grubeditor.md 5.7 KB

GRUB EDITOR

Libreboot ROM images now support fluid grub.cfg and grubtest.cfg configuration editing with the grubeditor.sh script! Instead of manually running cbfstool to manipulate these configuration files, this script will handle the work for you so you can focus on actually modifying your GRUB configuration files to your setup's needs.

At the time of this writing, grubeditor.sh supports extracting and editing either the grub.cfg or grubtest.cfg file in any cbfstool-compatible Libreboot ROM image that contains these files, even ones that have been previously modified. It can also swap these configuration files in an existing ROM image, handy if you have a working grubtest.cfg and want to make it the default or if you broke the main grub.cfg and know that your grubtest.cfg still works. Lastly, it can also run diff on these two configuration files to show you how they differ.

Requirements

grubeditor.sh requires an x86, x86_64, or armv7l environment, since these are the environments for which cbfstools binaries are provided. Additionally, grubeditor.sh needs a Bash environment with extended getopt functionality that can run the diff command and write to /tmp. Lastly, the script expects to live in the top directory of the Libreboot utilities package so it can properly call cbfstool.

Chances are that you already meet these requirements if you are on a Linux environment of the listed architectures and downloaded the Libreboot utilities package from an official source. If not, it shouldn't be too hard to use a Linux LiveCD of your choice which provides these essentials.

Optionally, you should make sure your EDITOR variable is set. Otherwise, grubeditor.sh will default to using vi, which may not exist on your system. You can override this default or the contents of your EDITOR variable using the -e or --editor command.

Usage help

grubeditor.sh takes a number of options, the only one which is required being a valid Libreboot ROM image that uses the GRUB2 payload and contains both grub.cfg and grubtest.cfg files. Additional options should come before the ROM image file on the command line.

grubeditor.sh supports combining several short options with a single hyphen like -ris, but you can also list them separately like -r -i -s. Long options must always be written as standalone arguments.

You can use the -h or --help option to view a brief summary of the options available. Consider this guide a more extensive version of this screen.

Lastly, you can check which version of grubeditor.sh you are using with the -v or --version option.

Editing configuration files

Invoked without any arguments except for the ROM image, grubeditor.sh will attempt to extract the grubtest.cfg file from the provided ROM image and launch it in your editor of choice. If you make changes to the file, grubeditor.sh will incorporate your changes into a new ROM image with the same name in the same directory, except that the new ROM file will end with ".modified". You can then flash this ROM image to your platform's BIOS chip.

If you would prefer to edit the actual grub.cfg configuration file, use the -r or the --realcfg option. Everything else will work the same except that your editor will open the grub.cfg instead.

If you would prefer to overwrite your existing ROM image instead of creating a new one ending in ".modified" use the -i or --inplace option. Naturally, you can combine this option with the -r/--realcfg option described above.

Swapping grub.cfg and grubtest.cfg

grubeditor.sh supports swapping the grub.cfg and grubtest.cfg configuration files with the -s or --swap option. This will create a new ROM image alongside the existing ROM image ending with ".modified" which has these files swapped. Naturally, you can request this operation overwrite the existing file instead using the -i/--inplace option.

Note that the script will automatically modify the "Load test configuration (grubtest.cfg)" menu entry in both configuration files during this operation. If this was not done, these entries would end up being self-referential after the rename, breaking their intended functionality of changing between the configuration files.

For best results, please do not modify this section without studying the source code of grubeditor.sh and making sure your edits do not impact the script's ability to perform this modification

Swapping grub.cfg and grubtest.cfg

grubeditor.sh supports comparing grub.cfg and grubtest.cfg files for differences with the -d or --diffcfg option. This uses the diff command by default, but if you want to use another program (e.g. vimdiff), you can specify it with the -D or --differ option. Note that this mode is only intended to show differences in the files and does not support updating the configs themselves, so any changes you make in an interactive differ will be ignored.

Extracting a configuration file

You can simply extract a configuration file using the -x or --extract option. This option is responsive to the -r/--realcfg option for choosing between grubtest.cfg and grub.cfg.

Pending development

TODO:

  • allow injecting configuration files to complement the extractor.
  • detect potentially devastating corner cases, however rare they may actually be
  • i can't specify a quoted command line with arguments to -e or -D, why?
  • support editing both config files if using an interactive differ
  • work with other types of files besides the grub configuration files.

Conclusion

I hope that grubeditor.sh will significantly ease modifying your configuration files in your Libreboot ROM files.

Should you find any bugs or want any feature requests, please don't hesitate to email me or bug me on IRC.