NAME
UEFI
—
Unified Extensible Firmware Interface
bootstrapping procedures
DESCRIPTION
The UEFI
Unified Extensible Firmware
Interface provides boot- and run-time services to operating systems.
UEFI
is a replacement for the legacy BIOS on the
i386 and amd64 CPU architectures, and is also used on arm, arm64 and riscv
architectures.
The UEFI specification is the successor to the Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) specification. The terms UEFI and EFI are often used interchangeably.
The UEFI
boot process loads system
bootstrap code located in an EFI System Partition (ESP). The ESP is a GPT or
MBR partition with a specific identifier that contains an
msdosfs(4) FAT file system with a specified file
hierarchy.
Partition Scheme | ESP Identifier |
GPT | C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B |
MBR | 0xEF |
The UEFI
boot process proceeds as
follows:
UEFI
firmware runs at power up and searches for an OS loader in the EFI system partition. The path to the loader may be set by an EFI environment variable managed by efibootmgr(8). If not set, an architecture-specific default is used.Architecture Default Path amd64 /EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI arm /EFI/BOOT/BOOTARM.EFI arm64 /EFI/BOOT/BOOTAA64.EFI i386 /EFI/BOOT/BOOTIA32.EFI riscv /EFI/BOOT/BOOTRISCV64.EFI The default
UEFI
boot configuration for FreeBSD installs loader.efi in the default path.- loader.efi reads boot configuration from /boot.config or /boot/config.
- loader.efi loads and boots the kernel, as described in loader.efi(8).
The vt(4) system console is automatically selected when booting
via UEFI
.
FILES
UEFI
bootstrap
- /boot/loader.efi
- Final stage bootstrap
- /boot/kernel/kernel
- Default kernel
- /boot/kernel.old/kernel
- Typical non-default kernel (optional)
SEE ALSO
msdosfs(4), vt(4), boot.config(5), boot(8), efibootmgr(8), efidp(8), efivar(8), gpart(8), loader.efi(8), uefisign(8)
HISTORY
EFI boot support for the ia64 architecture first appeared in
FreeBSD 5.0. UEFI
boot
support for amd64 first appeared in FreeBSD 10.1;
for arm64 in FreeBSD 11.0; for armv7 in
FreeBSD 12.0; and for riscv in
FreeBSD 13.0.
BUGS
There is no support for 32-bit i386 booting via UEFI.