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Configuring Grub Guests
vm-bhyve has built in support for the grub2-bhyve
software, which is capable of booting most guests that can be booted by GRUB2. This page describes the various configuration options that can be placed in the guest config file to control grub2-bhyve
, and the effect they have.
In order for a guest to use the grub2-bhyve
loader, you need to set loader="grub"
in the guest configuration file.
The grub loader is run on the guest console, so while the guest is in the Bootloader
state, you can access it using the standard vm console guest
command.
If you do not specify any grub configuration at all, grub2-bhyve
will look for a /boot/grub/grub.cfg
GRUB2 file in the guest. If this file exists it will be processed, which in most cases means you will be shown a boot menu with a choice of options.
If no GRUB2 configuration file is found, grub2-bhyve will just drop to the grub>
cli. You can access this using vm console guest
to enter grub commands manually.
If your guest has a GRUB2 configuration file, but it is not in the standard location looked in by grub2-bhyve
, you can specify the location using configuration options in the guest. These options are grub_run_dir
and grub_run_file
.
For example, CentOS 7 seems to use /grub2/grub.cfg
. Because the filename is still the same we don't need to change that, but we need to tell grub2-bhyve
the new directory to look in:
grub_run_dir="/grub2"
If for example, your guest operating system calls the file /grub2/grub2.conf
, you could specify the following:
grub_run_dir="/grub2"
grub_run_file="grub2.conf"
By default vm-bhyve specifies hd0,1
as the root for the guest disk partition. If your boot partition is not 1, an alternative partition can be specified in the configuration file.
grub_run_partition="2"
With this configuration, grub2-bhyve
will look in (hd0,2)/boot/grub/grub.cfg
for the grub configuration file.
The partition also affects custom commands, so let's say you specify the following configuration for example:
grub_run_partition="2"
grub_run0="linux /vmlinuz"
This will effectively perform the same as running linux (hd0,2)/vmlinuz
from the grub>
cli.
As mentioned above, if the guest has no GRUB2 configuration file, when the guest starts grub2-bhyve
will just fall back to the grub>
cli. At this point you can connect to the guest and enter the relevant commands to boot the guest. For example to boot NetBSD, you could access the grub cli and enter the following:
grub> knetbsd -h -r ld0a /netbsd
grub> boot
Of course, running this every time you start or restart the guest is not ideal. However, you can specify the needed commands in the guest configuration file (boot
is not required):
grub_run0="knetbsd -h -r ld0a /netbsd"
If more than one command is needed, add additional lines and change run0
to run1
, then run2
, etc. If any boot commands are specified in this way, vm-bhyve will create a custom grub.cfg
file. On booting the guest, a custom grub menu is displayed containing a single guestname (bhyve run)
option. This option is then booted by default after 3 seconds. (The 3 second timeout can be changed using the loader_timeout="X"
guest configuration option.
For most linux guests it's preferable to install GRUB2 in the guest if possible as it allows the guest to manage the configuration file. Sometimes a kernel upgrade can require changes to the boot commands, and if the commands have been manually entered into the guest, it will not boot until they are manually updated.
As normal, grub2-bhyve
will look in /boot/grub/grub.cfg
on the cd for a grub configuration file. If it can't find one it will drop to the grub>
cli. We do not provide configuration options to tell grub2-bhyve
to look in other locations, but we do provide the facility to specify custom boot commands. As an example, these are the commands from the CentOS 6 sample template that successfully boot the ISO installer
grub_install0="linux /isolinux/vmlinuz"
grub_install1="initrd /isolinux/initrd.img"
Status
How-To / Examples
- Quickstart
- Full Example Template
- Using tmux
- Supported Guest Examples
- Disks
- Network Interfaces
- Datastores
- Virtual Switches
- NAT
- Grub Configuration
- Running Windows
- Running OmniOS
- Running Linux
- UEFI Graphics (VNC)
- Info Output Explained
- Serial Console Output with the UEFI
- VM migration
- Cloud Images
Development