2016-12-16 23:56 GMT+01:00 Warner Losh <i...@bsdimp.com>: > On Fri, Dec 16, 2016 at 11:00 AM, Dimitry Andric <d...@freebsd.org> wrote: > > On 16 Dec 2016, at 18:53, Antony Uspensky <uspen...@x-art.ru> wrote: > >> > >> On Fri, 16 Dec 2016, Eric van Gyzen wrote: > >>> On 12/16/2016 11:39, Slawa Olhovchenkov wrote: > >>>> On Fri, Dec 16, 2016 at 06:08:34PM +0100, Fernando Herrero Carr?n > wrote: > >>>>> Hi everyone, > >>>>> > >>>>> A few months ago I got myself a new box and I have been happily > running > >>>>> FreeBSD on it ever since. I noticed that the boot was not as fast as > I had > >>>>> expected and I've realized that, while my disk is GPT partitioned, > the boot > >>>>> process is still BIOS based: > >>>>> > >>>>> % gpart show > >>>>> => 34 976773101 ada0 GPT (466G) > >>>>> 34 6 - free - (3.0K) > >>>>> 40 1024 1 freebsd-boot (512K) > >>>>> 1064 984 - free - (492K) > >>>>> 2048 67108864 2 freebsd-swap (32G) > >>>>> 67110912 909662208 3 freebsd-zfs (434G) > >>>>> 976773120 15 - free - (7.5K) > > ... > >> I would shrink ada0p1 down to 128K (size of gptzfsboot = 88K now) and > place efi partition (~800K) on free space between new p1 and p2. No need to > touch swap partition. > > > > Yes, this is almost exactly what I have done on a machine that was > > originally installed with gptzfsboot on the first partition, which was > > 512K. Since all the partitions on this SSD were aligned to 1M, I > > reduced the size of the first partition to 224K, freeing up a hole of > > exactly 800K for an EFI partition: > > > > => 40 976773088 ada0 GPT (466G) > > 40 2008 - free - (1.0M) > > 2048 448 1 freebsd-boot (224K) > > 2496 1600 4 efi (800K) > > 4096 33554432 2 freebsd-swap (16G) > > 33558528 943214592 3 freebsd-zfs (450G) > > 976773120 8 - free - (4.0K) > > > > Then I wrote the preformatted boot1.efifat image to it, using: gpart > > bootcode -p /boot/boot1.efifat -i 4 ada0. You can also use dd of > > course, but I prefer using gpart for these kinds of manipulations. > > > > This way, you can choose between booting in old school BIOS mode, or > > UEFI mode. If the UEFI mode works flawlessly, you can always decide > > later to dump the freebsd-boot partition, and use only an EFI partition. > > > > -Dimitry > > > > P.S.: The only thing that triggers my OCD here is that the EFI partition > > has index 4, but is physically the second. But I can live with that, > > until I finally delete the freebsd-boot partition. :) > > > You likely want to carve out more like 50MB instead of 800k for UEFI > partition. 800k is the minimum, but it also precludes many things you > may need to do with UEFI applications down the line. > > Warner >
Thanks guys for all the answers, I think I will just nuke freebsd-boot and create a smallish efi where I can place boot1.efifat as suggested by Dimitry. If this works, I can always shrink swap if I really need to later on. Just out of curiosity, what other functionality will UEFI provide that takes up 50M? Best regards, Fernando _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"