On Tue, Jun 10, 2025, at 17:33, Roman Kisel wrote: >> Selecting SYSFB causes a link failure on arm64 kernels with EFI disabled: >> >> ld.lld-21: error: undefined symbol: screen_info >> >>> referenced by sysfb.c >> >>> drivers/firmware/sysfb.o:(sysfb_parent_dev) in archive >> >>> vmlinux.a >> >>> referenced by sysfb.c >> >> The problem is that sysfb works on the global 'screen_info' structure, which >> is provided by the firmware interface, either the generic EFI code or the >> x86 BIOS startup. >> >> Assuming that HV always boots Linux using UEFI, the dependency also makes >> logical sense, since otherwise it is impossible to boot a guest. >> > > Hyper-V as of recent can boot off DeviceTree with the direct kernel > boot, no UEFI > is required (examples would be OpenVMM and the OpenHCL paravisor on > arm64).
I was aware of hyperv no longer needing ACPI, but devicetree and UEFI are orthogonal concepts, and I had expected that even the devicetree based version would still get booted using a tiny UEFI implementation even if the kernel doesn't need that. Do you know what type of bootloader is actually used in the examples you mentioned? Does the hypervisor just start the kernel at the native entry point without a bootloader in this case? > Being no expert in Kconfig unfortunately... If another solution is possible to > find given the timing constraints (link errors can't wait iiuc) that would be > great :) > > Could something like "select EFI if SYSFB" work? You probably mean the reverse here: select SYSFB if EFI && !HYPERV_VTL_MODE I think that should work, as long as the change from the 96959283a58d ("Drivers: hv: Always select CONFIG_SYSFB for Hyper-V guests") patch is not required in the cases where the guest has no bootloader. Possibly this would also work select SYSFB if X86 && !HYPERV_VTL_MODE in case only the x86 host requires the sysfb hack, but arm can rely on PCI device probing instead. Or perhaps this version --- a/drivers/hv/Kconfig +++ b/drivers/hv/Kconfig @@ -19,6 +19,7 @@ config HYPERV_VTL_MODE bool "Enable Linux to boot in VTL context" depends on (X86_64 || ARM64) && HYPERV depends on SMP + depends on !EFI default n help Virtual Secure Mode (VSM) is a set of hypervisor capabilities and if the VTL mode is never used with a boot loader in the guest. Arnd