title: Software and hardware freedom status for each mainboard supported by Libreboot x-toc-enable: true ...
This page documents how Libreboot's binary blob reduction policy, adopted in November 2022, is implemented in practise, especially that line which says: "if free software can be used, it must be used."
Libreboot uses coreboot for hardware initialisation. While coreboot is nominally free or open source software, on some (not all) platforms, coreboot requires certain vendor files for things like raminit. All boards currently supported by Libreboot can be initialised entirely with free, libre or open source code from coreboot itself, because Libreboot currently only focuses on such mainboards. Libreboot's goal is to eventually support all mainboards from coreboot.
A more pragmatic binary blob reduction policy was adopted by Libreboot during November 2022, as part of an ongoing campaign to support more hardware (from coreboot) within Libreboot, so as to provide many more people with coreboot which, regardless of freedom status, does provide increased software freedom compared to fully proprietary boot firmware which is what most people would otherwise use; Libreboot's modern policy is thus pragmatic, further advancing the cause of software freedom.
Libreboot's previous policy was to ban all binary blobs. This actively harmed the Free Software movement, by reducing the number of people who can realistically use coreboot because, to this day, nothing quite like Libreboot yet exists. Libreboot's main purpose is to make coreboot as easy to use as possible for normal, non-technical users who like the idea of coreboot but who are otherwise not competent to configure it from scratch. Such harm was corrected, in November 2022.
For context about certain topics, please read:
https://doc.coreboot.org/getting_started/architecture.html
The reason this distinction matters (referring specifically to coreboot's side of the initialisation) will become clearer, in the following sections:
A universal exemption is made in Libreboot, permitting (read: requiring, per project policy) the inclusion of CPU microcode updates if available. You can read more about that and the reasons why by reading the following article:
Libreboot supports several mainboards using Intel platforms. Of these, there are essentially two class of machine (for the purposes of this article):
What does descriptor mean? Well, traditionally, the main flash IC (containing the boot firmware, commonly referred to as the BIOS) on Intel machines, contained only x86 executable code, responsible for initialising all of the hardware, such as the CPU, memory controller and peripherals. This is what we will refer to as the descriptorless setup; in such configurations, the Intel ME firmware is absent by default.
In a descriptor configuration, the flash is divided into regions such as:
me_cleaner
program) reconfigures it in such
a way where it is disabled during machine initialisation.Basically, you can think of such "regions" as analogous to partitions on a hard drive. What's important is that the flash IC is divided into such regions, where each region is intended for a specific purpose.
The contents of the descriptor and GbE regions are described by Intel datasheets, but those datasheets often contain reserved sections where parts are left undocumented. Reverse engineering efforts over the years have documented some of these blank spots.
Libreboot does not distribute the Intel ME firmware in any way, whether in
the Git repository or in releases. Where it is needed, Libreboot provides
scripts that automatically fetch and install it, in a neutered (disabled)
state by running the me_cleaner
program. This is completely automated.
Please read:
https://github.com/corna/me_cleaner/wiki/How-does-it-work%3F
The BringUp code of Intel ME is all that remains, in Libreboot configurations. ME BringUp (BUP) is analogous to coreboot, providing initialisation for the ME itself; by that same analogy, the way Libreboot configures it is similar to running coreboot without a payload. The ME is initialised, to a state where it can run code, but then it doesn't actually run code. It is thus disabled.
In other words, a neutered Intel ME setup is completely benign, both from a software freedom and security perspective. It becomes a useless, unused processor, that most people in the real world will never want to use anyway. With this perspective, we see that Intel ME is now entirely inconsequential to the average user.
Released Libreboot ROM images, provided pre-compiled, do not include the ME firmware at all; they are scrubbed, by automated release scripts when they're preparing a release. If you're building from source, the Libreboot build system will automatically download it (from the vendor), neuter it and then insert it; on release ROMs, the same scripts used by the build systems can (must) be run manually, accomplishing the same result after the fact. Please read: docs/install/ivy_has_common.md
The ME firmware is required on almost all Intel platforms, or the machine will turn off after 30 minutes (or it will not boot, if the ME also controls whether the CPU comes out of reset).
Libreboot provides a way to fully remove the ME firmware, while retaining full use of the machine, on GM45 platforms with ICH9M southbridge. These are laptops: ThinkPad X200/T400/T500/W500 and so on of that generation. See: docs/install/ich9utils.md
The ich9utils
software is provided by Libreboot. The ich9gen
utility was
specifically written by Leah Rowe, in 2014 and improved incrementally since.
On newer platforms as alluded to above, me_cleaner
is used instead.
Native video initialisation is supported and enabled, for all supported Intel platforms that have it. The source code is provided by coreboot, under free license.
In some cases, a laptop may have a graphics chip that is unsupported by
coreboot. In this situation, a vendor file called a VGA Option ROM must be
used. Libreboot has experimental support for Nvidia GPU models of the Dell
Latitude E6400, in an experimental branch where the build system automatically
downloads the VGA ROM for it. This is currently not present in releases, or
in the stable branch of lbmk
.
In other instances, a machine may have two graphics devices, where one has native (free/libre) initialisation provided by coreboot. In these situations, it is possible to insert a VGA ROM for the other one; Libreboot currently lacks documentation for this, but it has been tested. Example: Dual Intel/Nvidia graphics on some ivybridge or haswell thinkpads.
For add-on GPUs, SeaBIOS (payload) can typically scan a VGA ROM present on the card and execute it. This has been tested on certain desktop mainboards that Libreboot supports, and works just fine; Libreboot does not need to handle these files at all.
Libreboot's default is always freedom, when feasible in practise. Users who wish to have use of these additional GPUs, on such hardware, must take stock of the following paragraph in Libreboot policy:
"The principles above should apply to default configurations. However, libreboot is to be configurable, allowing the user to do whatever they like." - configurable, it most certainly is! See: docs/maintain/
Libreboot has fully libre initialisation available for all Intel memory controllers on supported platforms. This includes Haswell (ThinkPad T440p and W541) as of Libreboot 20230319 or higher.
Mostly free software, except for the requirement on daisy
and peach
mainboards
to include BL1 bootloader files from the vendor. These are:
This article has thoroughly explained, in a detailed overview, the precise nature as to what vendor files are accomodated for in Libreboot. Again, fully libre init from coreboot is available on all currently supported boards.
From coreboot is the critical aspect of this, but Libreboot's full scope is the main flash IC which (in some cases) contains software outside of coreboot.
Here is a list, for each board, of those files:
Neutered ME required on these targets: t420_8mb
, t420s_8mb
, t430_12mb
,
t440plibremrc_12mb
, t520_8mb
, t530_12mb
, w530_12mb
,
w541_12mb
, x220_8mb
, x230_12mb
, x230_16mb
,
x230edp_12mb
, x230t_12mb
, x230t_16mb
, hp8200sff
, hp2560p_8mb
,
hp2570p_16mb
, hp8300usdt_16mb
, hp2170p_16mb
, hp9470m_16mb
,
hp820g2_12mb
, t1650_12mb
and the OptiPlex 9020 ports, also
Sandybridge/Ivybridge/Haswell Dell Latitude.
As stated, Libreboot provides this in a state where the ME is no longer a
threat to security. It initialises itself, but then does nothing, so it's
disabled. This is done using me_cleaner
. See:
https://github.com/corna/me_cleaner/wiki/How-does-it-work%3F
This applies to the following targets: hp2170p_16mb
, hp2560p_8mb
,
hp2570p_16mb
, hp8470pintel_16mb
, hp9470m_16mb
.
EC firmware
is inserted into main boot flash, rather than being on a separate
IC. This is better because libre replacements would be more easy to install in
the future, and reverse engineering is made much easier by it. Libreboot's
build system handles such firmware in a script, automatically downloading
it during the build process. Libreboot 20230423 onwards does scrub EC firmware
and provide functionality in a special script, to insert them with cbfstool
at the correct offset as defined by coreboot config for each board.
This is a tiny firmware required for fan control, on Dell Precision T1650.
Microcode updates for CPU provided on all x86 platforms, by default. Not technically required, but highly recommended. To remove, do:
cbfstool filename.rom remove -n cpu_microcode_blob.bin
On ASUS KFSN4-DRE, KCMA-D8 and KGPE-D16 boards, do this instead:
cbfstool filename.rom remove -n microcode_amd.bin
cbfstool filename.rom remove -n microcode_amd_fam15h.bin
Removal of microcode updates will affect system stability in a negative way, introducing non-standard broken behaviour and it may result in the machine being unable to boot properly. In other cases, doing so may break features such as S3 suspend/resume.
CPU microcode files included by default, on all x86 boards. While not needed in most cases, their use is highly recommended. For reasons why, see: news/policy.md#more-detailed-insight-about-microcode
Intel Flash Descriptors are provided as blobs on some boards, but these are not software blobs. They are configurations provided in a binary format, fully readable by libre software. For example:
ich9gen
program generates ICH9M flash descriptors from scratch.ifdtool
program has extensive features for manipulating Intel
flash descriptors.bincfg
program generates any sort of binary from a .spec
file
which can describe any binary format in a human readable format. It contains
several flash descriptors for several platforms, but Libreboot does not use
these.Intel GbE NVM config (configuration data, binary-encoded, for gigabit NIC):
ich9gen
program also generates GbE NVM images specifically
for Intel NICs used in GM45 thinkpads.nvmutil
program can manipulate GbE NVM imagesBL1 bootloader needed on: daisy_snow
, daisy_spring
and peach_pit
.
These boards are currently not present. They were removed from Libreboot, because the build system does not yet auto-insert the BL1 files. The boards are otherwise believed to work, using Alper's port of U-Boot in Libreboot.
From the above, you can see that Libreboot really does implement a binary blobs reduction policy, with the emphasis on reduction being most critical. It can be asserted that Libreboot does in fact provide a reasonable level of software freedom, on all boards.
Libreboot could add a lot more such files for many platforms, to enable various extra features, that it instead avoids adding, precisely because the purpose of the Libreboot project is to promote libre software and minimise the power that proprietary software developers have over users.
I hope this article provided food for thought.
None of the currently supported Libreboot machines have libre hardware, in the sense that ICs do not come with publicly available verilog files and the like. You could not manufacture your own replacements of these machines.
Some schematics and boardview files describing the circuit boards of each machine are available online, through various channels. You have to search for them yourself; one day, the Right To Repair movement will hopefully bring about universal access to such documents by the public.
This article has described code what goes in the main boot flash, but any computer you buy will have tons of firmware elsewhere in the system. Some insights are available in the Libreboot FAQ. See:
Of these, the most critical are HDD/SSD firmware and EC firmware. The problems described in those two links apply to many different computers, including Libreboot ones, and virtually every other computer in the world.