README.gnuefi 17 KB

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  1. -------------------------------------------------
  2. Building EFI Applications Using the GNU Toolchain
  3. -------------------------------------------------
  4. David Mosberger <davidm@hpl.hp.com>
  5. 23 September 1999
  6. Copyright (c) 1999-2007 Hewlett-Packard Co.
  7. Copyright (c) 2006-2010 Intel Co.
  8. Last update: 04/09/2007
  9. * Introduction
  10. This document has two parts: the first part describes how to develop
  11. EFI applications for IA-64,x86 and x86_64 using the GNU toolchain and the EFI
  12. development environment contained in this directory. The second part
  13. describes some of the more subtle aspects of how this development
  14. environment works.
  15. * Part 1: Developing EFI Applications
  16. ** Prerequisites:
  17. To develop x86 and x86_64 EFI applications, the following tools are needed:
  18. - gcc-3.0 or newer (gcc 2.7.2 is NOT sufficient!)
  19. As of gnu-efi-3.0b, the Redhat 8.0 toolchain is known to work,
  20. but the Redhat 9.0 toolchain is not currently supported.
  21. - A version of "objcopy" that supports EFI applications. To
  22. check if your version includes EFI support, issue the
  23. command:
  24. objcopy --help
  25. and verify that the line "supported targets" contains the
  26. string "efi-app-ia32" and "efi-app-x86_64". The binutils release
  27. binutils-2.17.50.0.14 supports Intel64 EFI.
  28. - For debugging purposes, it's useful to have a version of
  29. "objdump" that supports EFI applications as well. This
  30. allows inspect and disassemble EFI binaries.
  31. To develop IA-64 EFI applications, the following tools are needed:
  32. - A version of gcc newer than July 30th 1999 (older versions
  33. had problems with generating position independent code).
  34. As of gnu-efi-3.0b, gcc-3.1 is known to work well.
  35. - A version of "objcopy" that supports EFI applications. To
  36. check if your version includes EFI support, issue the
  37. command:
  38. objcopy --help
  39. and verify that the line "supported targets" contains the
  40. string "efi-app-ia64".
  41. - For debugging purposes, it's useful to have a version of
  42. "objdump" that supports EFI applications as well. This
  43. allows inspect and disassemble EFI binaries.
  44. ** Directory Structure
  45. This EFI development environment contains the following
  46. subdirectories:
  47. inc: This directory contains the EFI-related include files. The
  48. files are taken from Intel's EFI source distribution, except
  49. that various fixes were applied to make it compile with the
  50. GNU toolchain.
  51. lib: This directory contains the source code for Intel's EFI library.
  52. Again, the files are taken from Intel's EFI source
  53. distribution, with changes to make them compile with the GNU
  54. toolchain.
  55. gnuefi: This directory contains the glue necessary to convert ELF64
  56. binaries to EFI binaries. Various runtime code bits, such as
  57. a self-relocator are included as well. This code has been
  58. contributed by the Hewlett-Packard Company and is distributed
  59. under the GNU GPL.
  60. apps: This directory contains a few simple EFI test apps.
  61. ** Setup
  62. It is necessary to edit the Makefile in the directory containing this
  63. README file before EFI applications can be built. Specifically, you
  64. should verify that macros CC, AS, LD, AR, RANLIB, and OBJCOPY point to
  65. the appropriate compiler, assembler, linker, ar, and ranlib binaries,
  66. respectively.
  67. If you're working in a cross-development environment, be sure to set
  68. macro ARCH to the desired target architecture ("ia32" for x86, "x86_64" for
  69. x86_64 and "ia64" for IA-64). For convenience, this can also be done from
  70. the make command line (e.g., "make ARCH=ia64").
  71. ** Building
  72. To build the sample EFI applications provided in subdirectory "apps",
  73. simply invoke "make" in the toplevel directory (the directory
  74. containing this README file). This should build lib/libefi.a and
  75. gnuefi/libgnuefi.a first and then all the EFI applications such as a
  76. apps/t6.efi.
  77. ** Running
  78. Just copy the EFI application (e.g., apps/t6.efi) to the EFI
  79. filesystem, boot EFI, and then select "Invoke EFI application" to run
  80. the application you want to test. Alternatively, you can invoke the
  81. Intel-provided "nshell" application and then invoke your test binary
  82. via the command line interface that "nshell" provides.
  83. ** Writing Your Own EFI Application
  84. Suppose you have your own EFI application in a file called
  85. "apps/myefiapp.c". To get this application built by the GNU EFI build
  86. environment, simply add "myefiapp.efi" to macro TARGETS in
  87. apps/Makefile. Once this is done, invoke "make" in the top level
  88. directory. This should result in EFI application apps/myefiapp.efi,
  89. ready for execution.
  90. The GNU EFI build environment allows to write EFI applications as
  91. described in Intel's EFI documentation, except for two differences:
  92. - The EFI application's entry point is always called "efi_main". The
  93. declaration of this routine is:
  94. EFI_STATUS efi_main (EFI_HANDLE image, EFI_SYSTEM_TABLE *systab);
  95. - UNICODE string literals must be written as W2U(L"Sample String")
  96. instead of just L"Sample String". The W2U() macro is defined in
  97. <efilib.h>. This header file also declares the function W2UCpy()
  98. which allows to convert a wide string into a UNICODE string and
  99. store the result in a programmer-supplied buffer.
  100. - Calls to EFI services should be made via uefi_call_wrapper(). This
  101. ensures appropriate parameter passing for the architecture.
  102. * Part 2: Inner Workings
  103. WARNING: This part contains all the gory detail of how the GNU EFI
  104. toolchain works. Normal users do not have to worry about such
  105. details. Reading this part incurs a definite risk of inducing severe
  106. headaches or other maladies.
  107. The basic idea behind the GNU EFI build environment is to use the GNU
  108. toolchain to build a normal ELF binary that, at the end, is converted
  109. to an EFI binary. EFI binaries are really just PE32+ binaries. PE
  110. stands for "Portable Executable" and is the object file format
  111. Microsoft is using on its Windows platforms. PE is basically the COFF
  112. object file format with an MS-DOS2.0 compatible header slapped on in
  113. front of it. The "32" in PE32+ stands for 32 bits, meaning that PE32
  114. is a 32-bit object file format. The plus in "PE32+" indicates that
  115. this format has been hacked to allow loading a 4GB binary anywhere in
  116. a 64-bit address space (unlike ELF64, however, this is not a full
  117. 64-bit object file format because the entire binary cannot span more
  118. than 4GB of address space). EFI binaries are plain PE32+ binaries
  119. except that the "subsystem id" differs from normal Windows binaries.
  120. There are two flavors of EFI binaries: "applications" and "drivers"
  121. and each has there own subsystem id and are identical otherwise. At
  122. present, the GNU EFI build environment supports the building of EFI
  123. applications only, though it would be trivial to generate drivers, as
  124. the only difference is the subsystem id. For more details on PE32+,
  125. see the spec at
  126. http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/specs/msdn_pecoff.htm.
  127. In theory, converting a suitable ELF64 binary to PE32+ is easy and
  128. could be accomplished with the "objcopy" utility by specifying option
  129. --target=efi-app-ia32 (x86) or --target=efi-app-ia64 (IA-64). But
  130. life never is that easy, so here some complicating factors:
  131. (1) COFF sections are very different from ELF sections.
  132. ELF binaries distinguish between program headers and sections.
  133. The program headers describe the memory segments that need to
  134. be loaded/initialized, whereas the sections describe what
  135. constitutes those segments. In COFF (and therefore PE32+) no
  136. such distinction is made. Thus, COFF sections need to be page
  137. aligned and have a size that is a multiple of the page size
  138. (4KB for EFI), whereas ELF allows sections at arbitrary
  139. addresses and with arbitrary sizes.
  140. (2) EFI binaries should be relocatable.
  141. Since EFI binaries are executed in physical mode, EFI cannot
  142. guarantee that a given binary can be loaded at its preferred
  143. address. EFI does _try_ to load a binary at it's preferred
  144. address, but if it can't do so, it will load it at another
  145. address and then relocate the binary using the contents of the
  146. .reloc section.
  147. (3) On IA-64, the EFI entry point needs to point to a function
  148. descriptor, not to the code address of the entry point.
  149. (4) The EFI specification assumes that wide characters use UNICODE
  150. encoding.
  151. ANSI C does not specify the size or encoding that a wide
  152. character uses. These choices are "implementation defined".
  153. On most UNIX systems, the GNU toolchain uses a wchar_t that is
  154. 4 bytes in size. The encoding used for such characters is
  155. (mostly) UCS4.
  156. In the following sections, we address how the GNU EFI build
  157. environment addresses each of these issues.
  158. ** (1) Accommodating COFF Sections
  159. In order to satisfy the COFF constraint of page-sized and page-aligned
  160. sections, the GNU EFI build environment uses the special linker script
  161. in gnuefi/elf_$(ARCH)_efi.lds where $(ARCH) is the target architecture
  162. ("ia32" for x86, "x86_64" for x86_64 and "ia64" for IA-64).
  163. This script is set up to create only eight COFF section, each page aligned
  164. and page sized.These eight sections are used to group together the much
  165. greater number of sections that are typically present in ELF object files.
  166. Specifically:
  167. .hash
  168. Collects the ELF .hash info (this section _must_ be the first
  169. section in order to build a shared object file; the section is
  170. not actually loaded or used at runtime).
  171. .text
  172. Collects all sections containing executable code.
  173. .data
  174. Collects read-only and read-write data, literal string data,
  175. global offset tables, the uninitialized data segment (bss) and
  176. various other sections containing data.
  177. The reason read-only data is placed here instead of the in
  178. .text is to make it possible to disassemble the .text section
  179. without getting garbage due to read-only data. Besides, since
  180. EFI binaries execute in physical mode, differences in page
  181. protection do not matter.
  182. The reason the uninitialized data is placed in this section is
  183. that the EFI loader appears to be unable to handle sections
  184. that are allocated but not loaded from the binary.
  185. .dynamic, .dynsym, .rela, .rel, .reloc
  186. These sections contains the dynamic information necessary to
  187. self-relocate the binary (see below).
  188. A couple of more points worth noting about the linker script:
  189. o On IA-64, the global pointer symbol (__gp) needs to be placed such
  190. that the _entire_ EFI binary can be addressed using the signed
  191. 22-bit offset that the "addl" instruction affords. Specifically,
  192. this means that __gp should be placed at ImageBase + 0x200000.
  193. Strictly speaking, only a couple of symbols need to be addressable
  194. in this fashion, so with some care it should be possible to build
  195. binaries much larger than 4MB. To get a list of symbols that need
  196. to be addressable in this fashion, grep the assembly files in
  197. directory gnuefi for the string "@gprel".
  198. o The link address (ImageBase) of the binary is (arbitrarily) set to
  199. zero. This could be set to something larger to increase the chance
  200. of EFI being able to load the binary without requiring relocation.
  201. However, a start address of 0 makes debugging a wee bit easier
  202. (great for those of us who can add, but not subtract... ;-).
  203. o The relocation related sections (.dynamic, .rel, .rela, .reloc)
  204. cannot be placed inside .data because some tools in the GNU
  205. toolchain rely on the existence of these sections.
  206. o Some sections in the ELF binary intentionally get dropped when
  207. building the EFI binary. Particularly noteworthy are the dynamic
  208. relocation sections for the .plabel and .reloc sections. It would
  209. be _wrong_ to include these sections in the EFI binary because it
  210. would result in .reloc and .plabel being relocated twice (once by
  211. the EFI loader and once by the self-relocator; see below for a
  212. description of the latter). Specifically, only the sections
  213. mentioned with the -j option in the final "objcopy" command are
  214. retained in the EFI binary (see apps/Makefile).
  215. ** (2) Building Relocatable Binaries
  216. ELF binaries are normally linked for a fixed load address and are thus
  217. not relocatable. The only kind of ELF object that is relocatable are
  218. shared objects ("shared libraries"). However, even those objects are
  219. usually not completely position independent and therefore require
  220. runtime relocation by the dynamic loader. For example, IA-64 binaries
  221. normally require relocation of the global offset table.
  222. The approach to building relocatable binaries in the GNU EFI build
  223. environment is to:
  224. (a) build an ELF shared object
  225. (b) link it together with a self-relocator that takes care of
  226. applying the dynamic relocations that may be present in the
  227. ELF shared object
  228. (c) convert the resulting image to an EFI binary
  229. The self-relocator is of course architecture dependent. The x86
  230. version can be found in gnuefi/reloc_ia32.c, the x86_64 version
  231. can be found in gnuefi/reloc_x86_64.c and the IA-64 version can be
  232. found in gnuefi/reloc_ia64.S.
  233. The self-relocator operates as follows: the startup code invokes it
  234. right after EFI has handed off control to the EFI binary at symbol
  235. "_start". Upon activation, the self-relocator searches the .dynamic
  236. section (whose starting address is given by symbol _DYNAMIC) for the
  237. dynamic relocation information, which can be found in the DT_REL,
  238. DT_RELSZ, and DT_RELENT entries of the dynamic table (DT_RELA,
  239. DT_RELASZ, and DT_RELAENT in the case of rela relocations, as is the
  240. case for IA-64). The dynamic relocation information points to the ELF
  241. relocation table. Once this table is found, the self-relocator walks
  242. through it, applying each relocation one by one. Since the EFI
  243. binaries are fully resolved shared objects, only a subset of all
  244. possible relocations need to be supported. Specifically, on x86 only
  245. the R_386_RELATIVE relocation is needed. On IA-64, the relocations
  246. R_IA64_DIR64LSB, R_IA64_REL64LSB, and R_IA64_FPTR64LSB are needed.
  247. Note that the R_IA64_FPTR64LSB relocation requires access to the
  248. dynamic symbol table. This is why the .dynsym section is included in
  249. the EFI binary. Another complication is that this relocation requires
  250. memory to hold the function descriptors (aka "procedure labels" or
  251. "plabels"). Each function descriptor uses 16 bytes of memory. The
  252. IA-64 self-relocator currently reserves a static memory area that can
  253. hold 100 of these descriptors. If the self-relocator runs out of
  254. space, it causes the EFI binary to fail with error code 5
  255. (EFI_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL). When this happens, the manifest constant
  256. MAX_FUNCTION_DESCRIPTORS in gnuefi/reloc_ia64.S should be increased
  257. and the application recompiled. An easy way to count the number of
  258. function descriptors required by an EFI application is to run the
  259. command:
  260. objdump --dynamic-reloc example.so | fgrep FPTR64 | wc -l
  261. assuming "example" is the name of the desired EFI application.
  262. ** (3) Creating the Function Descriptor for the IA-64 EFI Binaries
  263. As mentioned above, the IA-64 PE32+ format assumes that the entry
  264. point of the binary is a function descriptor. A function descriptors
  265. consists of two double words: the first one is the code entry point
  266. and the second is the global pointer that should be loaded before
  267. calling the entry point. Since the ELF toolchain doesn't know how to
  268. generate a function descriptor for the entry point, the startup code
  269. in gnuefi/crt0-efi-ia64.S crafts one manually by with the code:
  270. .section .plabel, "a"
  271. _start_plabel:
  272. data8 _start
  273. data8 __gp
  274. this places the procedure label for entry point _start in a section
  275. called ".plabel". Now, the only problem is that _start and __gp need
  276. to be relocated _before_ EFI hands control over to the EFI binary.
  277. Fortunately, PE32+ defines a section called ".reloc" that can achieve
  278. this. Thus, in addition to manually crafting the function descriptor,
  279. the startup code also crafts a ".reloc" section that has will cause
  280. the EFI loader to relocate the function descriptor before handing over
  281. control to the EFI binary (again, see the PECOFF spec mentioned above
  282. for details).
  283. A final question may be why .plabel and .reloc need to go in their own
  284. COFF sections. The answer is simply: we need to be able to discard
  285. the relocation entries that are generated for these sections. By
  286. placing them in these sections, the relocations end up in sections
  287. ".rela.plabel" and ".rela.reloc" which makes it easy to filter them
  288. out in the filter script. Also, the ".reloc" section needs to be in
  289. its own section so that the objcopy program can recognize it and can
  290. create the correct directory entries in the PE32+ binary.
  291. ** (4) Convenient and Portable Generation of UNICODE String Literals
  292. As of gnu-efi-3.0, we make use (and somewhat abuse) the gcc option
  293. that forces wide characters (WCHAR_T) to use short integers (2 bytes)
  294. instead of integers (4 bytes). This way we match the Unicode character
  295. size. By abuse, we mean that we rely on the fact that the regular ASCII
  296. characters are encoded the same way between (short) wide characters
  297. and Unicode and basically only use the first byte. This allows us
  298. to just use them interchangeably.
  299. The gcc option to force short wide characters is : -fshort-wchar
  300. * * * The End * * *