Leah Rowe 87f1a8d0da Restore SeaBIOS 9029a010 update, but with AHCI fix
I fixed the AHCI bug, with a patch that I wrote. It works by
restoring the old SeaBIOS AHCI initialisation behaviour, whereby
the AHCI controller is enabled from its current state; the patch
that broke AHCI in coreboot (tested on ThinkPad T420), changed
AHCI initialisation behaviour so that the controller's state is
first reset, prior to enablement.

However, my patch also retains the new AHCI initialisation
behaviour, when a CSM is in use. The AHCI reset patch was done,
by the author, specifically for SeaBIOS in CSM mode, so it makes
sense to only change the behaviour conditionally according to that.

This reverts commit 8245f0b321.

Signed-off-by: Leah Rowe <leah@libreboot.org>
2025-05-05 12:18:22 +01:00
2021-05-18 13:56:12 +01:00
2025-04-29 11:25:39 +01:00

Libreboot

Documentation: libreboot.org
Support: #libreboot on Libera IRC

Libreboot provides libre boot firmware on supported motherboards. It replaces proprietary vendor BIOS/UEFI implementations, by

  • Using coreboot to initialize the hardware (e.g. memory controller, CPU, etc.) while minimizing unwanted functionality (e.g. backdoors such as the Intel Management Engine)
  • ... which runs a payload such as SeaBIOS, GRUB, or U-Boot
  • ... which loads your operating system's boot loader (BSD and Linux-based systems are supported).

Why use Libreboot, and what is coreboot?

A lot of users who use libre operating systems still use proprietary boot firmware, which often contain backdoors and bugs, hampering user freedom and right to repair.

coreboot provides libre boot firmware by initializing the hardware then running a payload. However, coreboot is notoriously difficult to configure and install for most non-technical users, requiring detailed technical knowledge of hardware.

Libreboot solves this by being a coreboot distribution (in the same way that Alpine Linux is a Linux distribution). It provides a fully automated build system that downloads and compiles pre-configured ROM images for supported motherboards, so end-users could easily fetch images to flash onto their devices.

Libreboot also produces documentation aimed at non-technical users and excellent user support via IRC.

Contribute

You can check bugs listed on the bug tracker.

You may use Codeberg pull requests to send patches with bug fixes or other improvements. This repository hosts the code for the main build system. The website lives in a separate repository.

Development is also done on the IRC channel.

License for this README

It's just a README file. It is released under Creative Commons Zero, version 1.0.

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