2022-05-11 14:06:32 +00:00
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.. _chapter-systembooting:
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Host Bootloader
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---------------
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`Proxmox Backup`_ currently uses one of two bootloaders depending on the disk setup
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selected in the installer.
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For EFI Systems installed with ZFS as the root filesystem ``systemd-boot`` is
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used. All other deployments use the standard ``grub`` bootloader (this usually
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also applies to systems which are installed on top of Debian).
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.. _systembooting-installer-part-scheme:
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Partitioning Scheme Used by the Installer
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The `Proxmox Backup`_ installer creates 3 partitions on all disks selected for
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installation.
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The created partitions are:
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* a 1 MB BIOS Boot Partition (gdisk type EF02)
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* a 512 MB EFI System Partition (ESP, gdisk type EF00)
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* a third partition spanning the set ``hdsize`` parameter or the remaining space
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used for the chosen storage type
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Systems using ZFS as root filesystem are booted with a kernel and initrd image
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stored on the 512 MB EFI System Partition. For legacy BIOS systems, ``grub`` is
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used, for EFI systems ``systemd-boot`` is used. Both are installed and configured
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to point to the ESPs.
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``grub`` in BIOS mode (``--target i386-pc``) is installed onto the BIOS Boot
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Partition of all selected disks on all systems booted with ``grub`` (These are
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all installs with root on ``ext4`` or ``xfs`` and installs with root on ZFS on
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non-EFI systems).
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.. _systembooting-proxmox-boot-tool:
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Synchronizing the content of the ESP with ``proxmox-boot-tool``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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``proxmox-boot-tool`` is a utility used to keep the contents of the EFI System
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Partitions properly configured and synchronized. It copies certain kernel
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versions to all ESPs and configures the respective bootloader to boot from
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the ``vfat`` formatted ESPs. In the context of ZFS as root filesystem this means
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that you can use all optional features on your root pool instead of the subset
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which is also present in the ZFS implementation in ``grub`` or having to create a
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separate small boot-pool (see: `Booting ZFS on root with grub
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<https://github.com/zfsonlinux/zfs/wiki/Debian-Stretch-Root-on-ZFS>`_).
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In setups with redundancy all disks are partitioned with an ESP, by the
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installer. This ensures the system boots even if the first boot device fails
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or if the BIOS can only boot from a particular disk.
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The ESPs are not kept mounted during regular operation. This helps to prevent
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filesystem corruption to the ``vfat`` formatted ESPs in case of a system crash,
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and removes the need to manually adapt ``/etc/fstab`` in case the primary boot
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device fails.
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``proxmox-boot-tool`` handles the following tasks:
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* formatting and setting up a new partition
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* copying and configuring new kernel images and initrd images to all listed ESPs
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* synchronizing the configuration on kernel upgrades and other maintenance tasks
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* managing the list of kernel versions which are synchronized
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* configuring the boot-loader to boot a particular kernel version (pinning)
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You can view the currently configured ESPs and their state by running:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool status
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.. _systembooting-proxmox-boot-setup:
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Setting up a new partition for use as synced ESP
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To format and initialize a partition as synced ESP, e.g., after replacing a
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failed vdev in an rpool, ``proxmox-boot-tool`` from ``pve-kernel-helper`` can be used.
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WARNING: the ``format`` command will format the ``<partition>``, make sure to pass
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in the right device/partition!
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For example, to format an empty partition ``/dev/sda2`` as ESP, run the following:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool format /dev/sda2
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To setup an existing, unmounted ESP located on ``/dev/sda2`` for inclusion in
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`Proxmox Backup`_'s kernel update synchronization mechanism, use the following:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool init /dev/sda2
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Afterwards `/etc/kernel/proxmox-boot-uuids`` should contain a new line with the
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UUID of the newly added partition. The ``init`` command will also automatically
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trigger a refresh of all configured ESPs.
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.. _systembooting-proxmox-boot-refresh:
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Updating the configuration on all ESPs
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To copy and configure all bootable kernels and keep all ESPs listed in
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``/etc/kernel/proxmox-boot-uuids`` in sync you just need to run:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool refresh
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(The equivalent to running ``update-grub`` systems with ``ext4`` or ``xfs`` on root).
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This is necessary should you make changes to the kernel commandline, or want to
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sync all kernels and initrds.
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.. NOTE:: Both ``update-initramfs`` and ``apt`` (when necessary) will automatically
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trigger a refresh.
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Kernel Versions considered by ``proxmox-boot-tool``
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The following kernel versions are configured by default:
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* the currently running kernel
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* the version being newly installed on package updates
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* the two latest already installed kernels
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* the latest version of the second-to-last kernel series (e.g. 5.0, 5.3), if applicable
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* any manually selected kernels
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Manually keeping a kernel bootable
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Should you wish to add a certain kernel and initrd image to the list of
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bootable kernels use ``proxmox-boot-tool kernel add``.
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For example run the following to add the kernel with ABI version ``5.0.15-1-pve``
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to the list of kernels to keep installed and synced to all ESPs:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool kernel add 5.0.15-1-pve
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``proxmox-boot-tool kernel list`` will list all kernel versions currently selected
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for booting:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool kernel list
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Manually selected kernels:
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5.0.15-1-pve
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Automatically selected kernels:
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5.0.12-1-pve
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4.15.18-18-pve
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Run ``proxmox-boot-tool kernel remove`` to remove a kernel from the list of
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manually selected kernels, for example:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool kernel remove 5.0.15-1-pve
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.. NOTE:: It's required to run ``proxmox-boot-tool refresh`` to update all EFI System
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Partitions (ESPs) after a manual kernel addition or removal from above.
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.. _systembooting-determine-bootloader:
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Determine which Bootloader is Used
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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2022-05-11 14:06:33 +00:00
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.. image:: images/screenshots/boot-grub.png
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:target: _images/boot-grub.png
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:align: left
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:alt: Grub boot screen
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2022-05-11 14:06:32 +00:00
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The simplest and most reliable way to determine which bootloader is used, is to
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watch the boot process of the `Proxmox Backup`_ node.
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2022-05-11 14:06:33 +00:00
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2022-05-11 14:06:32 +00:00
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You will either see the blue box of ``grub`` or the simple black on white
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``systemd-boot``.
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2022-05-11 14:06:33 +00:00
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.. image:: images/screenshots/boot-systemdboot.png
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:target: _images/boot-systemdboot.png
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:align: right
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:alt: systemd-boot screen
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2022-05-11 14:06:32 +00:00
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Determining the bootloader from a running system might not be 100% accurate. The
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safest way is to run the following command:
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.. code-block:: console
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# efibootmgr -v
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If it returns a message that EFI variables are not supported, ``grub`` is used in
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BIOS/Legacy mode.
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If the output contains a line that looks similar to the following, ``grub`` is
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used in UEFI mode.
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.. code-block:: console
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Boot0005* proxmox [...] File(\EFI\proxmox\grubx64.efi)
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If the output contains a line similar to the following, ``systemd-boot`` is used.
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.. code-block:: console
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Boot0006* Linux Boot Manager [...] File(\EFI\systemd\systemd-bootx64.efi)
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By running:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool status
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you can find out if ``proxmox-boot-tool`` is configured, which is a good
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indication of how the system is booted.
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.. _systembooting-grub:
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Grub
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~~~~
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``grub`` has been the de-facto standard for booting Linux systems for many years
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and is quite well documented
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(see the `Grub Manual
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<https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html>`_).
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Configuration
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Changes to the ``grub`` configuration are done via the defaults file
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``/etc/default/grub`` or config snippets in ``/etc/default/grub.d``. To regenerate
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the configuration file after a change to the configuration run:
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.. code-block:: console
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# update-grub
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.. NOTE:: Systems using ``proxmox-boot-tool`` will call
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``proxmox-boot-tool refresh`` upon ``update-grub``
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.. _systembooting-systemdboot:
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Systemd-boot
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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``systemd-boot`` is a lightweight EFI bootloader. It reads the kernel and initrd
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images directly from the EFI Service Partition (ESP) where it is installed.
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The main advantage of directly loading the kernel from the ESP is that it does
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not need to reimplement the drivers for accessing the storage. In `Proxmox
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Backup`_ :ref:`proxmox-boot-tool <systembooting-proxmox-boot-tool>` is used to
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keep the configuration on the ESPs synchronized.
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.. _systembooting-systemd-boot-config:
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Configuration
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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``systemd-boot`` is configured via the file ``loader/loader.conf`` in the root
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directory of an EFI System Partition (ESP). See the ``loader.conf(5)`` manpage
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for details.
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Each bootloader entry is placed in a file of its own in the directory
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``loader/entries/``
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An example entry.conf looks like this (``/`` refers to the root of the ESP):
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.. code-block:: console
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title Proxmox
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version 5.0.15-1-pve
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options root=ZFS=rpool/ROOT/pve-1 boot=zfs
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linux /EFI/proxmox/5.0.15-1-pve/vmlinuz-5.0.15-1-pve
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initrd /EFI/proxmox/5.0.15-1-pve/initrd.img-5.0.15-1-pve
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.. _systembooting-edit-kernel-cmdline:
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Editing the Kernel Commandline
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You can modify the kernel commandline in the following places, depending on the
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bootloader used:
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Grub
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^^^^
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The kernel commandline needs to be placed in the variable
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``GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT`` in the file ``/etc/default/grub``. Running
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``update-grub`` appends its content to all ``linux`` entries in
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``/boot/grub/grub.cfg``.
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Systemd-boot
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^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The kernel commandline needs to be placed as one line in ``/etc/kernel/cmdline``.
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To apply your changes, run ``proxmox-boot-tool refresh``, which sets it as the
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``option`` line for all config files in ``loader/entries/proxmox-*.conf``.
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.. _systembooting-kernel-pin:
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Override the Kernel-Version for next Boot
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To select a kernel that is not currently the default kernel, you can either:
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* use the boot loader menu that is displayed at the beginning of the boot
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process
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* use the ``proxmox-boot-tool`` to ``pin`` the system to a kernel version either
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once or permanently (until pin is reset).
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This should help you work around incompatibilities between a newer kernel
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version and the hardware.
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.. NOTE:: Such a pin should be removed as soon as possible so that all current
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security patches of the latest kernel are also applied to the system.
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For example: To permanently select the version ``5.15.30-1-pve`` for booting you
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would run:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool kernel pin 5.15.30-1-pve
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.. TIP:: The pinning functionality works for all `Proxmox Backup`_ systems, not only those using
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``proxmox-boot-tool`` to synchronize the contents of the ESPs, if your system
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does not use ``proxmox-boot-tool`` for synchronizing you can also skip the
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``proxmox-boot-tool refresh`` call in the end.
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You can also set a kernel version to be booted on the next system boot only.
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This is for example useful to test if an updated kernel has resolved an issue,
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which caused you to ``pin`` a version in the first place:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool kernel pin 5.15.30-1-pve --next-boot
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To remove any pinned version configuration use the ``unpin`` subcommand:
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool kernel unpin
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While ``unpin`` has a ``--next-boot`` option as well, it is used to clear a pinned
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version set with ``--next-boot``. As that happens already automatically on boot,
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invonking it manually is of little use.
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After setting, or clearing pinned versions you also need to synchronize the
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content and configuration on the ESPs by running the ``refresh`` subcommand.
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.. TIP:: You will be prompted to automatically do for ``proxmox-boot-tool`` managed
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systems if you call the tool interactively.
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.. code-block:: console
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# proxmox-boot-tool refresh
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