[virt-tools-list] UEFI/Q35: System BootOrder not found
ovirt at fateknollogee.com
ovirt at fateknollogee.com
Sun Aug 27 15:05:31 UTC 2017
Cole & Laszlo, thanks for your help.
Questions:
1 - Should I just create my Fedora virtual machines with UEFI + i440 and
not use Q35.
2 - The Windows 10 vm's I had (from the same host) had no problems
booting up, but they where UEFI + i440
On 2017-08-27 07:04, Laszlo Ersek wrote:
> On 08/26/17 00:23, Cole Robinson wrote:
>> On 08/24/2017 07:34 AM, ovirt at fateknollogee.com wrote:
>>> I used virt-manager (in a previous Fedora 25 install) to create a
>>> Fedora 26
>>> virtual machine.
>>> This Fedora26 image was qcow2 and UEFI (firmware/chipset: EFI/Q35.
>>> The qcow2 images were stored on a separate disk (not on the same disk
>>> as the
>>> Fedora 25 host).
>>>
>>> I changed the host o/s from Fedora 25 to 26.
>>> I did not keep the XML files for the virtual machines.
>>>
>>> Using virt-manager, creating new vm & selecting "import existing disk
>>> image"
>>> does not work.
>>> When I boot the vm, I get an error "System BootOrder not found
>>> Initializing
>>> defaults".
>>> The virtual machine will not boot.
>>>
>>> Any ideas on how to "fix" the error?
>>
>> Good question that I've wondered myself. I assume the failure to boot
>> is
>> because the default generated NVRAM doesn't have whatever boot
>> knowledge is
>> created at VM OS install time.
>>
>> Laszlo, is there some way to regenerate NVRAM for a disk image?
>
> That's actually what's being attempted (when you see the message
> "System
> BootOrder not found Initializing defaults"). The message comes from
> "fallback.efi". You can read all about it in Peter Jones's blog:
>
> https://blog.uncooperative.org/blog/2014/02/06/the-efi-system-partition/
>
> The intent is that "fallback.efi" is booted under the circumstances
> described above, it recreates the UEFI boot option, and from then on
> you
> can boot again normally. Unfortunately "fallback.efi" seems to have a
> bug that triggers an ASSERT() failure in edk2 (you can see it if you
> capture the OVMF debug log in a file), hence the above symptoms.
>
> It can be mitigated manually: when the VM boots, interrupt it at the
> TianoCore splash screen. In the setup utility, navigate to:
>
> Boot Maintenance Manager
> Boot Options
> Add Boot Option
>
> In the file chooser, select
>
> <whatever device you have>/EFI/fedora/shim.efi
>
> and enter a description (name) for the boot option.
>
> Then,
>
> Boot Maintenance Manager
> Boot Options
> Change Boot Order
>
> and move the new boot option to the top of the list.
>
> After you commit the changes, you can forcibly reset the VM, or else
> return to the setup TUI front page, and select Reset there.
>
>> Also, for my own curiosity, what data is stored in the NVRAM that's
>> critical
>> for boot to 'just work' ? Is it just some pointer to the default boot
>> device?
>
> I don't know about "critical", but "important" can be: UEFI boot
> options, Secure Boot-related variables, ... The UEFI spec lists quite a
> few standardized variables. Plus, UEFI variables live under namespaces
> (identified by "vendor GUID"s), so if you have some special app that
> has
> its own UEFI variables (like shim / MokManager for their own
> certificate
> handling), that could be important too.
>
> If you don't really care about UEFI, you just want it to boot, then
> "fallback.efi" should just work. (I'm not sure why it doesn't,
> currently; there have been different issue reports and bugfixes in the
> past.)
>
> Thanks
> Laszlo
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