Am Wed, 17 Sep 2014 01:25:07 +0300
Andriy Gapon <a...@freebsd.org> schrieb:

> On 17/09/2014 00:32, Ed Maste wrote:
> > On 16 September 2014 17:03, O. Hartmann <ohart...@zedat.fu-berlin.de> wrote:
> >>
> >> In that case, is it still /boot/boot1.efifat or is it /boot/boot1.efi? 
> >> What is the
> >> difference? Is the efi partition FAT?
> > 
> > An EFI system partition (ESP) is a FAT-formatted partition with a
> > specific GPT or MBR identifier and file system hierarchy; EFI firmware
> > will try to load /EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI from the ESP.
> 
> A very useful read about how EFI boot process works and how different OSes 
> boot
> on top of it:
> http://homepage.ntlworld.com/jonathan.deboynepollard/FGA/efi-boot-process.html

Great!

> 
> > boot1.efi is an EFI application - that is, a PECOFF format binary.  It
> > searches for a UFS filesystem and loads loader.efi from that.  It is
> > intended to simplify the UEFI boot process, so that loader.efi, the
> > .4th files, loader.conf etc. do not all need to be installed in the
> > ESP.
> > 
> > boot1.efifat is a FAT filesystem image that contains a copy of
> > boot1.efi as /EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI.  It exists so that the installer
> > can treat it as opaque bootcode, like other boot schemes.  It's
> > certainly possible to create a partition, use newfs_msdos to format
> > it, and copy in boot1.efi instead.
> > 
> >> It is one disk, dedicated to FreeBSD (a laptop disk). Is there any 
> >> documentation
> >> readable for non-developer for that matter? I'm curious about how EFI 
> >> works on
> >> FreeBSD.
> > 
> > Better user-facing documentation is in progress; for now the best
> > source is probably the wik.
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> > 
> 
> 


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