| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Module "biosdisk" is necessary for GRUB to boot from the floppy
image we're working to create. If this module is not included in
core.img it will simply not load.
Module "minicmd" has been added in order to provide the commands
"lsmod" and "rmmod" which are useful for listing loaded modules
and unloading them, respectively (especially great for testing).
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All modules listed in a given target's modules-minimal file are
preloaded so there's no need to specifically load any.
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The cbfs module must be loaded before trying to source grub.cfg
from CBFS, for obvious reasons.
The test module is bundled into all images in order to avoid the
situation where grub gets stuck in a loop trying to locate the
module during parsing of grub.cfg. This could happen if a user
removes the module or moves it, so it's best to avoid a brick
by just bundling it into the image.
For the bios target, biosdisk has been removed as it doesn't seem
to provide any benefit and memdisk has been added to eliminate
an error printed by GRUB upon load.
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Dumps CBMEM console log to stdout; this is useful for
development/troubleshooting purposes.
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Without these modules, the GRUB Coreboot target image can't access
devices other than cbfsdisk. Adds support for HDD/USB drives.
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As with the BIOS target, the modules listed in this file will later be
added to CBFS in order to avoid issues inherent to bundling modules
into the GRUB image.
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As with the BIOS target's modules-minimal file, this file lists the
minimum necessary to complement a working, bootable image so that it
can read from other devices in addition to halting/rebooting the
machine.
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Since GRUB images will be produced on a target-specific basis the
target will need its own copy of the modules to include in either the
GRUB image itself or CBFS.
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The added files are mostly the same as their BIOS target counterparts
because the base configuration for each GRUB image produced is
intended to be quite similar (for greater malleability down the line).
The purpose of each file remains the same.
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