title: GRUB payload x-toc-enable: true ...
TODO: this guide should be reviewed and updated. Some info might be out of date.
GRUB already has excellent documentation, but there are aspects of libreboot that deserve special treatment. libreboot provides the option to boot GNU GRUB directly, running on bare metal (instead of using BIOS or UEFI services).
The Linux section also has libreboot-specific guides for dealing with Linux distributions when using GRUB directly, in this setup. A similar section exists for BSD operating systems
It is possible to use any keymap in GNU GRUB.
Keymaps are stored in resources/grub/keymap/
You can use the ckbcomp
program to generate a keymap, based on Xorg keymap
files:
ckbcomp fr > frazerty
When you build GRUB from source, you can use the grub-mklayout
program to
create a special keymap file for GRUB. Learn how to build GRUB
When you've built GRUB, using lbmk
(libreboot build system), take your kepmap
file (generated by ckbcomp) and run it through grub-mklayout
like so:
cat frazerty | ./grub/grub-mklayout -o frazerty.gkb
Place the newly created .gkb
file under resources/grub/keymap
in lbmk. When
you build libreboot, a ROM image with GRUB payload and your newly created
keymap will be available under the bin/
directory.
Learn how to build libreboot ROM images
Many keymaps exist in the libreboot build system, but sometimes you must
manually tweak the file created by ckbcomp
, adjusting the scan codes in that
file, before converting to a GRUB keymap file. Therefore, it would be unwise to
automatically add all keymaps in GRUB.
If you've added a keymap to lbmk, and it works, please submit a patch!