edk2 | sbctl | |
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51 | 94 | |
4,262 | 1,304 | |
1.9% | - | |
9.9 | 7.8 | |
4 days ago | 5 days ago | |
C | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
edk2
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Future of 32-bit platform support in FreeBSD
For the modern server/desktop and even laptop, that's also no bad thing. It is somewhat ridiculous that UEFI bioses, internally, still boot in 16-bit real mode and have to do all the steps your bios bootloader used to do to set up a 64-bit environment ready to go: https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/edc6681206c1a8791981a..., https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/edc6681206c1a8791981a..., https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/edc6681206c1a8791981a...
Why not just start the CPU in "long mode", which is what everyone is using it for, in the first place?
These newer ARM processors support 32-bit code at EL0 only (userspace). That seems like a reasonable approach for x86 as well and the freebsd announcement has this to say:
> There is currently no plan to remove support for 32-bit binaries on 64-bit kernels.
So for the moment, you can run 32-bit applications just fine.
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Precision 7520: 64GB memory 3200MHz support
Download this UEFI shell and place it in the BOOT subfolder
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Just about every Windows and Linux device vulnerable to new LogoFAIL firmware attack
They could have at least informed TianoCore. the affected code in edk2 hasn't been modified in 2 years.... https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/MdeModulePkg/Library/BaseBmpSupportLib/BmpSupportLib.c
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VM not booting with host-passthrough or host-model
I have half fixed it.. Using this solution: https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/discussions/4662
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All gaming laptop owners know this is never true...
You need only EDK2 and some lööps.
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AMD openSIL open source firmware proof of concept
What is the difference between this and https://github.com/tianocore/edk2
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AMD to move to open source firmware in 2026
From there you'll need to get an EFI Shell. There may be one built into your system, but you can also get one here from Tianocore (aka, the people mostly making UEFI). Neither this EFI Shell nor Keytool.efi (the thing you need to load the keys) are signed of course, so you will need to turn off SecureBoot to continue. From there just run Keytool with your new keys, turn back on SecureBoot, and move on with your life.
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Windows installation doesn't boot up when I try to use UEFI firmware
I had the same issue. What fixed it for me was compiling my own OVMF.fd file from here and using that to boot. The version of OVMF that shipped with fedora was broken for me for some reason.
- why chatgpt knows about (haswell NRI) [ERROR] REUT timed out, ch_done: 0 but not in google?
- EDK II Project: cross-platform firmware development environment
sbctl
- Show HN: Sbctl – Secure Boot key manager
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Show HN: SSH-tpm-agent – SSH agent for TPMs
No, this isn't true nor correct.
Secure Boot and TPM do offer tangible security benefits and is security features you can take ownership of.
Secure Boot allows your own key hierarchy, and TPM allows you to take ownership.
The linked boot disk isn't really proof that Secure Boot is useless. If you don't set a MOKManager password (as you should), and you change the security state of the machine while present at the keyboard. Yes you can boot things.
This is intended to make sure people can actually decide to trust things. And having insecure defaults makes this less useful. Not very surprising.
TPMs could also prevent attacks like this on your machine.
Incidentally I've invested quite a bit of time in making user-friendly Secure Boot tooling as well. https://github.com/Foxboron/sbctl
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Enabling secure boot for your Arch installation is very easy now with the "sbctl" tool
No problem! The sbctl package ships with a pretty extensive hook out of the box (https://github.com/Foxboron/sbctl/blob/master/contrib/pacman/ZZ-sbctl.hook). It's been very reliable for automatically resigning .efi executables after updates for me.
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sbctl fails to find EFI system partition
sbctl verify returns failed to find EFI system partition despite it definitely is there. It's the same issue as this but remounting or restarting doesn't fix it.
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Millions of PC Motherboards Were Sold With a Firmware Backdoor
lol
- The vendor-locking is for your own safety. Do not resist.
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Let's make a motherboard review guide
Must actually prevent unsigned images from booting
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[Kinoite/Silverblue]Decrypt LUKS volumes with a TPM on Fedora 35+
sudo dnf install asciidoc golang -y VERSION=0.11 cd /tmp curl -L "https://github.com/Foxboron/sbctl/releases/download/${VERSION}/sbctl-${VERSION}.tar.gz" | tar zxvf - cd "sbctl-${VERSION}" make sudo make install cd ~
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Setting up secure boot while dual booting Windows 11 and Arch Linux
By far the easiest is to use sbctl to generate, install and use keys to sign your efi images. You can use mkinitcpio to build the unified kernels automatically and a pacman trigger to rerun the sbctl signing when the kernel is updated. Pretty straightforward (once you've done it once).
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Intel OEM Private Key Leak: A Blow to UEFI Secure Boot Security
The question is whether you have any UEFI drivers or not. If they're in the ESP you can just look there to check, but UEFI drivers can also be loaded from PCI cards or baked in the firmware itself.
If you're using a TPM for Secure Boot, you can use the command in https://github.com/Foxboron/sbctl/wiki/FAQ#option-rom to know for sure.
What are some alternatives?
vTPM - libtpms / swtpm software emulation of a Trusted Platform Module (TPM 1.2 and TPM 2.0) compile script
mortar - Framework to join Linux's physical security bricks.
tianocore
mkinitcpio - Arch Linux initramfs generation tools (read-only mirror)
coreboot - Mirror of https://review.coreboot.org/coreboot.git. We don't handle Pull Requests.
zorin-exec-guard - Zorin Exec Guard shows a warning when attempting to run unknown Linux or Windows executables and offers more trusted alternatives.
OpenCorePkg - OpenCore bootloader
cryptboot - Encrypted boot partition manager with UEFI Secure Boot support
Getting-Started-With-ACPI - Repo for Getting Started With ACPI
mainline - Install mainline kernel packages from kernel.ubuntu.com
limine - Modern, advanced, portable, multiprotocol bootloader.
simple-arch-installer