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49ba9447 1\r
2=== OVMF OVERVIEW ===\r
3\r
4The Open Virtual Machine Firmware (OVMF) project aims\r
5to support firmware for Virtual Machines using the edk2\r
6code base. More information can be found at:\r
7\r
c315da0a 8http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/tianocore/index.php?title=OVMF\r
49ba9447 9\r
10=== STATUS ===\r
11\r
12Current status: Alpha\r
13\r
14Current capabilities:\r
15* IA32 and X64 architectures\r
73f4a1c0 16* QEMU (0.10.0 or later)\r
49ba9447 17 - Video, keyboard, IDE, CD-ROM, serial\r
18 - Runs UEFI shell\r
7416f4eb 19 - Optional NIC support. Requires QEMU (0.12.2 or later)\r
73f4a1c0 20* UEFI Linux boots\r
21* UEFI Windows 8 boots\r
49ba9447 22\r
23=== FUTURE PLANS ===\r
24\r
25* Stabilize UEFI Linux boot\r
26* Test/Stabilize UEFI Self-Certification Tests (SCT) results\r
27\r
37e97c51 28=== BUILDING OVMF ===\r
29\r
30Pre-requisites:\r
31* Build environment capable of build the edk2 MdeModulePkg.\r
66325870 32* A properly configured ASL compiler:\r
33 - Intel ASL compiler: Available from http://www.acpica.org\r
34 - Microsoft ASL compiler: Available from http://www.acpi.info\r
37e97c51 35\r
36Update Conf/target.txt ACTIVE_PLATFORM for OVMF:\r
37 PEI arch DXE arch UEFI interfaces\r
38* OvmfPkg/OvmfPkgIa32.dsc IA32 IA32 IA32\r
39* OvmfPkg/OvmfPkgIa32X64.dsc IA32 X64 X64\r
40* OvmfPkg/OvmfPkgX64.dsc X64 X64 X64\r
41\r
2dae09a5 42Update Conf/target.txt TARGET_ARCH based on the .dsc file:\r
43 TARGET_ARCH\r
44* OvmfPkg/OvmfPkgIa32.dsc IA32\r
45* OvmfPkg/OvmfPkgIa32X64.dsc IA32 X64\r
46* OvmfPkg/OvmfPkgX64.dsc X64\r
47\r
48Following the edk2 build process, you will find the OVMF binaries\r
49under the $WORKSPACE/Build/*/*/FV directory. The actual path will\r
50depend on how your build is configured. You can expect to find\r
51these binary outputs:\r
7416f4eb 52* OVMF.FD\r
66325870 53 - Please note! This filename has changed. Older releases used OVMF.Fv.\r
922f593a 54* OvmfVideo.rom\r
2dae09a5 55\r
56More information on building OVMF can be found at:\r
c315da0a 57\r
58http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/tianocore/index.php?title=How_to_build_OVMF\r
37e97c51 59\r
60=== RUNNING OVMF on QEMU ===\r
61\r
62* QEMU 0.9.1 or later is required.\r
7416f4eb 63* Either copy, rename or symlink OVMF.FD => bios.bin\r
37e97c51 64* Be sure to use qemu-system-x86_64, if you are using and X64 firmware.\r
65 (qemu-system-x86_64 works for the IA32 firmware as well, of course.)\r
2dae09a5 66* Use the QEMU -L parameter to specify the directory where the bios.bin\r
aadb1d09 67 file is located.\r
37e97c51 68* Optionally you can use the QEMU -serial command to capture the\r
69 OVMF debug messages. For example: -serial file:serial.log\r
70* The EFI shell is built into OVMF builds at this time, so it should\r
71 run automatically if a UEFI boot application is not found on the\r
72 removable media.\r
aed8e2ec 73* On Linux, newer version of QEMU may enable KVM feature, and this might\r
74 cause OVMF to fail to boot. The QEMU '-no-kvm' may allow OVMF to boot.\r
5a9745b9 75\r
76=== Build Scripts ===\r
77\r
66325870 78On systems with the bash shell you can use OvmfPkg/build.sh to simplify\r
79building and running OVMF.\r
5a9745b9 80\r
81So, for example, to build + run OVMF X64:\r
66325870 82$ OvmfPkg/build.sh -a X64\r
83$ OvmfPkg/build.sh -a X64 qemu\r
5a9745b9 84\r
85And to run a 64-bit UEFI bootable ISO image:\r
66325870 86$ OvmfPkg/build.sh -a X64 qemu -cdrom /path/to/disk-image.iso\r
87\r
88To build a 32-bit OVMF without debug serial messages using GCC 4.5:\r
89$ OvmfPkg/build.sh -a IA32 -b RELEASE -t GCC45\r
5a9745b9 90\r
aed8e2ec 91=== Network Support ===\r
92\r
93To add network drivers to OVMF:\r
94\r
95* Download UEFI drivers for the e1000 NIC\r
96 - http://downloadcenter.intel.com/Detail_Desc.aspx?agr=Y&DwnldID=17515&lang=eng\r
97 - Install the drivers into a directory called Intel3.5 in your WORKSPACE\r
98\r
99* Include the drivers in OVMF during the build:\r
100 - Add '-D NETWORK_ENABLE' to your build command\r
101 - For example: build -D NETWORK_ENABLE\r
102\r
103* Use the QEMU -net parameter to enable NIC support.\r
104 - QEMU does not support UEFI DHCP or UEFI PXE Boot, so long timeouts will\r
105 occur when NICs are enabled. The long timeouts can be avoided by\r
106 interrupts the boot sequence by pressing a key when the logo appears.\r
107 - Example: Enable e1000 NIC with a DHCP server and restrict packet\r
108 forwarding:\r
109 -net nic,model=e1000 -net user,restrict=yes -net user,dhcpstart=10.0.2.10\r
110 - Example: Enable e1000 NIC with a DHCP server, restrict packet forwarding,\r
111 and generate PCAP file:\r
112 -net nic,model=e1000 -net user,restrict=yes -net user,dhcpstart=10.0.2.10\r
113 -net dump,file=a.pcap\r
114 - Example: Enable 2 e1000 NICs with a DHCP server and restrict\r
115 packet forwarding:\r
116 -net nic,model=e1000,addr=3 -net nic,model=e1000,addr=4\r
117 -net user,restrict=yes -net user,dhcpstart=10.0.2.10\r
118\r
0b5a5022 119=== UNIXGCC Debug ===\r
120\r
121If you build with the UNIXGCC toolchain, then debugging will be disabled\r
122due to larger image sizes being produced by the UNIXGCC toolchain. The\r
123first choice recommendation is to use GCC44 or newer instead.\r
124\r
125If you must use UNIXGCC, then you can override the build options for\r
126particular libraries and modules in the .dsc to re-enable debugging\r
127selectively. For example:\r
128 [Components]\r
129 OvmfPkg/Library/PlatformBdsLib/PlatformBdsLib.inf {\r
130 <BuildOptions>\r
131 GCC:*_*_*_CC_FLAGS = -UMDEPKG_NDEBUG\r
132 }\r
133 IntelFrameworkModulePkg/Universal/BdsDxe/BdsDxe.inf {\r
134 <BuildOptions>\r
135 GCC:*_*_*_CC_FLAGS = -UMDEPKG_NDEBUG\r
136 }\r
137\r