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doc: Add section about ostree and bootloaders
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# Bootloaders | ||
{: .no_toc } | ||
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1. TOC | ||
{:toc} | ||
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# OSTree and bootloaders | ||
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The intended design of OSTree is that it just writes new files into `/boot/loader/entries`. There is a legacy GRUB script (shipped on Fedora as `ostree-grub2`) that is intended only for the cases where the system GRUB does not support the `blscfg` verb. | ||
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In the happy path then, the flow of an OS update is just: | ||
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- ostree writes a new set of files in `/boot/loader/entries` (during `ostree-finalize-staged.service` on system shutdown) | ||
- On system start, GRUB reads those files | ||
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And that's it. | ||
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## OSTree and grub | ||
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For historical reasons, OSTree defaults to detecting the bootloader; if some GRUB files are present then OSTree will default to executing `grub2-mkconfig`. | ||
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[Commented out for now, as this can lead to the system not booting in some cases.]: # | ||
[This can be avoided by setting `sysroot.bootloader=none` (except this should not be set on s390x).]: # | ||
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## GRUB and os-prober | ||
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A specific component of GRUB that can significantly impede the reliabilty of OS updates is the `os-prober` aspect, which scans all system block devices. If one doesn't care about dual booting, avoiding this is a good idea. | ||
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# Anaconda | ||
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Until very recently the Anaconda project only supported setting up the bootloader (e.g. GRUB) on its own, which requires `grub2-mkconfig` etc. As of recently, Anaconda now [supports bootupd](https://github.com/rhinstaller/anaconda/pull/5298). | ||
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# bootupd | ||
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As of recently [the bootupd project](https://github.com/coreos/bootupd/) ships [static grub configs](https://github.com/coreos/bootupd/tree/main/src/grub2) and in this case, the `sysroot.bootloader` should be set to `none` (except on s390x). | ||
And assuming that the system grub has the `blscfg` support, which it does on Fedora derivatives per above. |