commit | c4ee28c61d955f598f475ed70951a83ab55d7e45 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org> | Mon Apr 27 19:31:03 2020 -0700 |
committer | Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org> | Thu Dec 03 00:08:03 2020 +0000 |
tree | ce1c4517df8fae76ac435feb22756eb63572d19d | |
parent | 7066a1e7b3f588c8c4ac0394c8c1f35e227dd552 [diff] |
cbfstool: Hide hash printing behind -v and add to parseable output With the upcoming introduction of CBFS verification, a lot more CBFS files will have hashes. The current cbfstool default of always printing hash attributes when they exist will make cbfstool print very messy. Therefore, hide hash attribute output unless the user passed -v. It would also be useful to be able to get file attributes like hashes in machine parseable output. Unfortunately, our machine parseable format (-k) doesn't really seem designed to be extensible. To avoid breaking older parsers, this patch adds new attribute output behind -v (which hopefully no current users pass since it doesn't change anything for -k at the moment). With this patch cbfstool print -k -v may print an arbitrary amount of extra tokens behind the predefined ones on a file line. Tokens always begin with an identifying string (e.g. 'hash'), followed by extra fields that should be separated by colons. Multiple tokens are separated by the normal separator character (tab). cbfstool print -k -v may also print additional information that applies to the whole CBFS on separate lines. These lines will always begin with a '[' (which hopefully nobody would use as a CBFS filename character although we technically have no restrictions at the moment). Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org> Change-Id: I9e16cda393fa0bc1d8734d4b699e30e2ae99a36d Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/c/coreboot/+/41119 Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) <no-reply@coreboot.org> Reviewed-by: Aaron Durbin <adurbin@chromium.org>
coreboot is a Free Software project aimed at replacing the proprietary BIOS (firmware) found in most computers. coreboot performs a little bit of hardware initialization and then executes additional boot logic, called a payload.
With the separation of hardware initialization and later boot logic, coreboot can scale from specialized applications that run directly firmware, run operating systems in flash, load custom bootloaders, or implement firmware standards, like PC BIOS services or UEFI. This allows for systems to only include the features necessary in the target application, reducing the amount of code and flash space required.
coreboot was formerly known as LinuxBIOS.
After the basic initialization of the hardware has been performed, any desired "payload" can be started by coreboot.
See https://www.coreboot.org/Payloads for a list of supported payloads.
coreboot supports a wide range of chipsets, devices, and mainboards.
For details please consult:
ANY_TOOLCHAIN
Kconfig option if you're feeling lucky (no support in this case).Optional:
make menuconfig
and make nconfig
)Please consult https://www.coreboot.org/Build_HOWTO for details.
If you want to test coreboot without any risks before you really decide to use it on your hardware, you can use the QEMU system emulator to run coreboot virtually in QEMU.
Please see https://www.coreboot.org/QEMU for details.
Further details on the project, a FAQ, many HOWTOs, news, development guidelines and more can be found on the coreboot website:
You can contact us directly on the coreboot mailing list:
https://www.coreboot.org/Mailinglist
The copyright on coreboot is owned by quite a large number of individual developers and companies. Please check the individual source files for details.
coreboot is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). Some files are licensed under the "GPL (version 2, or any later version)", and some files are licensed under the "GPL, version 2". For some parts, which were derived from other projects, other (GPL-compatible) licenses may apply. Please check the individual source files for details.
This makes the resulting coreboot images licensed under the GPL, version 2.