Update documentation and CI to rely on the new CLOUDHV.fd firmware built from the newly introduced target CloudHvX64. Signed-off-by: Sebastien Boeuf <sebastien.boeuf@intel.com>
1.9 KiB
UEFI Boot
Cloud Hypervisor supports UEFI boot through the utilization of the EDK II based UEFI firmware.
Building UEFI Firmware
To avoid any unnecessary issues, it is recommended to use Ubuntu 18.04 and its default toolset. Any other compatible Linux distribution is otherwise suitable, however it is suggested to use a temporary Docker container with Ubuntu 18.04 for a quick build on an existing Linux machine.
The commands below will compile an OVMF firmware suitable for Cloud Hypervisor.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install uuid-dev nasm iasl build-essential python3-distutils git
git clone https://github.com/cloud-hypervisor/edk2 -b ch
cd edk2
. edksetup.sh
git submodule update --init
echo "ACTIVE_PLATFORM=OvmfPkg/CloudHv/CloudHvX64.dsc" >> Conf/target.txt
echo "TARGET_ARCH=X64" >> Conf/target.txt
echo "TOOL_CHAIN_TAG=GCC5" >> Conf/target.txt
make -C ./BaseTools
build
After the successful build, the resulting firmware binaries are available under Build/CloudHvX64/DEBUG_GCC5/FV
underneath the edk2 checkout.
Using OVMF Binaries
Any UEFI capable image can be booted using the Cloud Hypervisor specific firmware. Windows guests under Cloud Hypervisor only support UEFI boot, therefore OVMF is mandatory there.
To make Cloud Hypervisor use UEFI boot, pass the CLOUDHV.fd
file path as an argument to the --kernel
option. The firmware file will be opened in read only mode.
The same firmware can be used with Cloud Hypervisor or with QEMU. This is particularly useful if using QEMU for the preparation phase.