On Tue, Oct 16, 2012 at 06:12:22PM -0500, Anthony Liguori wrote: > Peter Maydell <peter.mayd...@linaro.org> writes: > > > On 16 October 2012 20:55, Anthony Liguori <aligu...@us.ibm.com> wrote: > >> > >> We discussed nvram and it's interaction with boot order in today's KVM > >> call. Here's the outcome. This list is completely incremental so it's > >> fine to start with 1-4, for instance, as long as we eventually get to 6. > >> > >> Today, on x86, we implement up to (5) but we don't persist NVRAM. > >> > >> 1) We should modify QEMUMachine to specify that a machine does not want > >> a default boot order. Ideally, this would be done by adding a new > >> default_boot_order that is set to "cad" explicitly in all machines > >> allowing a machine to remove that entry. At any rate, this allows a > >> machine to receive a NULL boot order when -boot isn't used and take an > >> appropriate action accordingly. > >> > >> 2) In the absence of a persistent NVRAM, a ephemeral NVRAM should be > >> generated with a reasonable default boot order. > >> > >> 3) In the absence of -boot or ,bootindex=, the system should boot from > >> order specified in NVRAM. > >> > >> 4) If -boot is specified, the parameter should alter the contents of > >> NVRAM to change the boot order to what is specified by -boot. > >> > >> 5) If ,bootorder is specified, it should take predence over -boot. > >> > >> 6) ,bootorder= should also alter the contents of NVRAM to determine the > >> boot order. > > > > What's the rationale for 6? It seems a bit odd for a command line > > option to randomly mangle the NVRAM... > > The use case is to have a consistent view of the boot order within the > guest and in the host while still having the ability to edit the > persistent boot order within the guest. > > If you look at my other note in this thread, one way to achieve this is > to have the boot order "owned" by QEMU with the guest making fw_cfg > calls to modify it. It would be persisted in a portion of the NVRAM > reserved for QEMU's use.
That's not necessarily compatible with established guest visible platform NVRAM semantics. -- David Gibson | I'll have my music baroque, and my code david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you. NOT _the_ _other_ | _way_ _around_! http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson