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- Managing device boot order with bootindex properties
- ====================================================
- QEMU can tell QEMU-aware guest firmware (like the x86 PC BIOS)
- which order it should look for a bootable OS on which devices.
- A simple way to set this order is to use the ``-boot order=`` option,
- but you can also do this more flexibly, by setting a ``bootindex``
- property on the individual block or net devices you specify
- on the QEMU command line.
- The ``bootindex`` properties are used to determine the order in which
- firmware will consider devices for booting the guest OS. If the
- ``bootindex`` property is not set for a device, it gets the lowest
- boot priority. There is no particular order in which devices with no
- ``bootindex`` property set will be considered for booting, but they
- will still be bootable.
- Some guest machine types (for instance the s390x machines) do
- not support ``-boot order=``; on those machines you must always
- use ``bootindex`` properties.
- There is no way to set a ``bootindex`` property if you are using
- a short-form option like ``-hda`` or ``-cdrom``, so to use
- ``bootindex`` properties you will need to expand out those options
- into long-form ``-drive`` and ``-device`` option pairs.
- Example
- -------
- Let's assume we have a QEMU machine with two NICs (virtio, e1000) and two
- disks (IDE, virtio):
- .. parsed-literal::
- |qemu_system| -drive file=disk1.img,if=none,id=disk1 \\
- -device ide-hd,drive=disk1,bootindex=4 \\
- -drive file=disk2.img,if=none,id=disk2 \\
- -device virtio-blk-pci,drive=disk2,bootindex=3 \\
- -netdev type=user,id=net0 \\
- -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=net0,bootindex=2 \\
- -netdev type=user,id=net1 \\
- -device e1000,netdev=net1,bootindex=1
- Given the command above, firmware should try to boot from the e1000 NIC
- first. If this fails, it should try the virtio NIC next; if this fails
- too, it should try the virtio disk, and then the IDE disk.
- Limitations
- -----------
- Some firmware has limitations on which devices can be considered for
- booting. For instance, the x86 PC BIOS boot specification allows only one
- disk to be bootable. If boot from disk fails for some reason, the x86 BIOS
- won't retry booting from other disk. It can still try to boot from
- floppy or net, though. In the case of s390x BIOS, the BIOS will try up to
- 8 total devices, any number of which may be disks or virtio-net devices.
- Sometimes, firmware cannot map the device path QEMU wants firmware to
- boot from to a boot method. It doesn't happen for devices the firmware
- can natively boot from, but if firmware relies on an option ROM for
- booting, and the same option ROM is used for booting from more then one
- device, the firmware may not be able to ask the option ROM to boot from
- a particular device reliably. For instance with the PC BIOS, if a SCSI HBA
- has three bootable devices target1, target3, target5 connected to it,
- the option ROM will have a boot method for each of them, but it is not
- possible to map from boot method back to a specific target. This is a
- shortcoming of the PC BIOS boot specification.
- Mixing bootindex and boot order parameters
- ------------------------------------------
- Note that it does not make sense to use the bootindex property together
- with the ``-boot order=...`` (or ``-boot once=...``) parameter. The guest
- firmware implementations normally either support the one or the other,
- but not both parameters at the same time. Mixing them will result in
- undefined behavior, and thus the guest firmware will likely not boot
- from the expected devices.
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