First of all, make sure that you haven't specified the option 1570 @option{--disable-serial} to the configure script when you built your 1571 GRUB images. If you get them in binary form, probably they have serial 1572 terminal support already. 1573 1574 Then, initialize your serial terminal after GRUB starts up. Here is an 1575 example: 1576 1577 @example 1578 @group 1579 grub> @kbd{serial --unit=0 --speed=9600} 1580 grub> @kbd{terminal serial} 1581 @end group 1582 @end example 1583 1584 The command @command{serial} initializes the serial unit 0 with the 1585 speed 9600bps. The serial unit 0 is usually called @samp{COM1}, so, if 1586 you want to use COM2, you must specify @samp{--unit=1} instead. This 1587 command accepts many other options, so please refer to @ref{serial}, 1588 for more details. 1589 1590 The command @command{terminal} (@pxref{terminal}) chooses which type of 1591 terminal you want to use. In the case above, the terminal will be a 1592 serial terminal, but you can also pass @code{console} to the command, 1593 as @samp{terminal serial console}. In this case, a terminal in which 1594 you press any key will be selected as a GRUB terminal. 1595 1596 However, note that GRUB assumes that your terminal emulator is 1597 compatible with VT100 by default. This is true for most terminal 1598 emulators nowadays, but you should pass the option @option{--dumb} to 1599 the command if your terminal emulator is not VT100-compatible or 1600 implements few VT100 escape sequences. If you specify this option then 1601 GRUB provides you with an alternative menu interface, because the normal 1602 menu requires several fancy features of your terminal. 1603 1604 1605 @node Preset Menu 1606 @chapter Embedding a configuration file into GRUB 1607 1608 GRUB supports a @dfn{preset menu} which is to be always loaded before 1609 starting. The preset menu feature is useful, for example, when your 1610 computer has no console but a serial cable. In this case, it is 1611 critical to set up the serial terminal as soon as possible, since you 1612 cannot see any message until the serial terminal begins to work. So it 1613 is good to run the commands @command{serial} (@pxref{serial}) and 1614 @command{terminal} (@pxref{terminal}) before anything else at the 1615 start-up time. 1616 1617 How the preset menu works is slightly complicated: 1618 1619 @enumerate 1620 @item 1621 GRUB checks if the preset menu feature is used, and loads the preset 1622 menu, if available. This includes running commands and reading boot 1623 entries, like an ordinary configuration file. 1624 1625 @item 1626 GRUB checks if the configuration file is available. Note that this check 1627 is performed @strong{regardless of the existence of the preset 1628 menu}. The configuration file is loaded even if the preset menu was 1629 loaded. 1630 1631 @item 1632 If the preset menu includes any boot entries, they are cleared when 1633 the configuration file is loaded. It doesn't matter whether the 1634 configuration file has any entries or no entry. The boot entries in the 1635 preset menu are used only when GRUB fails in loading the configuration 1636 file. 1637 @end enumerate 1638 1639 To enable the preset menu feature, you must rebuild GRUB specifying a 1640 file to the configure script with the option 1641 @option{--enable-preset-menu}. The file has the same semantics as 1642 normal configuration files (@pxref{Configuration}). 1643 1644 Another point you should take care is that the diskless support 1645 (@pxref{Diskless}) diverts the preset menu. Diskless images embed a 1646 preset menu to execute the command @command{bootp} (@pxref{bootp}) 1647 automatically, unless you specify your own preset menu to the configure 1648 script. This means that you must put commands to initialize a network in 1649 the preset menu yourself, because diskless images don't set it up 1650 implicitly, when you use the preset menu explicitly. 1651 1652 Therefore, a typical preset menu used with diskless support would be 1653 like this: 1654 1655 @example 1656 @group 1657 # Set up the serial terminal, first of all. 1658 serial --unit=0 --speed=19200 1659 terminal --timeout=0 serial 1660 1661 # Initialize the network. 1662 dhcp 1663 @end group 1664 @end example 1665 1666 1667 @node Security 1668 @chapter Protecting your computer from cracking 1669 1670 You may be interested in how to prevent ordinary users from doing 1671 whatever they like, if you share your computer with other people. So 1672 this chapter describes how to improve the security of GRUB. 1673 1674 One thing which could be a security hole is that the user can do too 1675 many things with GRUB, because GRUB allows one to modify its configuration 1676 and run arbitrary commands at run-time. For example, the user can even 1677 read @file{/etc/passwd} in the command-line interface by the command 1678 @command{cat} (@pxref{cat}). So it is necessary to disable all the 1679 interactive operations. 1680 1681 Thus, GRUB provides a @dfn{password} feature, so that only administrators 1682 can start the interactive operations (i.e. editing menu entries and 1683 entering the command-line interface). To use this feature, you need to 1684 run the command @command{password} in your configuration file 1685 (@pxref{password}), like this: 1686 1687 @example 1688 password --md5 PASSWORD 1689 @end example 1690 1691 If this is specified, GRUB disallows any interactive control, until you 1692 press the key @key{p} and enter a correct password. The option 1693 @option{--md5} tells GRUB that @samp{PASSWORD} is in MD5 format. If it 1694 is omitted, GRUB assumes the @samp{PASSWORD} is in clear text. 1695 1696 You can encrypt your password with the command @command{md5crypt} 1697 (@pxref{md5crypt}). For example, run the grub shell (@pxref{Invoking the 1698 grub shell}), and enter your password: 1699 1700 @example 1701 @group 1702 grub> md5crypt 1703 Password: ********** 1704 Encrypted: $1$U$JK7xFegdxWH6VuppCUSIb. 1705 @end group 1706 @end example 1707 1708 Then, cut and paste the encrypted password to your configuration file. 1709 1710 Also, you can specify an optional argument to @command{password}. See 1711 this example: 1712 1713 @example 1714 password PASSWORD /boot/grub/menu-admin.lst 1715 @end example 1716 1717 In this case, GRUB will load @file{/boot/grub/menu-admin.lst} as a 1718 configuration file when you enter the valid password. 1719 1720 Another thing which may be dangerous is that any user can choose any 1721 menu entry. Usually, this wouldn't be problematic, but you might want to 1722 permit only administrators to run some of your menu entries, such as an 1723 entry for booting an insecure OS like DOS. 1724 1725 GRUB provides the command @command{lock} (@pxref{lock}). This command 1726 always fails until you enter the valid password, so you can use it, like 1727 this: 1728 1729 @example 1730 @group 1731 title Boot DOS 1732 lock 1733 rootnoverify (hd0,1) 1734 makeactive 1735 chainload +1 1736 @end group 1737 @end example 1738 1739 You should insert @command{lock} right after @command{title}, because 1740 any user can execute commands in an entry until GRUB encounters 1741 @command{lock}. 1742 1743 You can also use the command @command{password} instead of 1744 @command{lock}. In this case the boot process will ask for the password 1745 and stop if it was entered incorrectly. Since the @command{password} 1746 takes its own @var{PASSWORD} argument this is useful if you want 1747 different passwords for different entries. 1748 1749 1750 @node Images 1751 @chapter GRUB image files 1752 1753 GRUB consists of several images: two essential stages, optional stages 1754 called @dfn{Stage 1.5}, one image for bootable CD-ROM, and two network 1755 boot images. Here is a short overview of them. @xref{Internals}, for 1756 more details. 1757 1758 @table @file 1759 @item stage1 1760 This is an essential image used for booting up GRUB. Usually, this is 1761 embedded in an MBR or the boot sector of a partition. Because a PC boot 1762 sector is 512 bytes, the size of this image is exactly 512 bytes. 1763 1764 All @file{stage1} must do is to load Stage 2 or Stage 1.5 from a local 1765 disk. Because of the size restriction, @file{stage1} encodes the 1766 location of Stage 2 (or Stage 1.5) in a block list format, so it never 1767 understand any filesystem structure. 1768 1769 @item stage2 1770 This is the core image of GRUB. It does everything but booting up 1771 itself. Usually, this is put in a filesystem, but that is not required. 1772 1773 @item e2fs_stage1_5 1774 @itemx fat_stage1_5 1775 @itemx ffs_stage1_5 1776 @itemx jfs_stage1_5 1777 @itemx minix_stage1_5 1778 @itemx reiserfs_stage1_5 1779 @itemx vstafs_stage1_5 1780 @itemx xfs_stage1_5 1781 1782 These are called @dfn{Stage 1.5}, because they serve as a bridge 1783 between @file{stage1} and @file{stage2}, that is to say, Stage 1.5 is 1784 loaded by Stage 1 and Stage 1.5 loads Stage 2. The difference between 1785 @file{stage1} and @file{*_stage1_5} is that the former doesn't 1786 understand any filesystem while the latter understands one filesystem 1787 (e.g. @file{e2fs_stage1_5} understands ext2fs). So you can move the 1788 Stage 2 image to another location safely, even after GRUB has been 1789 installed. 1790 1791 While Stage 2 cannot generally be embedded in a fixed area as the size 1792 is so large, Stage 1.5 can be installed into the area right after an MBR, 1793 or the boot loader area of a ReiserFS or a FFS. 1794 1795 @item stage2_eltorito 1796 This is a boot image for CD-ROMs using the @dfn{no emulation mode} in 1797 El Torito specification. This is identical to Stage 2, except that 1798 this boots up without Stage 1 and sets up a special drive @samp{(cd)}. 1799 1800 @item nbgrub 1801 This is a network boot image for the Network Image Proposal used by some 1802 network boot loaders, such as Etherboot. This is mostly the same as 1803 Stage 2, but it also sets up a network and loads a configuration file 1804 from the network. 1805 1806 @item pxegrub 1807 This is another network boot image for the Preboot Execution Environment 1808 used by several Netboot ROMs. This is identical to @file{nbgrub}, except 1809 for the format. 1810 @end table 1811 1812 1813 @node Filesystem 1814 @chapter Filesystem syntax and semantics 1815 1816 GRUB uses a special syntax for specifying disk drives which can be 1817 accessed by BIOS. Because of BIOS limitations, GRUB cannot distinguish 1818 between IDE, ESDI, SCSI, or others. You must know yourself which BIOS 1819 device is equivalent to which OS device. Normally, that will be clear if 1820 you see the files in a device or use the command @command{find} 1821 (@pxref{find}). 1822 1823 @menu 1824 * Device syntax:: How to specify devices 1825 * File name syntax:: How to specify files 1826 * Block list syntax:: How to specify block lists 1827 @end menu 1828 1829 1830 @node Device syntax 1831 @section How to specify devices 1832 1833 The device syntax is like this: 1834 1835 @example 1836 @code{(@var{device}[,@var{part-num}][,@var{bsd-subpart-letter}])} 1837 @end example 1838 1839 @samp{[]} means the parameter is optional. @var{device} should be 1840 either @samp{fd} or @samp{hd} followed by a digit, like @samp{fd0}. 1841 But you can also set @var{device} to a hexadecimal or a decimal number 1842 which is a BIOS drive number, so the following are equivalent: 1843 1844 @example 1845 (hd0) 1846 (0x80) 1847 (128) 1848 @end example 1849 1850 @var{part-num} represents the partition number of @var{device}, starting 1851 from zero for primary partitions and from four for extended partitions, 1852 and @var{bsd-subpart-letter} represents the BSD disklabel subpartition, 1853 such as @samp{a} or @samp{e}. 1854 1855 A shortcut for specifying BSD subpartitions is 1856 @code{(@var{device},@var{bsd-subpart-letter})}, in this case, GRUB 1857 searches for the first PC partition containing a BSD disklabel, then 1858 finds the subpartition @var{bsd-subpart-letter}. Here is an example: 1859 1860 @example 1861 (hd0,a) 1862 @end example 1863 1864 The syntax @samp{(hd0)} represents using the entire disk (or the 1865 MBR when installing GRUB), while the syntax @samp{(hd0,0)} 1866 represents using the first partition of the disk (or the boot sector 1867 of the partition when installing GRUB). 1868 1869 If you enabled the network support, the special drive, @samp{(nd)}, is 1870 also available. Before using the network drive, you must initialize the 1871 network. @xref{Network}, for more information. 1872 1873 If you boot GRUB from a CD-ROM, @samp{(cd)} is available. @xref{Making 1874 a GRUB bootable CD-ROM}, for details. 1875 1876 1877 @node File name syntax 1878 @section How to specify files 1879 1880 There are two ways to specify files, by @dfn{absolute file name} and by 1881 @dfn{block list}. 1882 1883 An absolute file name resembles a Unix absolute file name, using 1884 @samp{/} for the directory separator (not @samp{\} as in DOS). One 1885 example is @samp{(hd0,0)/boot/grub/menu.lst}. This means the file 1886 @file{/boot/grub/menu.lst} in the first partition of the first hard 1887 disk. If you omit the device name in an absolute file name, GRUB uses 1888 GRUB's @dfn{root device} implicitly. So if you set the root device to, 1889 say, @samp{(hd1,0)} by the command @command{root} (@pxref{root}), then 1890 @code{/boot/kernel} is the same as @code{(hd1,0)/boot/kernel}. 1891 1892 1893 @node Block list syntax 1894 @section How to specify block lists 1895 1896 A block list is used for specifying a file that doesn't appear in the 1897 filesystem, like a chainloader. The syntax is 1898 @code{[@var{offset}]+@var{length}[,[@var{offset}]+@var{length}]@dots{}}. 1899 Here is an example: 1900 1901 @example 1902 @code{0+100,200+1,300+300} 1903 @end example 1904 1905 This represents that GRUB should read blocks 0 through 99, block 200, 1906 and blocks 300 through 599. If you omit an offset, then GRUB assumes 1907 the offset is zero. 1908 1909 Like the file name syntax (@pxref{File name syntax}), if a blocklist 1910 does not contain a device name, then GRUB uses GRUB's @dfn{root 1911 device}. So @code{(hd0,1)+1} is the same as @code{+1} when the root 1912 device is @samp{(hd0,1)}. 1913 1914 1915 @node Interface 1916 @chapter GRUB's user interface 1917 1918 GRUB has both a simple menu interface for choosing preset entries from a 1919 configuration file, and a highly flexible command-line for performing 1920 any desired combination of boot commands. 1921 1922 GRUB looks for its configuration file as soon as it is loaded. If one 1923 is found, then the full menu interface is activated using whatever 1924 entries were found in the file. If you choose the @dfn{command-line} menu 1925 option, or if the configuration file was not found, then GRUB drops to 1926 the command-line interface. 1927 1928 @menu 1929 * Command-line interface:: The flexible command-line interface 1930 * Menu interface:: The simple menu interface 1931 * Menu entry editor:: Editing a menu entry 1932 * Hidden menu interface:: The hidden menu interface 1933 @end menu 1934 1935 1936 @node Command-line interface 1937 @section The flexible command-line interface 1938 1939 The command-line interface provides a prompt and after it an editable 1940 text area much like a command-line in Unix or DOS. Each command is 1941 immediately executed after it is entered@footnote{However, this 1942 behavior will be changed in the future version, in a user-invisible 1943 way.}. The commands (@pxref{Command-line and menu entry commands}) are a 1944 subset of those available in the configuration file, used with exactly 1945 the same syntax. 1946 1947 Cursor movement and editing of the text on the line can be done via a 1948 subset of the functions available in the Bash shell: 1949 1950 @table @key 1951 @item C-f 1952 @itemx PC right key 1953 Move forward one character. 1954 1955 @item C-b 1956 @itemx PC left key 1957 Move back one character. 1958 1959 @item C-a 1960 @itemx HOME 1961 Move to the start of the line. 1962 1963 @item C-e 1964 @itemx END 1965 Move the the end of the line. 1966 1967 @item C-d 1968 @itemx DEL 1969 Delete the character underneath the cursor. 1970 1971 @item C-h 1972 @itemx BS 1973 Delete the character to the left of the cursor. 1974 1975 @item C-k 1976 Kill the text from the current cursor position to the end of the line. 1977 1978 @item C-u 1979 Kill backward from the cursor to the beginning of the line. 1980 1981 @item C-y 1982 Yank the killed text back into the buffer at the cursor. 1983 1984 @item C-p 1985 @itemx PC up key 1986 Move up through the history list. 1987 1988 @item C-n 1989 @itemx PC down key 1990 Move down through the history list. 1991 @end table 1992 1993 When typing commands interactively, if the cursor is within or before 1994 the first word in the command-line, pressing the @key{TAB} key (or 1995 @key{C-i}) will display a listing of the available commands, and if the 1996 cursor is after the first word, the @kbd{@key{TAB}} will provide a 1997 completion listing of disks, partitions, and file names depending on the 1998 context. Note that to obtain a list of drives, one must open a 1999 parenthesis, as @command{root (}. 2000 2001 Note that you cannot use the completion functionality in the TFTP 2002 filesystem. This is because TFTP doesn't support file name listing for 2003 the security. 2004 2005 2006 @node Menu interface 2007 @section The simple menu interface 2008 2009 The menu interface is quite easy to use. Its commands are both 2010 reasonably intuitive and described on screen. 2011 2012 Basically, the menu interface provides a list of @dfn{boot entries} to 2013 the user to choose from. Use the arrow keys to select the entry of 2014 choice, then press @key{RET} to run it. An optional timeout is 2015 available to boot the default entry (the first one if not set), which is 2016 aborted by pressing any key. 2017 2018 Commands are available to enter a bare command-line by pressing @key{c} 2019 (which operates exactly like the non-config-file version of GRUB, but 2020 allows one to return to the menu if desired by pressing @key{ESC}) or to 2021 edit any of the @dfn{boot entries} by pressing @key{e}. 2022 2023 If you protect the menu interface with a password (@pxref{Security}), 2024 all you can do is choose an entry by pressing @key{RET}, or press 2025 @key{p} to enter the password. 2026 2027 2028 @node Menu entry editor 2029 @section Editing a menu entry 2030 2031 The menu entry editor looks much like the main menu interface, but the 2032 lines in the menu are individual commands in the selected entry instead 2033 of entry names. 2034 2035 If an @key{ESC} is pressed in the editor, it aborts all the changes made 2036 to the configuration entry and returns to the main menu interface. 2037 2038 When a particular line is selected, the editor places the user in a 2039 special version of the GRUB command-line to edit that line. When the 2040 user hits @key{RET}, GRUB replaces the line in question in the boot 2041 entry with the changes (unless it was aborted via @key{ESC}, 2042 in which case the changes are thrown away). 2043 2044 If you want to add a new line to the menu entry, press @key{o} if adding 2045 a line after the current line or press @key{O} if before the current 2046 line. 2047 2048 To delete a line, hit the key @key{d}. Although GRUB unfortunately 2049 does not support @dfn{undo}, you can do almost the same thing by just 2050 returning to the main menu. 2051 2052 2053 @node Hidden menu interface 2054 @section The hidden menu interface 2055 2056 When your terminal is dumb or you request GRUB to hide the menu 2057 interface explicitly with the command @command{hiddenmenu} 2058 (@pxref{hiddenmenu}), GRUB doesn't show the menu interface (@pxref{Menu 2059 interface}) and automatically boots the default entry, unless 2060 interrupted by pressing @key{ESC}. 2061 2062 When you interrupt the timeout and your terminal is dumb, GRUB falls 2063 back to the command-line interface (@pxref{Command-line interface}). 2064 2065 2066 @node Commands 2067 @chapter The list of available commands 2068 2069 In this chapter, we list all commands that are available in GRUB. 2070 2071 Commands belong to different groups. A few can only be used in 2072 the global section of the configuration file (or ``menu''); most 2073 of them can be entered on the command-line and can be used either 2074 anywhere in the menu or specifically in the menu entries. 2075 2076 @menu 2077 * Menu-specific commands:: 2078 * General commands:: 2079 * Command-line and menu entry commands:: 2080 @end menu 2081 2082 2083 @node Menu-specific commands 2084 @section The list of commands for the menu only 2085 2086 The semantics used in parsing the configuration file are the following: 2087 2088 @itemize @bullet 2089 @item 2090 The menu-specific commands have to be used before any others. 2091 2092 @item 2093 The files @emph{must} be in plain-text format. 2094 2095 @item 2096 @samp{#} at the beginning of a line in a configuration file means it is 2097 only a comment. 2098 2099 @item 2100 Options are separated by spaces. 2101 2102 @item 2103 All numbers can be either decimal or hexadecimal. A hexadecimal number 2104 must be preceded by @samp{0x}, and is case-insensitive. 2105 2106 @item 2107 Extra options or text at the end of the line are ignored unless otherwise 2108 specified. 2109 2110 @item 2111 Unrecognized commands are added to the current entry, except before entries 2112 start, where they are ignored. 2113 @end itemize 2114 2115 These commands can only be used in the menu: 2116 2117 @menu 2118 * default:: Set the default entry 2119 * fallback:: Set the fallback entry 2120 * hiddenmenu:: Hide the menu interface 2121 * timeout:: Set the timeout 2122 * title:: Start a menu entry 2123 @end menu 2124 2125 2126 @node default 2127 @subsection default 2128 2129 @deffn Command default num 2130 Set the default entry to the entry number @var{num}. Numbering starts 2131 from 0, and the entry number 0 is the default if the command is not 2132 used. 2133 2134 You can specify @samp{saved} instead of a number. In this case, the 2135 default entry is the entry saved with the command 2136 @command{savedefault}. @xref{savedefault}, for more information. 2137 @end deffn 2138 2139 2140 @node fallback 2141 @subsection fallback 2142 2143 @deffn Command fallback num... 2144 Go into unattended boot mode: if the default boot entry has any errors, 2145 instead of waiting for the user to do something, immediately start 2146 over using the @var{num} entry (same numbering as the @code{default} 2147 command (@pxref{default})). This obviously won't help if the machine was 2148 rebooted by a kernel that GRUB loaded. You can specify multiple 2149 fallback entry numbers. 2150 @end deffn 2151 2152 2153 @node hiddenmenu 2154 @subsection hiddenmenu 2155 2156 @deffn Command hiddenmenu 2157 Don't display the menu. If the command is used, no menu will be 2158 displayed on the control terminal, and the default entry will be 2159 booted after the timeout expired. The user can still request the 2160 menu to be displayed by pressing @key{ESC} before the timeout 2161 expires. See also @ref{Hidden menu interface}. 2162 @end deffn 2163 2164 2165 @node timeout 2166 @subsection timeout 2167 2168 @deffn Command timeout sec 2169 Set a timeout, in @var{sec} seconds, before automatically booting the 2170 default entry (normally the first entry defined). 2171 @end deffn 2172 2173 2174 @node title 2175 @subsection title 2176 2177 @deffn Command title name @dots{} 2178 Start a new boot entry, and set its name to the contents of the rest of 2179 the line, starting with the first non-space character. 2180 @end deffn 2181 2182 2183 @node General commands 2184 @section The list of general commands 2185 2186 Commands usable anywhere in the menu and in the command-line. 2187 2188 @menu 2189 * bootp:: Initialize a network device via BOOTP 2190 * color:: Color the menu interface 2191 * device:: Specify a file as a drive 2192 * dhcp:: Initialize a network device via DHCP 2193 * hide:: Hide a partition 2194 * ifconfig:: Configure a network device manually 2195 * pager:: Change the state of the internal pager 2196 * partnew:: Make a primary partition 2197 * parttype:: Change the type of a partition 2198 * password:: Set a password for the menu interface 2199 * rarp:: Initialize a network device via RARP 2200 * serial:: Set up a serial device 2201 * setkey:: Configure the key map 2202 * terminal:: Choose a terminal 2203 * terminfo:: Define escape sequences for a terminal 2204 * tftpserver:: Specify a TFTP server 2205 * unhide:: Unhide a partition 2206 @end menu 2207 2208 2209 @node bootp 2210 @subsection bootp 2211 2212 @deffn Command bootp [@option{--with-configfile}] 2213 Initialize a network device via the @dfn{BOOTP} protocol. This command 2214 is only available if GRUB is compiled with netboot support. See also 2215 @ref{Network}. 2216 2217 If you specify @option{--with-configfile} to this command, GRUB will 2218 fetch and load a configuration file specified by your BOOTP server 2219 with the vendor tag @samp{150}. 2220 @end deffn 2221 2222 2223 @node color 2224 @subsection color 2225 2226 @deffn Command color normal [highlight] 2227 Change the menu colors. The color @var{normal} is used for most 2228 lines in the menu (@pxref{Menu interface}), and the color 2229 @var{highlight} is used to highlight the line where the cursor 2230 points. If you omit @var{highlight}, then the inverted color of 2231 @var{normal} is used for the highlighted line. The format of a color is 2232 @code{@var{foreground}/@var{background}}. @var{foreground} and 2233 @var{background} are symbolic color names. A symbolic color name must be 2234 one of these: 2235 2236 @itemize @bullet 2237 @item 2238 black 2239 2240 @item 2241 blue 2242 2243 @item 2244 green 2245 2246 @item 2247 cyan 2248 2249 @item 2250 red 2251 2252 @item 2253 magenta 2254 2255 @item 2256 brown 2257 2258 @item 2259 light-gray 2260 2261 @strong{These below can be specified only for the foreground.} 2262 2263 @item 2264 dark-gray 2265 2266 @item 2267 light-blue 2268 2269 @item 2270 light-green 2271 2272 @item 2273 light-cyan 2274 2275 @item 2276 light-red 2277 2278 @item 2279 light-magenta 2280 2281 @item 2282 yellow 2283 2284 @item 2285 white 2286 @end itemize 2287 2288 But only the first eight names can be used for @var{background}. You can 2289 prefix @code{blink-} to @var{foreground} if you want a blinking 2290 foreground color. 2291 2292 This command can be used in the configuration file and on the command 2293 line, so you may write something like this in your configuration file: 2294 2295 @example 2296 @group 2297 # Set default colors. 2298 color light-gray/blue black/light-gray 2299 2300 # Change the colors. 2301 title OS-BS like 2302 color magenta/blue black/magenta 2303 @end group 2304 @end example 2305 @end deffn 2306 2307 2308 @node device 2309 @subsection device 2310 2311 @deffn Command device drive file 2312 In the grub shell, specify the file @var{file} as the actual drive for a 2313 @sc{bios} drive @var{drive}. You can use this command to create a disk 2314 image, and/or to fix the drives guessed by GRUB when GRUB fails to 2315 determine them correctly, like this: 2316 2317 @example 2318 @group 2319 grub> @kbd{device (fd0) /floppy-image} 2320 grub> @kbd{device (hd0) /dev/sd0} 2321 @end group 2322 @end example 2323 2324 This command can be used only in the grub shell (@pxref{Invoking the 2325 grub shell}). 2326 @end deffn 2327 2328 2329 @node dhcp 2330 @subsection dhcp 2331 2332 @deffn Command dhcp [--with-configfile] 2333 Initialize a network device via the @dfn{DHCP} protocol. Currently, 2334 this command is just an alias for @command{bootp}, since the two 2335 protocols are very similar. This command is only available if GRUB is 2336 compiled with netboot support. See also @ref{Network}. 2337 2338 If you specify @option{--with-configfile} to this command, GRUB will 2339 fetch and load a configuration file specified by your DHCP server 2340 with the vendor tag @samp{150}. 2341 @end deffn 2342 2343 2344 @node hide 2345 @subsection hide 2346 2347 @deffn Command hide partition 2348 Hide the partition @var{partition} by setting the @dfn{hidden} bit in 2349 its partition type code. This is useful only when booting DOS or Windows 2350 and multiple primary FAT partitions exist in one disk. See also 2351 @ref{DOS/Windows}. 2352 @end deffn 2353 2354 2355 @node ifconfig 2356 @subsection ifconfig 2357 2358 @deffn Command ifconfig [@option{--server=server}] [@option{--gateway=gateway}] [@option{--mask=mask}] [@option{--address=address}] 2359 Configure the IP address, the netmask, the gateway, and the server 2360 address of a network device manually. The values must be in dotted 2361 decimal format, like @samp{192.168.11.178}. The order of the options is 2362 not important. This command shows current network configuration, if no 2363 option is specified. See also @ref{Network}. 2364 @end deffn 2365 2366 2367 @node pager 2368 @subsection pager 2369 2370 @deffn Command pager [flag] 2371 Toggle or set the state of the internal pager. If @var{flag} is 2372 @samp{on}, the internal pager is enabled. If @var{flag} is @samp{off}, 2373 it is disabled. If no argument is given, the state is toggled. 2374 @end deffn 2375 2376 2377 @node partnew 2378 @subsection partnew 2379 2380 @deffn Command partnew part type from len 2381 Create a new primary partition. @var{part} is a partition specification 2382 in GRUB syntax (@pxref{Naming convention}); @var{type} is the partition 2383 type and must be a number in the range @code{0-0xff}; @var{from} is 2384 the starting address and @var{len} is the length, both in sector units. 2385 @end deffn 2386 2387 2388 @node parttype 2389 @subsection parttype 2390 2391 @deffn Command parttype part type 2392 Change the type of an existing partition. @var{part} is a partition 2393 specification in GRUB syntax (@pxref{Naming convention}); @var{type} 2394 is the new partition type and must be a number in the range 0-0xff. 2395 @end deffn 2396 2397 2398 @node password 2399 @subsection password 2400 2401 @deffn Command password [@option{--md5}] passwd [new-config-file] 2402 If used in the first section of a menu file, disable all interactive 2403 editing control (menu entry editor and command-line) and entries 2404 protected by the command @command{lock}. If the password @var{passwd} is 2405 entered, it loads the @var{new-config-file} as a new config file and 2406 restarts the GRUB Stage 2, if @var{new-config-file} is 2407 specified. Otherwise, GRUB will just unlock the privileged instructions. 2408 You can also use this command in the script section, in which case it 2409 will ask for the password, before continuing. The option 2410 @option{--md5} tells GRUB that @var{passwd} is encrypted with 2411 @command{md5crypt} (@pxref{md5crypt}). 2412 @end deffn 2413 2414 2415 @node rarp 2416 @subsection rarp 2417 2418 @deffn Command rarp 2419 Initialize a network device via the @dfn{RARP} protocol. This command 2420 is only available if GRUB is compiled with netboot support. See also 2421 @ref{Network}. 2422 @end deffn 2423 2424 2425 @node serial 2426 @subsection serial 2427 2428 @deffn Command serial [@option{--unit=unit}] [@option{--port=port}] [@option{--speed=speed}] [@option{--word=word}] [@option{--parity=parity}] [@option{--stop=stop}] [@option{--device=dev}] 2429 Initialize a serial device. @var{unit} is a number in the range 0-3 2430 specifying which serial port to use; default is 0, which corresponds to 2431 the port often called COM1. @var{port} is the I/O port where the UART 2432 is to be found; if specified it takes precedence over @var{unit}. 2433 @var{speed} is the transmission speed; default is 9600. @var{word} and 2434 @var{stop} are the number of data bits and stop bits. Data bits must 2435 be in the range 5-8 and stop bits must be 1 or 2. Default is 8 data 2436 bits and one stop bit. @var{parity} is one of @samp{no}, @samp{odd}, 2437 @samp{even} and defaults to @samp{no}. The option @option{--device} 2438 can only be used in the grub shell and is used to specify the 2439 tty device to be used in the host operating system (@pxref{Invoking the 2440 grub shell}). 2441 2442 The serial port is not used as a communication channel unless the 2443 @command{terminal} command is used (@pxref{terminal}). 2444 2445 This command is only available if GRUB is compiled with serial 2446 support. See also @ref{Serial terminal}. 2447 @end deffn 2448 2449 2450 @node setkey 2451 @subsection setkey 2452 2453 @deffn Command setkey [to_key from_key] 2454 Change the keyboard map. The key @var{from_key} is mapped to the key 2455 @var{to_key}. If no argument is specified, reset key mappings. Note that 2456 this command @emph{does not} exchange the keys. If you want to exchange 2457 the keys, run this command again with the arguments exchanged, like this: 2458 2459 @example 2460 grub> @kbd{setkey capslock control} 2461 grub> @kbd{setkey control capslock} 2462 @end example 2463 2464 A key must be an alphabet letter, a digit, or one of these symbols: 2465 @samp{escape}, @samp{exclam}, @samp{at}, @samp{numbersign}, 2466 @samp{dollar}, @samp{percent}, @samp{caret}, @samp{ampersand}, 2467 @samp{asterisk}, @samp{parenleft}, @samp{parenright}, @samp{minus}, 2468 @samp{underscore}, @samp{equal}, @samp{plus}, @samp{backspace}, 2469 @samp{tab}, @samp{bracketleft}, @samp{braceleft}, @samp{bracketright}, 2470 @samp{braceright}, @samp{enter}, @samp{control}, @samp{semicolon}, 2471 @samp{colon}, @samp{quote}, @samp{doublequote}, @samp{backquote}, 2472 @samp{tilde}, @samp{shift}, @samp{backslash}, @samp{bar}, @samp{comma}, 2473 @samp{less}, @samp{period}, @samp{greater}, @samp{slash}, 2474 @samp{question}, @samp{alt}, @samp{space}, @samp{capslock}, @samp{FX} 2475 (@samp{X} is a digit), and @samp{delete}. This table describes to which 2476 character each of the symbols corresponds: 2477 2478 @table @samp 2479 @item exclam 2480 @samp{!} 2481 2482 @item at 2483 @samp{@@} 2484 2485 @item numbersign 2486 @samp{#} 2487 2488 @item dollar 2489 @samp{$} 2490 2491 @item percent 2492 @samp{%} 2493 2494 @item caret 2495 @samp{^} 2496 2497 @item ampersand 2498 @samp{&} 2499 2500 @item asterisk 2501 @samp{*} 2502 2503 @item parenleft 2504 @samp{(} 2505 2506 @item parenright 2507 @samp{)} 2508 2509 @item minus 2510 @samp{-} 2511 2512 @item underscore 2513 @samp{_} 2514 2515 @item equal 2516 @samp{=} 2517 2518 @item plus 2519 @samp{+} 2520 2521 @item bracketleft 2522 @samp{[} 2523 2524 @item braceleft 2525 @samp{@{} 2526 2527 @item bracketright 2528 @samp{]} 2529 2530 @item braceright 2531 @samp{@}} 2532 2533 @item semicolon 2534 @samp{;} 2535 2536 @item colon 2537 @samp{:} 2538 2539 @item quote 2540 @samp{'} 2541 2542 @item doublequote 2543 @samp{"} 2544 2545 @item backquote 2546 @samp{`} 2547 2548 @item tilde 2549 @samp{~} 2550 2551 @item backslash 2552 @samp{\} 2553 2554 @item bar 2555 @samp{|} 2556 2557 @item comma 2558 @samp{,} 2559 2560 @item less 2561 @samp{<} 2562 2563 @item period 2564 @samp{.} 2565 2566 @item greater 2567 @samp{>} 2568 2569 @item slash 2570 @samp{/} 2571 2572 @item question 2573 @samp{?} 2574 2575 @item space 2576 @samp{ } 2577 @end table 2578 @end deffn 2579 2580 2581 @node terminal 2582 @subsection terminal 2583 2584 @deffn Command terminal [@option{--dumb}] [@option{--no-echo}] [@option{--no-edit}] [@option{--timeout=secs}] [@option{--lines=lines}] [@option{--silent}] [@option{console}] [@option{serial}] [@option{hercules}] 2585 Select a terminal for user interaction. The terminal is assumed to be 2586 VT100-compatible unless @option{--dumb} is specified. If both 2587 @option{console} and @option{serial} are specified, then GRUB will use 2588 the one where a key is entered first or the first when the timeout 2589 expires. If neither are specified, the current setting is 2590 reported. This command is only available if GRUB is compiled with serial 2591 support. See also @ref{Serial terminal}. 2592 2593 This may not make sense for most users, but GRUB supports Hercules 2594 console as well. Hercules console is usable like the ordinary console, 2595 and the usage is quite similar to that for serial terminals: specify 2596 @option{hercules} as the argument. 2597 2598 The option @option{--lines} defines the number of lines in your 2599 terminal, and it is used for the internal pager function. If you don't 2600 specify this option, the number is assumed as 24. 2601 2602 The option @option{--silent} suppresses the message to prompt you to 2603 hit any key. This might be useful if your system has no terminal 2604 device. 2605 2606 The option @option{--no-echo} has GRUB not to echo back input 2607 characters. This implies the option @option{--no-edit}. 2608 2609 The option @option{--no-edit} disables the BASH-like editing feature. 2610 @end deffn 2611 2612 2613 @node terminfo 2614 @subsection terminfo 2615 2616 @deffn Command terminfo @option{--name=name} @option{--cursor-address=seq} [@option{--clear-screen=seq}] [@option{--enter-standout-mode=seq}] [@option{--exit-standout-mode=seq}] 2617 Define the capabilities of your terminal. Use this command to define 2618 escape sequences, if it is not vt100-compatible. You may use @samp{\e} 2619 for @key{ESC} and @samp{^X} for a control character. 2620 2621 You can use the utility @command{grub-terminfo} to generate 2622 appropriate arguments to this command. @xref{Invoking grub-terminfo}. 2623 2624 If no option is specified, the current settings are printed. 2625 @end deffn 2626 2627 2628 @node tftpserver 2629 @subsection tftpserver 2630 2631 @deffn Command tftpserver ipaddr 2632 @strong{Caution:} This command exists only for backward 2633 compatibility. Use @command{ifconfig} (@pxref{ifconfig}) instead. 2634 2635 Override a TFTP server address returned by a BOOTP/DHCP/RARP server. The 2636 argument @var{ipaddr} must be in dotted decimal format, like 2637 @samp{192.168.0.15}. This command is only available if GRUB is compiled 2638 with netboot support. See also @ref{Network}. 2639 @end deffn 2640 2641 2642 @node unhide 2643 @subsection unhide 2644 2645 @deffn Command unhide partition 2646 Unhide the partition @var{partition} by clearing the @dfn{hidden} bit in 2647 its partition type code. This is useful only when booting DOS or Windows 2648 and multiple primary partitions exist on one disk. See also 2649 @ref{DOS/Windows}. 2650 @end deffn 2651 2652 2653 @node Command-line and menu entry commands 2654 @section The list of command-line and menu entry commands 2655 2656 These commands are usable in the command-line and in menu entries. If 2657 you forget a command, you can run the command @command{help} 2658 (@pxref{help}). 2659 2660 @menu 2661 * blocklist:: Get the block list notation of a file 2662 * boot:: Start up your operating system 2663 * cat:: Show the contents of a file 2664 * chainloader:: Chain-load another boot loader 2665 * cmp:: Compare two files 2666 * configfile:: Load a configuration file 2667 * debug:: Toggle the debug flag 2668 * displayapm:: Display APM information 2669 * displaymem:: Display memory configuration 2670 * embed:: Embed Stage 1.5 2671 * find:: Find a file 2672 * fstest:: Test a filesystem 2673 * geometry:: Manipulate the geometry of a drive 2674 * halt:: Shut down your computer 2675 * help:: Show help messages 2676 * impsprobe:: Probe SMP 2677 * initrd:: Load an initrd 2678 * install:: Install GRUB 2679 * ioprobe:: Probe I/O ports used for a drive 2680 * kernel:: Load a kernel 2681 * lock:: Lock a menu entry 2682 * makeactive:: Make a partition active 2683 * map:: Map a drive to another 2684 * md5crypt:: Encrypt a password in MD5 format 2685 * module:: Load a module 2686 * modulenounzip:: Load a module without decompression 2687 * pause:: Wait for a key press 2688 * quit:: Exit from the grub shell 2689 * reboot:: Reboot your computer 2690 * read:: Read data from memory 2691 * root:: Set GRUB's root device 2692 * rootnoverify:: Set GRUB's root device without mounting 2693 * savedefault:: Save current entry as the default entry 2694 * setup:: Set up GRUB's installation automatically 2695 * testload:: Load a file for testing a filesystem 2696 * testvbe:: Test VESA BIOS EXTENSION 2697 * uppermem:: Set the upper memory size 2698 * vbeprobe:: Probe VESA BIOS EXTENSION 2699 @end menu 2700 2701 2702 @node blocklist 2703 @subsection blocklist 2704 2705 @deffn Command blocklist file 2706 Print the block list notation of the file @var{file}. @xref{Block list 2707 syntax}. 2708 @end deffn 2709 2710 2711 @node boot 2712 @subsection boot 2713 2714 @deffn Command boot 2715 Boot the OS or chain-loader which has been loaded. Only necessary if 2716 running the fully interactive command-line (it is implicit at the end of 2717 a menu entry). 2718 @end deffn 2719 2720 2721 @node cat 2722 @subsection cat 2723 2724 @deffn Command cat file 2725 Display the contents of the file @var{file}. This command may be useful 2726 to remind you of your OS's root partition: 2727 2728 @example 2729 grub> @kbd{cat /etc/fstab} 2730 @end example 2731 @end deffn 2732 2733 2734 @node chainloader 2735 @subsection chainloader 2736 2737 @deffn Command chainloader [@option{--force}] file 2738 Load @var{file} as a chain-loader. Like any other file loaded by the 2739 filesystem code, it can use the blocklist notation to grab the first 2740 sector of the current partition with @samp{+1}. If you specify the 2741 option @option{--force}, then load @var{file} forcibly, whether it has a 2742 correct signature or not. This is required when you want to load a 2743 defective boot loader, such as SCO UnixWare 7.1 (@pxref{SCO UnixWare}). 2744 @end deffn 2745 2746 2747 @node cmp 2748 @subsection cmp 2749 2750 @deffn Command cmp file1 file2 2751 Compare the file @var{file1} with the file @var{file2}. If they differ 2752 in size, print the sizes like this: 2753 2754 @example 2755 Differ in size: 0x1234 [foo], 0x4321 [bar] 2756 @end example 2757 2758 If the sizes are equal but the bytes at an offset differ, then print the 2759 bytes like this: 2760 2761 @example 2762 Differ at the offset 777: 0xbe [foo], 0xef [bar] 2763 @end example 2764 2765 If they are completely identical, nothing will be printed. 2766 @end deffn 2767 2768 2769 @node configfile 2770 @subsection configfile 2771 2772 @deffn Command configfile file 2773 Load @var{file} as a configuration file. 2774 @end deffn 2775 2776 2777 @node debug 2778 @subsection debug 2779 2780 @deffn Command debug 2781 Toggle debug mode (by default it is off). When debug mode is on, some 2782 extra messages are printed to show disk activity. This global debug flag 2783 is mainly useful for GRUB developers when testing new code. 2784 @end deffn 2785 2786 2787 @node displayapm 2788 @subsection displayapm 2789 2790 @deffn Command displayapm 2791 Display APM BIOS information. 2792 @end deffn 2793 2794 2795 @node displaymem 2796 @subsection displaymem 2797 2798 @deffn Command displaymem 2799 Display what GRUB thinks the system address space map of the machine is, 2800 including all regions of physical @sc{ram} installed. GRUB's 2801 @dfn{upper/lower memory} display uses the standard BIOS interface for 2802 the available memory in the first megabyte, or @dfn{lower memory}, and a 2803 synthesized number from various BIOS interfaces of the memory starting 2804 at 1MB and going up to the first chipset hole for @dfn{upper memory} 2805 (the standard PC @dfn{upper memory} interface is limited to reporting a 2806 maximum of 64MB). 2807 @end deffn 2808 2809 2810 @node embed 2811 @subsection embed 2812 2813 @deffn Command embed stage1_5 device 2814 Embed the Stage 1.5 @var{stage1_5} in the sectors after the MBR if 2815 @var{device} is a drive, or in the @dfn{boot loader} area if @var{device} 2816 is a FFS partition or a ReiserFS partition.@footnote{The latter feature 2817 has not been implemented yet.} Print the number of sectors which 2818 @var{stage1_5} occupies, if successful. 2819 2820 Usually, you don't need to run this command directly. @xref{setup}. 2821 @end deffn 2822 2823 2824 @node find 2825 @subsection find 2826 2827 @deffn Command find filename 2828 Search for the file name @var{filename} in all mountable partitions 2829 and print the list of the devices which contain the file. The file 2830 name @var{filename} should be an absolute file name like 2831 @code{/boot/grub/stage1}. 2832 @end deffn 2833 2834 2835 @node fstest 2836 @subsection fstest 2837 2838 @deffn Command fstest 2839 Toggle filesystem test mode. 2840 Filesystem test mode, when turned on, prints out data corresponding to 2841 all the device reads and what values are being sent to the low-level 2842 routines. The format is @samp{<@var{partition-offset-sector}, 2843 @var{byte-offset}, @var{byte-length}>} for high-level reads inside a 2844 partition, and @samp{[@var{disk-offset-sector}]} for low-level sector 2845 requests from the disk. 2846 Filesystem test mode is turned off by any use of the @command{install} 2847 (@pxref{install}) or @command{testload} (@pxref{testload}) commands. 2848 @end deffn 2849 2850 2851 @node geometry 2852 @subsection geometry 2853 2854 @deffn Command geometry drive [cylinder head sector [total_sector]] 2855 Print the information for the drive @var{drive}. In the grub shell, you 2856 can set the geometry of the drive arbitrarily. The number of 2857 cylinders, the number of heads, the number of sectors and the number of 2858 total sectors are set to CYLINDER, HEAD, SECTOR and TOTAL_SECTOR, 2859 respectively. If you omit TOTAL_SECTOR, then it will be calculated 2860 based on the C/H/S values automatically. 2861 @end deffn 2862 2863 2864 @node halt 2865 @subsection halt 2866 2867 @deffn Command halt @option{--no-apm} 2868 The command halts the computer. If the @option{--no-apm} option 2869 is specified, no APM BIOS call is performed. Otherwise, the computer 2870 is shut down using APM. 2871 @end deffn 2872 2873 2874 @node help 2875 @subsection help 2876 2877 @deffn Command help @option{--all} [pattern @dots{}] 2878 Display helpful information about builtin commands. If you do not 2879 specify @var{pattern}, this command shows short descriptions of most of 2880 available commands. If you specify the option @option{--all} to this 2881 command, short descriptions of rarely used commands (such as 2882 @ref{testload}) are displayed as well. 2883 2884 If you specify any @var{patterns}, it displays longer information 2885 about each of the commands which match those @var{patterns}. 2886 @end deffn 2887 2888 2889 @node impsprobe 2890 @subsection impsprobe 2891 2892 @deffn Command impsprobe 2893 Probe the Intel Multiprocessor Specification 1.1 or 1.4 configuration 2894 table and boot the various CPUs which are found into a tight loop. This 2895 command can be used only in the Stage 2, but not in the grub shell. 2896 @end deffn 2897 2898 2899 @node initrd 2900 @subsection initrd 2901 2902 @deffn Command initrd file @dots{} 2903 Load an initial ramdisk for a Linux format boot image and set the 2904 appropriate parameters in the Linux setup area in memory. See also 2905 @ref{GNU/Linux}. 2906 @end deffn 2907 2908 2909 @node install 2910 @subsection install 2911 2912 @deffn Command install [@option{--force-lba}] [@option{--stage2=os_stage2_file}] stage1_file [@option{d}] dest_dev stage2_file [addr] [@option{p}] [config_file] [real_config_file] 2913 This command is fairly complex, and you should not use this command 2914 unless you are familiar with GRUB. Use @command{setup} (@pxref{setup}) 2915 instead. 2916 2917 In short, it will perform a full install presuming the Stage 2 or Stage 2918 1.5@footnote{They're loaded the same way, so we will refer to the Stage 2919 1.5 as a Stage 2 from now on.} is in its final install location. 2920 2921 In slightly more detail, it will load @var{stage1_file}, validate that 2922 it is a GRUB Stage 1 of the right version number, install in it a 2923 blocklist for loading @var{stage2_file} as a Stage 2. If the option 2924 @option{d} is present, the Stage 1 will always look for the actual 2925 disk @var{stage2_file} was installed on, rather than using the booting 2926 drive. The Stage 2 will be loaded at address @var{addr}, which must be 2927 @samp{0x8000} for a true Stage 2, and @samp{0x2000} for a Stage 1.5. If 2928 @var{addr} is not present, GRUB will determine the address 2929 automatically. It then writes the completed Stage 1 to the first block 2930 of the device @var{dest_dev}. If the options @option{p} or 2931 @var{config_file} are present, then it reads the first block of stage2, 2932 modifies it with the values of the partition @var{stage2_file} was found 2933 on (for @option{p}) or places the string @var{config_file} into the area 2934 telling the stage2 where to look for a configuration file at boot 2935 time. Likewise, if @var{real_config_file} is present and 2936 @var{stage2_file} is a Stage 1.5, then the Stage 2 @var{config_file} is 2937 patched with the configuration file name @var{real_config_file}. This 2938 command preserves the DOS BPB (and for hard disks, the partition table) 2939 of the sector the Stage 1 is to be installed into. 2940 2941 @strong{Caution:} Several buggy BIOSes don't pass a booting drive 2942 properly when booting from a hard disk drive. Therefore, you will 2943 unfortunately have to specify the option @option{d}, whether your 2944 Stage2 resides at the booting drive or not, if you have such a 2945 BIOS. We know these are defective in this way: 2946 2947 @table @asis 2948 @item 2949 Fujitsu LifeBook 400 BIOS version 31J0103A 2950 2951 @item 2952 HP Vectra XU 6/200 BIOS version GG.06.11 2953 @end table 2954 2955 @strong{Caution2:} A number of BIOSes don't return a correct LBA support 2956 bitmap even if they do have the support. So GRUB provides a solution to 2957 ignore the wrong bitmap, that is, the option @option{--force-lba}. Don't 2958 use this option if you know that your BIOS doesn't have LBA support. 2959 2960 @strong{Caution3:} You must specify the option @option{--stage2} in the 2961 grub shell, if you cannot unmount the filesystem where your stage2 file 2962 resides. The argument should be the file name in your operating system. 2963 @end deffn 2964 2965 2966 @node ioprobe 2967 @subsection ioprobe 2968 2969 @deffn Command ioprobe drive 2970 Probe I/O ports used for the drive @var{drive}. This command will list 2971 the I/O ports on the screen. For technical information, 2972 @xref{Internals}. 2973 @end deffn 2974 2975 2976 @node kernel 2977 @subsection kernel 2978 2979 @deffn Command kernel [@option{--type=type}] [@option{--no-mem-option}] file @dots{} 2980 Attempt to load the primary boot image (Multiboot a.out or @sc{elf}, 2981 Linux zImage or bzImage, FreeBSD a.out, NetBSD a.out, etc.) from 2982 @var{file}. The rest of the line is passed verbatim as the @dfn{kernel 2983 command-line}. Any modules must be reloaded after using this command. 2984 2985 This command also accepts the option @option{--type} so that you can 2986 specify the kernel type of @var{file} explicitly. The argument 2987 @var{type} must be one of these: @samp{netbsd}, @samp{freebsd}, 2988 @samp{openbsd}, @samp{linux}, @samp{biglinux}, and 2989 @samp{multiboot}. However, you need to specify it only if you want to 2990 load a NetBSD @sc{elf} kernel, because GRUB can automatically determine 2991 a kernel type in the other cases, quite safely. 2992 2993 The option @option{--no-mem-option} is effective only for Linux. If the 2994 option is specified, GRUB doesn't pass the option @option{mem=} to the 2995 kernel. This option is implied for Linux kernels 2.4.18 and newer. 2996 @end deffn 2997 2998 2999 @node lock 3000 @subsection lock 3001 3002 @deffn Command lock 3003 Prevent normal users from executing arbitrary menu entries. You must use 3004 the command @command{password} if you really want this command to be 3005 useful (@pxref{password}). 3006 3007 This command is used in a menu, as shown in this example: 3008 3009 @example 3010 @group 3011 title This entry is too dangerous to be executed by normal users 3012 lock 3013 root (hd0,a) 3014 kernel /no-security-os 3015 @end group 3016 @end example 3017 3018 See also @ref{Security}. 3019 @end deffn 3020 3021 3022 @node makeactive 3023 @subsection makeactive 3024 3025 @deffn Command makeactive 3026 Set the active partition on the root disk to GRUB's root device. 3027 This command is limited to @emph{primary} PC partitions on a hard disk. 3028 @end deffn 3029 3030 3031 @node map 3032 @subsection map 3033 3034 @deffn Command map to_drive from_drive 3035 Map the drive @var{from_drive} to the drive @var{to_drive}. This is 3036 necessary when you chain-load some operating systems, such as DOS, if 3037 such an OS resides at a non-first drive. Here is an example: 3038 3039 @example 3040 @group 3041 grub> @kbd{map (hd0) (hd1)} 3042 grub> @kbd{map (hd1) (hd0)} 3043 @end group 3044 @end example 3045 3046 The example exchanges the order between the first hard disk and the 3047 second hard disk. See also @ref{DOS/Windows}. 3048 @end deffn 3049 3050 3051 @node md5crypt 3052 @subsection md5crypt 3053 3054 @deffn Command md5crypt 3055 Prompt to enter a password, and encrypt it in MD5 format. The encrypted 3056 password can be used with the command @command{password} 3057 (@pxref{password}). See also @ref{Security}. 3058 @end deffn 3059 3060 3061 @node module 3062 @subsection module 3063 3064 @deffn Command module file @dots{} 3065 Load a boot module @var{file} for a Multiboot format boot image (no 3066 interpretation of the file contents are made, so the user of this 3067 command must know what the kernel in question expects). The rest of the 3068 line is passed as the @dfn{module command-line}, like the 3069 @command{kernel} command. You must load a Multiboot kernel image before 3070 loading any module. See also @ref{modulenounzip}. 3071 @end deffn 3072 3073 3074 @node modulenounzip 3075 @subsection modulenounzip 3076 3077 @deffn Command modulenounzip file @dots{} 3078 The same as @command{module} (@pxref{module}), except that automatic 3079 decompression is disabled. 3080 @end deffn 3081 3082 3083 @node pause 3084 @subsection pause 3085 3086 @deffn Command pause message @dots{} 3087 Print the @var{message}, then wait until a key is pressed. Note that 3088 placing @key{^G} (ASCII code 7) in the message will cause the speaker to 3089 emit the standard beep sound, which is useful when prompting the user to 3090 change floppies. 3091 @end deffn 3092 3093 3094 @node quit 3095 @subsection quit 3096 3097 @deffn Command quit 3098 Exit from the grub shell @command{grub} (@pxref{Invoking the grub 3099 shell}). This command can be used only in the grub shell. 3100 @end deffn 3101 3102 3103 @node reboot 3104 @subsection reboot 3105 3106 @deffn Command reboot 3107 Reboot the computer. 3108 @end deffn 3109 3110 3111 @node read 3112 @subsection read 3113 3114 @deffn Command read addr 3115 Read a 32-bit value from memory at address @var{addr} and display it in 3116 hex format. 3117 @end deffn 3118 3119 3120 @node root 3121 @subsection root 3122 3123 @deffn Command root device [hdbias] 3124 Set the current @dfn{root device} to the device @var{device}, then 3125 attempt to mount it to get the partition size (for passing the partition 3126 descriptor in @code{ES:ESI}, used by some chain-loaded boot loaders), the 3127 BSD drive-type (for booting BSD kernels using their native boot format), 3128 and correctly determine the PC partition where a BSD sub-partition is 3129 located. The optional @var{hdbias} parameter is a number to tell a BSD 3130 kernel how many BIOS drive numbers are on controllers before the current 3131 one. For example, if there is an IDE disk and a SCSI disk, and your 3132 FreeBSD root partition is on the SCSI disk, then use a @samp{1} for 3133 @var{hdbias}. 3134 3135 See also @ref{rootnoverify}. 3136 @end deffn 3137 3138 3139 @node rootnoverify 3140 @subsection rootnoverify 3141 3142 @deffn Command rootnoverify device [hdbias] 3143 Similar to @command{root} (@pxref{root}), but don't attempt to mount the 3144 partition. This is useful for when an OS is outside of the area of the 3145 disk that GRUB can read, but setting the correct root device is still 3146 desired. Note that the items mentioned in @command{root} above which 3147 derived from attempting the mount will @emph{not} work correctly. 3148 @end deffn 3149 3150 3151 @node savedefault 3152 @subsection savedefault 3153 3154 @deffn Command savedefault num 3155 Save the current menu entry or @var{num} if specified as a default 3156 entry. Here is an example: 3157 3158 @example 3159 @group 3160 default saved 3161 timeout 10 3162 3163 title GNU/Linux 3164 root (hd0,0) 3165 kernel /boot/vmlinuz root=/dev/sda1 vga=ext 3166 initrd /boot/initrd 3167 savedefault 3168 3169 title FreeBSD 3170 root (hd0,a) 3171 kernel /boot/loader 3172 savedefault 3173 @end group 3174 @end example 3175 3176 With this configuration, GRUB will choose the entry booted previously as 3177 the default entry. 3178 3179 You can specify @samp{fallback} instead of a number. Then, next 3180 fallback entry is saved. Next fallback entry is chosen from fallback 3181 entries. Normally, this will be the first entry in fallback ones. 3182 3183 See also @ref{default} and @ref{Invoking grub-set-default}. 3184 @end deffn 3185 3186 3187 @node setup 3188 @subsection setup 3189 3190 @deffn Command setup [@option{--force-lba}] [@option{--stage2=os_stage2_file}] [@option{--prefix=dir}] install_device [image_device] 3191 Set up the installation of GRUB automatically. This command uses the 3192 more flexible command @command{install} (@pxref{install}) in the backend 3193 and installs GRUB into the device @var{install_device}. If 3194 @var{image_device} is specified, then find the GRUB images 3195 (@pxref{Images}) in the device @var{image_device}, otherwise use the 3196 current @dfn{root device}, which can be set by the command 3197 @command{root}. If @var{install_device} is a hard disk, then embed a 3198 Stage 1.5 in the disk if possible. 3199 3200 The option @option{--prefix} specifies the directory under which GRUB 3201 images are put. If it is not specified, GRUB automatically searches them 3202 in @file{/boot/grub} and @file{/grub}. 3203 3204 The options @option{--force-lba} and @option{--stage2} are just passed 3205 to @command{install} if specified. @xref{install}, for more 3206 information. 3207 @end deffn 3208 3209 3210 @node testload 3211 @subsection testload 3212 3213 @deffn Command testload file 3214 Read the entire contents of @var{file} in several different ways and 3215 compare them, to test the filesystem code. The output is somewhat 3216 cryptic, but if no errors are reported and the final @samp{i=@var{X}, 3217 filepos=@var{Y}} reading has @var{X} and @var{Y} equal, then it is 3218 definitely consistent, and very likely works correctly subject to a 3219 consistent offset error. If this test succeeds, then a good next step is 3220 to try loading a kernel. 3221 @end deffn 3222 3223 3224 @node testvbe 3225 @subsection testvbe 3226 3227 @deffn Command testvbe mode 3228 Test the VESA BIOS EXTENSION mode @var{mode}. This command will switch 3229 your video card to the graphics mode, and show an endless animation. Hit 3230 any key to return. See also @ref{vbeprobe}. 3231 @end deffn 3232 3233 3234 @node uppermem 3235 @subsection uppermem 3236 3237 @deffn Command uppermem kbytes 3238 Force GRUB to assume that only @var{kbytes} kilobytes of upper memory 3239 are installed. Any system address range maps are discarded. 3240 3241 @strong{Caution:} This should be used with great caution, and should 3242 only be necessary on some old machines. GRUB's BIOS probe can pick up 3243 all @sc{ram} on all new machines the author has ever heard of. It can 3244 also be used for debugging purposes to lie to an OS. 3245 @end deffn 3246 3247 3248 @node vbeprobe 3249 @subsection vbeprobe 3250 3251 @deffn Command vbeprobe [mode] 3252 Probe VESA BIOS EXTENSION information. If the mode @var{mode} is 3253 specified, show only the information about @var{mode}. Otherwise, this 3254 command lists up available VBE modes on the screen. See also 3255 @ref{testvbe}. 3256 @end deffn 3257 3258 3259 @node Troubleshooting 3260 @chapter Error messages reported by GRUB 3261 3262 This chapter describes error messages reported by GRUB when you 3263 encounter trouble. @xref{Invoking the grub shell}, if your problem is 3264 specific to the grub shell. 3265 3266 @menu 3267 * Stage1 errors:: Errors reported by the Stage 1 3268 * Stage1.5 errors:: Errors reported by the Stage 1.5 3269 * Stage2 errors:: Errors reported by the Stage 2 3270 @end menu 3271 3272 3273 @node Stage1 errors 3274 @section Errors reported by the Stage 1 3275 3276 The general way that the Stage 1 handles errors is to print an error 3277 string and then halt. Pressing @kbd{@key{CTRL}-@key{ALT}-@key{DEL}} will 3278 reboot. 3279 3280 The following is a comprehensive list of error messages for the Stage 1: 3281 3282 @table @asis 3283 @item Hard Disk Error 3284 The stage2 or stage1.5 is being read from a hard disk, and the attempt 3285 to determine the size and geometry of the hard disk failed. 3286 3287 @item Floppy Error 3288 The stage2 or stage1.5 is being read from a floppy disk, and the attempt 3289 to determine the size and geometry of the floppy disk failed. It's listed 3290 as a separate error since the probe sequence is different than for hard 3291 disks. 3292 3293 @item Read Error 3294 A disk read error happened while trying to read the stage2 or stage1.5. 3295 3296 @item Geom Error 3297 The location of the stage2 or stage1.5 is not in the portion of the disk 3298 supported directly by the BIOS read calls. This could occur because the 3299 BIOS translated geometry has been changed by the user or the disk is 3300 moved to another machine or controller after installation, or GRUB was 3301 not installed using itself (if it was, the Stage 2 version of this error 3302 would have been seen during that process and it would not have completed 3303 the install). 3304 @end table 3305 3306 3307 @node Stage1.5 errors 3308 @section Errors reported by the Stage 1.5 3309 3310 The general way that the Stage 1.5 handles errors is to print an error 3311 number in the form @code{Error @var{num}} and then halt. Pressing 3312 @kbd{@key{CTRL}-@key{ALT}-@key{DEL}} will reboot. 3313 3314 The error numbers correspond to the errors reported by Stage 3315 2. @xref{Stage2 errors}. 3316 3317 3318 @node Stage2 errors 3319 @section Errors reported by the Stage 2 3320 3321 The general way that the Stage 2 handles errors is to abort the 3322 operation in question, print an error string, then (if possible) either 3323 continue based on the fact that an error occurred or wait for the user to 3324 deal with the error. 3325 3326 The following is a comprehensive list of error messages for the Stage 2 3327 (error numbers for the Stage 1.5 are listed before the colon in each 3328 description): 3329 3330 @table @asis 3331 @item 1 : Filename must be either an absolute filename or blocklist 3332 This error is returned if a file name is requested which doesn't fit the 3333 syntax/rules listed in the @ref{Filesystem}. 3334 3335 @item 2 : Bad file or directory type 3336 This error is returned if a file requested is not a regular file, but 3337 something like a symbolic link, directory, or FIFO. 3338 3339 @item 3 : Bad or corrupt data while decompressing file 3340 This error is returned if the run-length decompression code gets an 3341 internal error. This is usually from a corrupt file. 3342 3343 @item 4 : Bad or incompatible header in compressed file 3344 This error is returned if the file header for a supposedly compressed 3345 file is bad. 3346 3347 @item 5 : Partition table invalid or corrupt 3348 This error is returned if the sanity checks on the integrity of the 3349 partition table fail. This is a bad sign. 3350 3351 @item 6 : Mismatched or corrupt version of stage1/stage2 3352 This error is returned if the install command points to incompatible 3353 or corrupt versions of the stage1 or stage2. It can't detect corruption 3354 in general, but this is a sanity check on the version numbers, which 3355 should be correct. 3356 3357 @item 7 : Loading below 1MB is not supported 3358 This error is returned if the lowest address in a kernel is below the 3359 1MB boundary. The Linux zImage format is a special case and can be 3360 handled since it has a fixed loading address and maximum size. 3361 3362 @item 8 : Kernel must be loaded before booting 3363 This error is returned if GRUB is told to execute the boot sequence 3364 without having a kernel to start. 3365 3366 @item 9 : Unknown boot failure 3367 This error is returned if the boot attempt did not succeed for reasons 3368 which are unknown. 3369 3370 @item 10 : Unsupported Multiboot features requested 3371 This error is returned when the Multiboot features word in the Multiboot 3372 header requires a feature that is not recognized. The point of this is 3373 that the kernel requires special handling which GRUB is probably 3374 unable to provide. 3375 3376 @item 11 : Unrecognized device string 3377 This error is returned if a device string was expected, and the string 3378 encountered didn't fit the syntax/rules listed in the @ref{Filesystem}. 3379 3380 @item 12 : Invalid device requested 3381 This error is returned if a device string is recognizable but does not 3382 fall under the other device errors. 3383 3384 @item 13 : Invalid or unsupported executable format 3385 This error is returned if the kernel image being loaded is not 3386 recognized as Multiboot or one of the supported native formats (Linux 3387 zImage or bzImage, FreeBSD, or NetBSD). 3388 3389 @item 14 : Filesystem compatibility error, cannot read whole file 3390 Some of the filesystem reading code in GRUB has limits on the length of 3391 the files it can read. This error is returned when the user runs into 3392 such a limit. 3393 3394 @item 15 : File not found 3395 This error is returned if the specified file name cannot be found, but 3396 everything else (like the disk/partition info) is OK. 3397 3398 @item 16 : Inconsistent filesystem structure 3399 This error is returned by the filesystem code to denote an internal 3400 error caused by the sanity checks of the filesystem structure on disk 3401 not matching what it expects. This is usually caused by a corrupt 3402 filesystem or bugs in the code handling it in GRUB. 3403 3404 @item 17 : Cannot mount selected partition 3405 This error is returned if the partition requested exists, but the 3406 filesystem type cannot be recognized by GRUB. 3407 3408 @item 18 : Selected cylinder exceeds maximum supported by BIOS 3409 This error is returned when a read is attempted at a linear block 3410 address beyond the end of the BIOS translated area. This generally 3411 happens if your disk is larger than the BIOS can handle (512MB for 3412 (E)IDE disks on older machines or larger than 8GB in general). 3413 3414 @item 19 : Linux kernel must be loaded before initrd 3415 This error is returned if the initrd command is used before loading a 3416 Linux kernel. 3417 3418 @item 20 : Multiboot kernel must be loaded before modules 3419 This error is returned if the module load command is used before loading 3420 a Multiboot kernel. It only makes sense in this case anyway, as GRUB has 3421 no idea how to communicate the presence of such modules to a 3422 non-Multiboot-aware kernel. 3423 3424 @item 21 : Selected disk does not exist 3425 This error is returned if the device part of a device- or full file name 3426 refers to a disk or BIOS device that is not present or not recognized by 3427 the BIOS in the system. 3428 3429 @item 22 : No such partition 3430 This error is returned if a partition is requested in the device part of 3431 a device- or full file name which isn't on the selected disk. 3432 3433 @item 23 : Error while parsing number 3434 This error is returned if GRUB was expecting to read a number and 3435 encountered bad data. 3436 3437 @item 24 : Attempt to access block outside partition 3438 This error is returned if a linear block address is outside of the disk 3439 partition. This generally happens because of a corrupt filesystem on the 3440 disk or a bug in the code handling it in GRUB (it's a great debugging 3441 tool). 3442 3443 @item 25 : Disk read error 3444 This error is returned if there is a disk read error when trying to 3445 probe or read data from a particular disk. 3446 3447 @item 26 : Too many symbolic links 3448 This error is returned if the link count is beyond the maximum 3449 (currently 5), possibly the symbolic links are looped. 3450 3451 @item 27 : Unrecognized command 3452 This error is returned if an unrecognized command is entered on the 3453 command-line or in a boot sequence section of a configuration file and 3454 that entry is selected. 3455 3456 @item 28 : Selected item cannot fit into memory 3457 This error is returned if a kernel, module, or raw file load command is 3458 either trying to load its data such that it won't fit into memory or it 3459 is simply too big. 3460 3461 @item 29 : Disk write error 3462 This error is returned if there is a disk write error when trying to 3463 write to a particular disk. This would generally only occur during an 3464 install of set active partition command. 3465 3466 @item 30 : Invalid argument 3467 This error is returned if an argument specified to a command is invalid. 3468 3469 @item 31 : File is not sector aligned 3470 This error may occur only when you access a ReiserFS partition by 3471 block-lists (e.g. the command @command{install}). In this case, you 3472 should mount the partition with the @samp{-o notail} option. 3473 3474 @item 32 : Must be authenticated 3475 This error is returned if you try to run a locked entry. You should 3476 enter a correct password before running such an entry. 3477 3478 @item 33 : Serial device not configured 3479 This error is returned if you try to change your terminal to a serial 3480 one before initializing any serial device. 3481 3482 @item 34 : No spare sectors on the disk 3483 This error is returned if a disk doesn't have enough spare space. This 3484 happens when you try to embed Stage 1.5 into the unused sectors after 3485 the MBR, but the first partition starts right after the MBR or they are 3486 used by EZ-BIOS. 3487 @end table 3488 3489 3490 @node Invoking the grub shell 3491 @chapter Invoking the grub shell 3492 3493 This chapter documents the grub shell @command{grub}. Note that the grub 3494 shell is an emulator; it doesn't run under the native environment, so it 3495 sometimes does something wrong. Therefore, you shouldn't trust it too 3496 much. If there is anything wrong with it, don't hesitate to try the 3497 native GRUB environment, especially when it guesses a wrong map between 3498 BIOS drives and OS devices. 3499 3500 @menu 3501 * Basic usage:: How to use the grub shell 3502 * Installation under UNIX:: How to install GRUB via @command{grub} 3503 * Device map:: The map between BIOS drives and OS devices 3504 @end menu 3505 3506 3507 @node Basic usage 3508 @section Introduction into the grub shell 3509 3510 You can use the command @command{grub} for installing GRUB under your 3511 operating systems and for a testbed when you add a new feature into GRUB 3512 or when fixing a bug. @command{grub} is almost the same as the Stage 2, 3513 and, in fact, it shares the source code with the Stage 2 and you can use 3514 the same commands (@pxref{Commands}) in @command{grub}. It is emulated by 3515 replacing BIOS calls with UNIX system calls and libc functions. 3516 3517 The command @command{grub} accepts the following options: 3518 3519 @table @option 3520 @item --help 3521 Print a summary of the command-line options and exit. 3522 3523 @item --version 3524 Print the version number of GRUB and exit. 3525 3526 @item --verbose 3527 Print some verbose messages for debugging purpose. 3528 3529 @item --device-map=@var{file} 3530 Use the device map file @var{file}. The format is described in 3531 @ref{Device map}. 3532 3533 @item --no-floppy 3534 Do not probe any floppy drive. This option has no effect if the option 3535 @option{--device-map} is specified (@pxref{Device map}). 3536 3537 @item --probe-second-floppy 3538 Probe the second floppy drive. If this option is not specified, the grub 3539 shell does not probe it, as that sometimes takes a long time. If you 3540 specify the device map file (@pxref{Device map}), the grub shell just 3541 ignores this option. 3542 3543 @item --config-file=@var{file} 3544 Read the configuration file @var{file} instead of 3545 @file{/boot/grub/menu.lst}. The format is the same as the normal GRUB 3546 syntax. See @ref{Filesystem}, for more information. 3547 3548 @item --boot-drive=@var{drive} 3549 Set the stage2 @var{boot_drive} to @var{drive}. This argument should be 3550 an integer (decimal, octal or hexadecimal). 3551 3552 @item --install-partition=@var{par} 3553 Set the stage2 @var{install_partition} to @var{par}. This argument 3554 should be an integer (decimal, octal or hexadecimal). 3555 3556 @item --no-config-file 3557 Do not use the configuration file even if it can be read. 3558 3559 @item --no-curses 3560 Do not use the screen handling interface by the curses even if it is 3561 available. 3562 3563 @item --batch 3564 This option has the same meaning as @samp{--no-config-file --no-curses}. 3565 3566 @item --read-only 3567 Disable writing to any disk. 3568 3569 @item --hold 3570 Wait until a debugger will attach. This option is useful when you want 3571 to debug the startup code. 3572 @end table 3573 3574 3575 @node Installation under UNIX 3576 @section How to install GRUB via @command{grub} 3577 3578 The installation procedure is the same as under the @dfn{native} Stage 3579 2. @xref{Installation}, for more information. The command 3580 @command{grub}-specific information is described here. 3581 3582 What you should be careful about is @dfn{buffer cache}. @command{grub} 3583 makes use of raw devices instead of filesystems that your operating 3584 systems serve, so there exists a potential problem that some cache 3585 inconsistency may corrupt your filesystems. What we recommend is: 3586 3587 @itemize @bullet 3588 @item 3589 If you can unmount drives to which GRUB may write any amount of data, 3590 unmount them before running @command{grub}. 3591 3592 @item 3593 If a drive cannot be unmounted but can be mounted with the read-only 3594 flag, mount it in read-only mode. That should be secure. 3595 3596 @item 3597 If a drive must be mounted with the read-write flag, make sure that no 3598 activity is being done on it while the command @command{grub} is 3599 running. 3600 3601 @item 3602 Reboot your operating system as soon as possible. This is probably not 3603 required if you follow the rules above, but reboot is the most secure 3604 way. 3605 @end itemize 3606 3607 In addition, enter the command @command{quit} when you finish the 3608 installation. That is @emph{very important} because @command{quit} makes 3609 the buffer cache consistent. Do not push @key{C-c}. 3610 3611 If you want to install GRUB non-interactively, specify @samp{--batch} 3612 option in the command-line. This is a simple example: 3613 3614 @example 3615 @group 3616 #!/bin/sh 3617 3618 # Use /usr/sbin/grub if you are on an older system. 3619 /sbin/grub --batch <<EOT 1>/dev/null 2>/dev/null 3620 root (hd0,0) 3621 setup (hd0) 3622 quit 3623 EOT 3624 @end group 3625 @end example 3626 3627 3628 @node Device map 3629 @section The map between BIOS drives and OS devices 3630 3631 When you specify the option @option{--device-map} (@pxref{Basic usage}), 3632 the grub shell creates the @dfn{device map file} automatically unless it 3633 already exists. The file name @file{/boot/grub/device.map} is preferred. 3634 3635 If the device map file exists, the grub shell reads it to map BIOS 3636 drives to OS devices. This file consists of lines like this: 3637 3638 @example 3639 @var{device} @var{file} 3640 @end example 3641 3642 @var{device} is a drive specified in the GRUB syntax (@pxref{Device 3643 syntax}), and @var{file} is an OS file, which is normally a device 3644 file. 3645 3646 The reason why the grub shell gives you the device map file is that it 3647 cannot guess the map between BIOS drives and OS devices correctly in 3648 some environments. For example, if you exchange the boot sequence 3649 between IDE and SCSI in your BIOS, it gets the order wrong. 3650 3651 Thus, edit the file if the grub shell makes a mistake. You can put any 3652 comments in the file if needed, as the grub shell assumes that a line is 3653 just a comment if the first character is @samp{#}. 3654 3655 3656 @node Invoking grub-install 3657 @chapter Invoking grub-install 3658 3659 The program @command{grub-install} installs GRUB on your drive using the 3660 grub shell (@pxref{Invoking the grub shell}). You must specify the 3661 device name on which you want to install GRUB, like this: 3662 3663 @example 3664 grub-install @var{install_device} 3665 @end example 3666 3667 The device name @var{install_device} is an OS device name or a GRUB 3668 device name. 3669 3670 @command{grub-install} accepts the following options: 3671 3672 @table @option 3673 @item --help 3674 Print a summary of the command-line options and exit. 3675 3676 @item --version 3677 Print the version number of GRUB and exit. 3678 3679 @item --force-lba 3680 Force GRUB to use LBA mode even for a buggy BIOS. Use this option only 3681 if your BIOS doesn't work properly in LBA mode even though it supports 3682 LBA mode. 3683 3684 @item --root-directory=@var{dir} 3685 Install GRUB images under the directory @var{dir} instead of the root 3686 directory. This option is useful when you want to install GRUB into a 3687 separate partition or a removable disk. Here is an example in which 3688 you have a separate @dfn{boot} partition which is mounted on 3689 @file{/boot}: 3690 3691 @example 3692 @kbd{grub-install --root-directory=/boot hd0} 3693 @end example 3694 3695 @item --grub-shell=@var{file} 3696 Use @var{file} as the grub shell. You can append arbitrary options to 3697 @var{file} after the file name, like this: 3698 3699 @example 3700 @kbd{grub-install --grub-shell="grub --read-only" /dev/fd0} 3701 @end example 3702 3703 @item --recheck 3704 Recheck the device map, even if @file{/boot/grub/device.map} already 3705 exists. You should use this option whenever you add/remove a disk 3706 into/from your computer. 3707 @end table 3708 3709 3710 @node Invoking grub-md5-crypt 3711 @chapter Invoking grub-md5-crypt 3712 3713 The program @command{grub-md5-crypt} encrypts a password in MD5 format. 3714 This is just a frontend of the grub shell (@pxref{Invoking the grub 3715 shell}). Passwords encrypted by this program can be used with the 3716 command @command{password} (@pxref{password}). 3717 3718 @command{grub-md5-crypt} accepts the following options: 3719 3720 @table @option 3721 @item --help 3722 Print a summary of the command-line options and exit. 3723 3724 @item --version 3725 Print the version information and exit. 3726 3727 @item --grub-shell=@var{file} 3728 Use @var{file} as the grub shell. 3729 @end table 3730 3731 3732 @node Invoking grub-terminfo 3733 @chapter Invoking grub-terminfo 3734 3735 The program @command{grub-terminfo} generates a terminfo command from 3736 a terminfo name (@pxref{terminfo}). The result can be used in the 3737 configuration file, to define escape sequences. Because GRUB assumes 3738 that your terminal is vt100-compatible by default, this would be 3739 useful only if your terminal is uncommon (such as vt52). 3740 3741 @command{grub-terminfo} accepts the following options: 3742 3743 @table @option 3744 @item --help 3745 Print a summary of the command-line options and exit. 3746 3747 @item --version 3748 Print the version information and exit. 3749 @end table 3750 3751 You must specify one argument to this command. For example: 3752 3753 @example 3754 @kbd{grub-terminfo vt52} 3755 @end example 3756 3757 3758 @node Invoking grub-set-default 3759 @chapter Invoking grub-set-default 3760 3761 The program @command{grub-set-default} sets the default boot entry for 3762 GRUB. This automatically creates a file named @file{default} under 3763 your GRUB directory (i.e. @file{/boot/grub}), if it is not 3764 present. This file is used to determine the default boot entry when 3765 GRUB boots up your system when you use @samp{default saved} in your 3766 configuration file (@pxref{default}), and to save next default boot 3767 entry when you use @samp{savedefault} in a boot entry 3768 (@pxref{savedefault}). 3769 3770 @command{grub-set-default} accepts the following options: 3771 3772 @table @option 3773 @item --help 3774 Print a summary of the command-line options and exit. 3775 3776 @item --version 3777 Print the version information and exit. 3778 3779 @item --root-directory=@var{dir} 3780 Use the directory @var{dir} instead of the root directory 3781 (i.e. @file{/}) to define the location of the default file. This 3782 is useful when you mount a disk which is used for another system. 3783 @end table 3784 3785 You must specify a single argument to @command{grub-set-default}. This 3786 argument is normally the number of a default boot entry. For example, 3787 if you have this configuration file: 3788 3789 @example 3790 @group 3791 default saved 3792 timeout 10 3793 3794 title GNU/Hurd 3795 root (hd0,0) 3796 ... 3797 3798 title GNU/Linux 3799 root (hd0,1) 3800 ... 3801 @end group 3802 @end example 3803 3804 and if you want to set the next default boot entry to GNU/Linux, you 3805 may execute this command: 3806 3807 @example 3808 @kbd{grub-set-default 1} 3809 @end example 3810 3811 Because the entry for GNU/Linux is @samp{1}. Note that entries are 3812 counted from zero. So, if you want to specify GNU/Hurd here, then you 3813 should specify @samp{0}. 3814 3815 This feature is very useful if you want to test a new kernel or to 3816 make your system quite robust. @xref{Making your system robust}, for 3817 more hints about how to set up a robust system. 3818 3819 3820 @node Invoking mbchk 3821 @chapter Invoking mbchk 3822 3823 The program @command{mbchk} checks for the format of a Multiboot 3824 kernel. We recommend using this program before booting your own kernel 3825 by GRUB. 3826 3827 @command{mbchk} accepts the following options: 3828 3829 @table @option 3830 @item --help 3831 Print a summary of the command-line options and exit. 3832 3833 @item --version 3834 Print the version number of GRUB and exit. 3835 3836 @item --quiet 3837 Suppress all normal output. 3838 @end table 3839 3840 3841 @node Obtaining and Building GRUB 3842 @appendix How to obtain and build GRUB 3843 3844 @quotation 3845 @strong{Caution:} GRUB requires binutils-2.9.1.0.23 or later because the 3846 GNU assembler has been changed so that it can produce real 16bits 3847 machine code between 2.9.1 and 2.9.1.0.x. See 3848 @uref{http://sources.redhat.com/binutils/}, to obtain information on 3849 how to get the latest version. 3850 @end quotation 3851 3852 GRUB is available from the GNU alpha archive site 3853 @uref{ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/grub} or any of its mirrors. The file 3854 will be named grub-version.tar.gz. The current version is 3855 @value{VERSION}, so the file you should grab is: 3856 3857 @uref{ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/grub/grub-@value{VERSION}.tar.gz} 3858 3859 To unbundle GRUB use the instruction: 3860 3861 @example 3862 @kbd{zcat grub-@value{VERSION}.tar.gz | tar xvf -} 3863 @end example 3864 3865 which will create a directory called @file{grub-@value{VERSION}} with 3866 all the sources. You can look at the file @file{INSTALL} for detailed 3867 instructions on how to build and install GRUB, but you should be able to 3868 just do: 3869 3870 @example 3871 @group 3872 @kbd{cd grub-@value{VERSION}} 3873 @kbd{./configure} 3874 @kbd{make install} 3875 @end group 3876 @end example 3877 3878 This will install the grub shell @file{grub} (@pxref{Invoking the grub 3879 shell}), the Multiboot checker @file{mbchk} (@pxref{Invoking mbchk}), 3880 and the GRUB images. This will also install the GRUB manual. 3881 3882 Also, the latest version is available from the CVS. See 3883 @uref{http://savannah.gnu.org/cvs/?group=grub} for more information. 3884 3885 3886 @node Reporting bugs 3887 @appendix Reporting bugs 3888 3889 These are the guideline for how to report bugs. Take a look at this 3890 list below before you submit bugs: 3891 3892 @enumerate 3893 @item 3894 Before getting unsettled, read this manual through and through. Also, 3895 see the @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/grub-faq.html, GNU GRUB FAQ}. 3896 3897 @item 3898 Always mention the information on your GRUB. The version number and the 3899 configuration are quite important. If you build it yourself, write the 3900 options specified to the configure script and your operating system, 3901 including the versions of gcc and binutils. 3902 3903 @item 3904 If you have trouble with the installation, inform us of how you 3905 installed GRUB. Don't omit error messages, if any. Just @samp{GRUB hangs 3906 up when it boots} is not enough. 3907 3908 The information on your hardware is also essential. These are especially 3909 important: the geometries and the partition tables of your hard disk 3910 drives and your BIOS. 3911 3912 @item 3913 If GRUB cannot boot your operating system, write down 3914 @emph{everything} you see on the screen. Don't paraphrase them, like 3915 @samp{The foo OS crashes with GRUB, even though it can boot with the 3916 bar boot loader just fine}. Mention the commands you executed, the 3917 messages printed by them, and information on your operating system 3918 including the version number. 3919 3920 @item 3921 Explain what you wanted to do. It is very useful to know your purpose 3922 and your wish, and how GRUB didn't satisfy you. 3923 3924 @item 3925 If you can investigate the problem yourself, please do. That will give 3926 you and us much more information on the problem. Attaching a patch is 3927 even better. 3928 3929 When you attach a patch, make the patch in unified diff format, and 3930 write ChangeLog entries. But, even when you make a patch, don't forget 3931 to explain the problem, so that we can understand what your patch is 3932 for. 3933 3934 @item 3935 Write down anything that you think might be related. Please understand 3936 that we often need to reproduce the same problem you encounterred in our 3937 environment. So your information should be sufficient for us to do the 3938 same thing---Don't forget that we cannot see your computer directly. If 3939 you are not sure whether to state a fact or leave it out, state it! 3940 Reporting too many things is much better than omitting something 3941 important. 3942 @end enumerate 3943 3944 If you follow the guideline above, submit a report to the 3945 @uref{http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=grub, Bug Tracking System}. 3946 Alternatively, you can submit a report via electronic mail to 3947 @email{bug-grub@@gnu.org}, but we strongly recommend that you use the 3948 Bug Tracking System, because e-mail can be passed over easily. 3949 3950 Once we get your report, we will try to fix the bugs. 3951 3952 3953 @node Future 3954 @appendix Where GRUB will go 3955 3956 We started the next generation of GRUB, GRUB 2. This will include 3957 internationalization, dynamic module loading, real memory management, 3958 multiple architecture support, a scripting language, and many other 3959 nice feature. If you are interested in the development of GRUB 2, take 3960 a look at @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/grub.html, the 3961 homepage}. 3962 3963 3964 @c Separate the programming guide. 3965 @include internals.texi 3966 3967 3968 @node Index 3969 @unnumbered Index 3970 3971 @c Currently, we use only the Concept Index. 3972 @printindex cp 3973 3974 3975 @bye 3976 3977 Some notes: 3978 3979 This is the second attempt to rewrite the manual. The status is 3980 mostly complete, but I need to check the spelling by ispell, and add 3981 more indices. Perhaps I also have to let some English native speakers 3982 proofread this manual through. My English is syntactically almost 3983 perfect, but sometimes (often?) awful in the nuance. Hehe, I can't be an 3984 English poet for now. 3985