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29a8a282 HS |
1 | # iSCSI booting with U-Boot and iPXE |
2 | ||
3 | ## Motivation | |
4 | ||
5 | U-Boot has only a reduced set of supported network protocols. The focus for | |
6 | network booting has been on UDP based protocols. A TCP stack and HTTP support | |
7 | are expected to be integrated in 2018 together with a wget command. | |
8 | ||
9 | For booting a diskless computer this leaves us with BOOTP or DHCP to get the | |
10 | address of a boot script. TFTP or NFS can be used to load the boot script, the | |
11 | operating system kernel and the initial file system (initrd). | |
12 | ||
13 | These protocols are insecure. The client cannot validate the authenticity | |
14 | of the contacted servers. And the server cannot verify the identity of the | |
15 | client. | |
16 | ||
17 | Furthermore the services providing the operating system loader or kernel are | |
18 | not the ones that the operating system typically will use. Especially in a SAN | |
19 | environment this makes updating the operating system a hassle. After installing | |
20 | a new kernel version the boot files have to be copied to the TFTP server | |
21 | directory. | |
22 | ||
23 | The HTTPS protocol provides certificate based validation of servers. Sensitive | |
24 | data like passwords can be securely transmitted. | |
25 | ||
26 | The iSCSI protocol is used for connecting storage attached networks. It | |
27 | provides mutual authentication using the CHAP protocol. It typically runs on | |
28 | a TCP transport. | |
29 | ||
30 | Thus a better solution than DHCP/TFTP/NFS boot would be to load a boot script | |
31 | via HTTPS and to download any other files needed for booting via iSCSI from the | |
32 | same target where the operating system is installed. | |
33 | ||
34 | An alternative to implementing these protocols in U-Boot is to use an existing | |
35 | software that can run on top of U-Boot. iPXE is the "swiss army knife" of | |
36 | network booting. It supports both HTTPS and iSCSI. It has a scripting engine for | |
37 | fine grained control of the boot process and can provide a command shell. | |
38 | ||
39 | iPXE can be built as an EFI application (named snp.efi) which can be loaded and | |
40 | run by U-Boot. | |
41 | ||
42 | ## Boot sequence | |
43 | ||
44 | U-Boot loads the EFI application iPXE snp.efi using the bootefi command. This | |
45 | application has network access via the simple network protocol offered by | |
46 | U-Boot. | |
47 | ||
48 | iPXE executes its internal script. This script may optionally chain load a | |
49 | secondary boot script via HTTPS or open a shell. | |
50 | ||
51 | For the further boot process iPXE connects to the iSCSI server. This includes | |
52 | the mutual authentication using the CHAP protocol. After the authentication iPXE | |
53 | has access to the iSCSI targets. | |
54 | ||
55 | For a selected iSCSI target iPXE sets up a handle with the block IO protocol. It | |
56 | uses the ConnectController boot service of U-Boot to request U-Boot to connect a | |
57 | file system driver. U-Boot reads from the iSCSI drive via the block IO protocol | |
58 | offered by iPXE. It creates the partition handles and installs the simple file | |
59 | protocol. Now iPXE can call the simple file protocol to load Grub. U-Boot uses | |
60 | the block IO protocol offered by iPXE to fulfill the request. | |
61 | ||
62 | Once Grub is started it uses the same block IO protocol to load Linux. Via | |
63 | the EFI stub Linux is called as an EFI application. | |
64 | ||
65 | ``` | |
66 | +--------+ +--------+ | |
67 | | | Runs | | | |
68 | | U-Boot |=========>| iPXE | | |
69 | | EFI | | snp.efi| | |
70 | +--------+ | | DHCP | | | |
71 | | |<====|********|<=========| | | |
72 | | DHCP | | | Get IP | | | |
73 | | Server | | | Address | | | |
74 | | |====>|********|=========>| | | |
75 | +--------+ | | Response | | | |
76 | | | | | | |
77 | | | | | | |
78 | +--------+ | | HTTPS | | | |
79 | | |<====|********|<=========| | | |
80 | | HTTPS | | | Load | | | |
81 | | Server | | | Script | | | |
82 | | |====>|********|=========>| | | |
83 | +--------+ | | | | | |
84 | | | | | | |
85 | | | | | | |
86 | +--------+ | | iSCSI | | | |
87 | | |<====|********|<=========| | | |
88 | | iSCSI | | | Auth | | | |
89 | | Server |====>|********|=========>| | | |
90 | | | | | | | | |
91 | | | | | Loads | | | |
92 | | |<====|********|<=========| | +--------+ | |
93 | | | | | Grub | | Runs | | | |
94 | | |====>|********|=========>| |=======>| Grub | | |
95 | | | | | | | | | | |
96 | | | | | | | | | | |
97 | | | | | | | Loads | | | |
98 | | |<====|********|<=========|********|<=======| | +--------+ | |
99 | | | | | | | Linux | | Runs | | | |
100 | | |====>|********|=========>|********|=======>| |=====>| Linux | | |
101 | | | | | | | | | | | | |
102 | +--------+ +--------+ +--------+ +--------+ | | | |
103 | | | | |
104 | | | | |
105 | | ~ ~ ~ ~| | |
106 | ``` | |
107 | ||
108 | ## Security | |
109 | ||
110 | The iSCSI protocol is not encrypted. The traffic could be secured using IPsec | |
111 | but neither U-Boot nor iPXE does support this. So we should at least separate | |
112 | the iSCSI traffic from all other network traffic. This can be achieved using a | |
113 | virtual local area network (VLAN). | |
114 | ||
115 | ## Configuration | |
116 | ||
117 | ### iPXE | |
118 | ||
119 | For running iPXE on arm64 the bin-arm64-efi/snp.efi build target is needed. | |
120 | ||
121 | git clone http://git.ipxe.org/ipxe.git | |
122 | cd ipxe/src | |
123 | make bin-arm64-efi/snp.efi -j6 EMBED=myscript.ipxe | |
124 | ||
125 | The available commands for the boot script are documented at: | |
126 | ||
127 | http://ipxe.org/cmd | |
128 | ||
129 | Credentials are managed as environment variables. These are described here: | |
130 | ||
131 | http://ipxe.org/cfg | |
132 | ||
133 | iPXE by default will put the CPU to rest when waiting for input. U-Boot does | |
134 | not wake it up due to missing interrupt support. To avoid this behavior create | |
135 | file src/config/local/nap.h. | |
136 | ||
137 | /* nap.h */ | |
138 | #undef NAP_EFIX86 | |
139 | #undef NAP_EFIARM | |
140 | #define NAP_NULL | |
141 | ||
142 | The supported commands in iPXE are controlled by an include, too. Putting the | |
143 | following into src/config/local/general.h is sufficient for most use cases. | |
144 | ||
145 | /* general.h */ | |
146 | #define NSLOOKUP_CMD /* Name resolution command */ | |
147 | #define PING_CMD /* Ping command */ | |
148 | #define NTP_CMD /* NTP commands */ | |
149 | #define VLAN_CMD /* VLAN commands */ | |
150 | #define IMAGE_EFI /* EFI image support */ | |
151 | #define DOWNLOAD_PROTO_HTTPS /* Secure Hypertext Transfer Protocol */ | |
152 | #define DOWNLOAD_PROTO_FTP /* File Transfer Protocol */ | |
153 | #define DOWNLOAD_PROTO_NFS /* Network File System Protocol */ | |
154 | #define DOWNLOAD_PROTO_FILE /* Local file system access */ | |
155 | ||
156 | ## Links | |
157 | ||
158 | * https://ipxe.org - iPXE open source boot firmware | |
159 | * https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/ - GNU Grub (Grand Unified Bootloader) |