svcadm(8)을 검색하려면 섹션에서 8 을 선택하고, 맨 페이지 이름에 svcadm을 입력하고 검색을 누른다.
eeprom(8)
System Administration Commands eeprom(8)
NAME
eeprom - EEPROM display and load utility
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/eeprom [-] [-f device] [parameter[=value]]
/usr/sbin/eeprom -u [-i] [-x] [-] [uefi-variable[=value]] ...
/usr/sbin/eeprom -u -d uefi-variable ...
DESCRIPTION
eeprom displays or changes the values of parameters in the EEPROM. It
processes parameters in the order given. When processing a parameter
accompanied by a value, eeprom makes the indicated alteration to the
EEPROM; otherwise, it displays the parameter's value. When given no
parameter specifiers, eeprom displays the values of all EEPROM parame‐
ters. A '−' (hyphen) flag specifies that parameters and values are to
be read from the standard input (one parameter or parameter=value per
line).
An effective uid of 0 is required to alter the EEPROM contents. This is
provided by the Device Security rights profile or the Maintenance and
Repair rights profile.
eeprom verifies the EEPROM checksums and complains if they are incor‐
rect.
platform-name is the name of the platform implementation and can be
found using the -i option of uname(1).
SPARC
SPARC based systems implement firmware password protection with eeprom,
using the security-mode, security-password and security-#badlogins
properties.
x86
EEPROM storage is simulated using a file residing in the platform-spe‐
cific boot area. The /boot/solaris/bootenv.rc file simulates EEPROM
storage.
Because x86 based systems typically implement password protection in
the system BIOS, there is no support for password protection in the
eeprom program. While it is possible to set the security-mode, secu‐
rity-password and security-#badlogins properties on x86 based systems,
these properties have no special meaning or behavior on x86 based sys‐
tems.
UEFI
In addition to simulating EEPROM storage, UEFI capable x86 systems
implement NVRAM storage for variables specific to the UEFI environment,
as defined by the UEFI specification. All privileges are required for
both reading and writing UEFI variables.
OPTIONS
-f device
Use device as the EEPROM device.
-u
Access UEFI variables instead of Solaris system variables. When
used alone prints all UEFI variables. Otherwise, individual vari‐
ables can be listed on the command line to be printed or written to
using the same format style as Solaris system variables.
Most UEFI variables are in a binary format and are translated to a
readable format. When translation is not possible, a hexdump is
printed.
-x uefi-variable
Outputs a hexdump of a specified UEFI variable without attempting
translation. When used on a set operation, it will have no effect.
-d uefi-variable
Deletes a UEFI variable specified on the command line.
-u -
´-' when used under -u option works the same way as it does with
the regular eeprom command except now it operates on UEFI vari‐
ables.
-i
Prints UEFI NVRAM storage usage information.
OPERANDS
x86 Only
acpi-user-options
A configuration variable that controls the use of Advanced Configu‐
ration and Power Interface (ACPI), a power management specifica‐
tion. The acceptable values for this variable depend on the release
of the Solaris operating system you are using.
For all releases of Solaris 10 and Solaris 11, a value of of 0x0
means that there will be an attempt to use ACPI if it is available
on the system. A value of 0x2 disables the use of ACPI.
For the Solaris 10 1/06 release, a value of 0x8 means that there
will be an attempt to use ACPI in a mode compatible with previous
releases of Solaris 10 if it is available on the system. The
default for Solaris 10 1/06 is 0x8.
For releases of Solaris 10 after the 1/06 release and for Solaris
11, the default is 0x0.
Most users can safely accept the default value, which enables ACPI
if available. If issues related to the use of ACPI are suspected on
releases of Solaris after Solaris 1/06, it is suggested to first
try a value of 0x8 and then, if you do not obtain satisfactory
results, 0x02.
console
Specifies the console device. Possible values are ttya, ttyb, text,
graphics and force-text. In text mode, console output goes to the
frame buffer and input comes from the keyboard. A variant of text
mode, graphics displays an image with an animation until either a
key is pressed or console interaction is required by console login,
sulogin, or kmdb. A further variant of text, force-text will avoid
using a VGA adapter as a bitmapped device setting it to VGA text
mode. When this property is not present, the console device falls
back to the device specified by input-device and output-device.
When neither the console property nor the input-device and output-
device property pair are present, the console defaults to the frame
buffer and keyboard.
screen-#columns screen-#rows
When screen is set to either graphics or text on a bitmapped
device, screen-#columns and screen-#rows allow the desired number
columns and rows of text to be specified. They default to 80 and 24
respectively.
UEFI Only
BootOrder
The ordered boot option load list.
BootNext
The boot option for the next boot only.
BootCurrent
The boot option that was selected for the current boot.
Boot####
A boot load option. #### is a printed hex value. No 0x or h is
included in the hex value.
ConIn
The device path of the default input console.
ConOut
The device path of the default output console.
ConInDev
The device path of all possible console input devices.
ConOutDev
The device path of all possible console output devices.
ErrOut
The device path of the default error output device.
ErrOutDev
The device path of all possible error output devices.
Lang
The language code that the system is configured for. This value is
deprecated.
PlatformLang
The language code that the system is configured for.
LangCodes
The language codes that the firmware supports. This value is depre‐
cated.
PlatformLangCodes
The language codes that the firmware supports.
Timeout
The firmware's boot managers timeout, in seconds, before initiating
the default boot selection.
NVRAM CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
Not all OpenBoot systems support all parameters. Defaults vary depend‐
ing on the system and the PROM revision. See the output in the "Default
Value" column of the printenv command, as entered at the ok (OpenBoot)
prompt, to determine the default for your system.
auto-boot?
If true, boots automatically after power-on or reset. Defaults to
true. On x86, this parameter is controlled by the grub menu file.
ansi-terminal?
Configuration variable used to control the behavior of the terminal
emulator. The value false makes the terminal emulator stop inter‐
preting ANSI escape sequences; instead, echoes them to the output
device. Defaults to true.
boot-args
Holds a string of arguments that are passed to the boot subsystem.
For example, you can use boot-args=' - install dhcp' to request a
customer jumpstart installation. See boot(8), kmdb(1), and ker‐
nel(8).
boot-command
Command executed if auto-boot? is true. Defaults to boot.
boot-device
Device from which to boot. boot-device may contain 0 or more device
specifiers separated by spaces. Each device specifier may be either
a prom device alias or a prom device path. The boot prom will
attempt to open each successive device specifier in the list begin‐
ning with the first device specifier. The first device specifier
that opens successfully will be used as the device to boot from.
Defaults to disk net.
boot-device-index
Keeps track onf the device index into the boot-device variable.
boot-file
File to boot (an empty string lets the secondary booter choose
default). Defaults to empty string.
boot-ncpus
Configuration variable that controls the number of processors with
which the system should boot. By default, the system boots with
maximum supported number of processors.
boot-pool-list
If the platform supports dedicated devices to be used as a boot
pool (a dedicated ZFS pool to be used for booting the system with
an operating system that can mount its root filesystem from a
device other than the boot device), this variable is a space-sepa‐
rated list of device paths to storage devices that can be used by
the operating system to create the boot pool.
diag-switch?
If true, run in diagnostic mode. Defaults to false on most desktop
systems, true on most servers.
error-reset-recovery
Recover after an error reset trap. Defaults to platform-specific
setting.
The options are:
none
Print a message describing the reset trap and go to OpenBoot
PROM's user interface, aka OK prompt.
sync
Invoke OpenBoot PROM's sync word after the reset trap. Some
platforms may treat this as none after an externally initiated
reset (XIR) trap.
boot
Reboot after the reset trap. Some platforms may treat this as
none after an XIR trap.
fcode-debug?
If true, include name parameter for plug-in device FCodes. Defaults
to false.
input-device
Input device used at power-on (usually keyboard, ttya, or ttyb).
Defaults to keyboard.
keyboard-layout
A string that specifies the layout name for non-self-identifying
keyboards (type 7c). Invoke kbd -s to obtain a list of acceptable
layout names. See kbd(1).
load-base
Default load address for client programs. Default value is 16384.
local-mac-address?
If true, network drivers use their own MAC address, not the sys‐
tem's. Defaults to false.
multipath-boot?
If true, is used by the PROM to cycle through the list of I/O
devices provided in the boot-device variable, until a successful
boot is performed with a device from the list.
nvramrc
Contents of NVRAMRC. Defaults to empty.
network-boot-arguments
Arguments to be used by the PROM for network booting. Defaults to
an empty string. network-boot-arguments can be used to specify the
boot protocol (RARP/DHCP) to be used and a range of system knowl‐
edge to be used in the process.
The syntax for arguments supported for network booting is:
[protocol,] [key=value,]*
All arguments are optional and can appear in any order. Commas are
required unless the argument is at the end of the list. If speci‐
fied, an argument takes precedence over any default values, or, if
booting using DHCP, over configuration information provided by a
DHCP server for those parameters.
protocol, above, specifies the address discovery protocol to be
used.
Configuration parameters, listed below, are specified as key=value
attribute pairs.
tftp-server
IP address of the TFTP server
file
file to download using TFTP or URL for WAN boot
host-ip
IP address of the client (in dotted-decimal notation)
router-ip
IP address of the default router (in dotted-decimal notation)
subnet-mask
subnet mask (in dotted-decimal notation)
client-id
DHCP client identifier
hostname
hostname to use in DHCP transactions
http-proxy
HTTP proxy server specification (IPADDR[:PORT])
tftp-retries
maximum number of TFTP retries
dhcp-retries
maximum number of DHCP retries
If no parameters are specified (that is, network-boot-arguments is
an empty string), the PROM will use the platform-specific default
address discovery protocol.
Absence of the protocol parameter when other configuration parame‐
ters are specified implies manual configuration.
Manual configuration requires that the client be provided with all
the information necessary for boot. If using manual configuration,
information required by the PROM to load the second-stage boot pro‐
gram must be provided in network-boot-arguments while information
required for the second-stage boot program can be specified either
as arguments to the boot program or by means of the boot program's
interactive command interpreter.
Information required by the PROM when using manual configuration
includes the booting client's IP address, name of the boot file,
and the address of the server providing the boot file image.
Depending on network configuration, it might be required that the
subnet mask and address of the default router to use also be speci‐
fied.
oem-banner
Custom OEM banner (enabled by setting oem-banner? to true).
Defaults to empty string.
oem-banner?
If true, use custom OEM banner. Defaults to false.
oem-logo
Byte array custom OEM logo (enabled by setting oem-logo? to true).
Displayed in hexadecimal.
oem-logo?
If true, use custom OEM logo (else, use Sun logo). Defaults to
false.
os-root-device
If set, wholly describes one or more root filesystem and device
that will be used to store the root pool. On platforms that import
their root pools from storage that is not directly accessible by
firmware (e.g. no FCode or ROM exists with code that can access the
root device), this variable is used to configure the root device
and filesystem in early Solaris kernel boot. The value of this
property is only interpreted by an operating system (e.g. Solaris).
The general form of os-root-device is a set of key-value pairs,
separated by semicolons (;). Multiple root descriptors are sepa‐
rated by double-semicolons (;;).
For example (a single root descriptor (reassembled, it forms a sin‐
gle, uninterrupted line of text)):
osroot-type=ZFS/iSCSI/IPv4/IPoIB;osroot-iscsi-port=3260;\
osroot-iscsi-target-ip=141.141.1.2;osroot-iscsi-partition=a;\
osroot-iscsi-lun=2;osroot-iscsi-target-name=iqn.1986-03.\
com.sun:02:3a9d3d74-b3ec-43ac-ed6f-c9358c98a366;\
osroot-subnet-mask=255.255.255.0;osroot-host-ip=\
141.141.1.1;osroot-path=/pci@301/pci@1/pciex15b3,1003@0:\
port=1,pkey=FFFF,protocol=ip
Another example (multiple root descriptors (reassembled, it forms a
single, uninterrupted line of text)):
osroot-type=ZFS/iSCSI/IPv4/IPoIB;osroot-iscsi-port=3260;\
osroot-iscsi-target-ip=141.141.1.2;osroot-iscsi-partition=a;\
osroot-iscsi-lun=2;osroot-iscsi-target-name=iqn.1986-03.\
com.sun:02:3a9d3d74-b3ec-43ac-ed6f-c9358c98a366;\
osroot-subnet-mask=255.255.255.0;osroot-host-ip=\
141.141.1.1;osroot-path=/pci@301/pci@1/pciex15b3,1003@0:\
port=1,pkey=FFFF,protocol=ip;;\
osroot-type=ZFS/iSCSI/IPv4/IPoIB;osroot-iscsi-port=3260;\
osroot-iscsi-target-ip=141.141.1.2;osroot-iscsi-partition=a;\
osroot-iscsi-lun=2;osroot-iscsi-target-name=iqn.1986-03.\
com.sun:02:3a9d3d74-b3ec-43ac-ed6f-c9358c98a366;\
osroot-subnet-mask=255.255.255.0;osroot-host-ip=\
141.141.1.1;osroot-path=/pci@315/pci@2/pciex15b3,1003@0:\
port=2,pkey=FFFF,protocol=ip
output-device
Output device used at power-on (usually screen, ttya, or ttyb).
Defaults to screen.
rootpath
Specifies the root device of the operating system.
screen-#columns
Number of on-screen columns (characters/line). Defaults to 80.
screen-#rows
Number of on-screen rows (lines). Defaults to 34.
scsi-initiator-id
SCSI bus address of host adapter, range 0-7. Defaults to 7.
security-#badlogins
Report the number of incorrect security password attempts. eeprom
security-#badlogins=0 will reset the value. This property has no
special meaning or behavior on x86 based systems.
security-mode
Firmware security level (options: none, command, or full). If set
to command or full, system will prompt for PROM security password.
Defaults to none.This property has no special meaning or behavior
on x86 based systems.
security-password
Firmware security password (never displayed). Can be set only when
security-mode is set to command or full.This property has no spe‐
cial meaning or behavior on x86 based systems.
example# eeprom security-password=
Changing PROM password:
New password:
Retype new password:
tboot-list
If the platform supports a fallback boot mechanism (a device or set
of devices that describe storage devices that hold bootable images
that can allow the system to boot in the event of failure of the
primary boot devices), this variable holds a space-separated list
of device paths that should be added to the boot-device variable
(usually at the end, after the primary boot devices) by the operat‐
ing system.
ttya-mode
TTYA (baud rate, #bits, parity, #stop, handshake). Defaults to
9600,8,n,1,−.
Fields, in left-to-right order, are:
Baud rate:
110, 300, 1200, 4800, 9600...
Data bits:
5, 6, 7, 8
Parity:
n(none), e(even), o(odd), m(mark), s(space)
Stop bits:
1, 1.5, 2
Handshake:
−(none), h(hardware:rts/cts), s(software:xon/xoff)
ttyb-mode
TTYB (baud rate, #bits, parity, #stop, handshake). Defaults to
9600,8,n,1,−.
Fields, in left-to-right order, are:
Baud rate:
110, 300, 1200, 4800, 9600...
Data bits:
5, 6, 7, 8
Stop bits:
1, 1.5, 2
Parity:
n(none), e(even), o(odd), m(mark), s(space)
Handshake:
−(none), h(hardware:rts/cts), s(software:xon/xoff)
ttya-ignore-cd
If true, operating system ignores carrier-detect on TTYA. Defaults
to true.
ttyb-ignore-cd
If true, operating system ignores carrier-detect on TTYB. Defaults
to true.
ttya-rts-dtr-off
If true, operating system does not assert DTR and RTS on TTYA.
Defaults to false.
ttyb-rts-dtr-off
If true, operating system does not assert DTR and RTS on TTYB.
Defaults to false.
use-nvramrc?
If true, execute commands in NVRAMRC during system start-up.
Defaults to false.
verbosity
Controls the level of verbosity of PROM messages. Can be one of
debug, max, normal, min, or none. Defaults to normal.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Setting the auto-boot? Parameter to true.
The following example demonstrates the method for setting the auto-
boot? parameter to true.
example# eeprom auto-boot?=true
When the eeprom command is executed in user mode, the parameters with a
trailing question mark (?) need to be enclosed in double quotation
marks (" ") to prevent the shell from interpreting the question mark.
Preceding the question mark with an escape character (\) will also pre‐
vent the shell from interpreting the question mark.
example% eeprom "auto-boot?"=true
Example 2 Using network-boot-arguments
To use DHCP as the boot protocol and a hostname of abcd.example.com for
network booting, set these values in network-boot-arguments as:
example# eeprom network-boot-arguments="dhcp,hostname=abcd.example.com"
...then boot using the command:
ok boot net
Note that network boot arguments specified from the PROM command line
cause the contents of network-boot-arguments to be ignored. For exam‐
ple, with network-boot-arguments set as shown above, the boot command:
ok boot net:dhcp
...causes DHCP to be used, but the hostname specified in network-boot-
arguments will not be used during network boot.
Example 3 Setting System Console to Auxiliary Device
The command below assigns the device /dev/term/a as the system console
device. You would make such an assignment prior to using tip(1) to
establish a tip connection to a host.
On a SPARC machine:
# eeprom output-device=/dev/term/a
On an x86 machine:
# eeprom console=ttya
On a SPARC machine, the preceding command would be sufficient for
assigning the console to an auxiliary device. For an x86 machine, you
might, in addition, need to set the characteristics of the serial line,
for which you would have to consult the BIOS documentation for that
machine. Also, on some x86 machines, you might use a device other than
device a, as shown above. For example, you could set console to ttyb if
the second serial port is present.
Example 4 Specifying that SPARC System Boots into kmdb
To specify that a SPARC machine boots into kmdb(1), enter the following
command:
# eeprom boot-command="boot -k"
Example 5 Read all UEFI Variables on an UEFI Capable X86 System While
in UEFI Mode
The following command shows how to read all UEFI variables on an UEFI
capable X86 system while in UEFI mode:
example# eeprom -u
MonotonicCounter=0x1f2
OsaBootOptNum=0xffff
ConOut=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1c,0x7)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/AcpiAdr(2147549440)
/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1f,0x0)/Serial(0x0)/Uart(115200,8,N,1)/UartFlowCtrl(None)/VenPcAnsi()
ConIn=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1f,0x0)/Serial(0x0)/Uart(115200,8,N,1)/UartFlowCtrl(None)/VenPcAnsi()
/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1d,0x0)/USB(0x1,0x0)/USB(0x8,0x0)
BootOrder=Boot0000 Boot0001 Boot0002 Boot0003 Boot0004 Boot0005 Boot0006
Lang=eng
PlatformLang=en-US
Timeout=0x1
Boot0001=description:string=[UEFI]USB:USBIN:USB USB Hard Drive, flags:int=1,
device_path:string=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1a,0x0)/USB(0x1,0x0)/USB(0x2,0x0)/HD(1,
MBR,0x004D5353,0x800,0x3b5800), optional_data:string=AMBO
Boot0002=description:string=[UEFI]PXE:NET0:Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 10
Gigabit X540-AT2, flags:int=1,
device_path:string=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x2,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/MAC(002128e77478),
optional_data:string=AMBO
Boot0003=description:string=[UEFI]PXE:NET1:Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 10
Gigabit X540-AT2, flags:int=1,
device_path:string=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x2,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x1)/MAC(002128e77479),
optional_data:string=AMBO
Boot0004=description:string=[UEFI]PXE:NET2:Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 10
Gigabit X540-AT2, flags:int=1,
device_path:string=/PciRoot(0x1)/Pci(0x1,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/MAC(002128e7747a),
optional_data:string=AMBO
Boot0005=description:string=[UEFI]PXE:NET3:Intel(R) Ethernet Controller 10
Gigabit X540-AT2, flags:int=1,
device_path:string=/PciRoot(0x1)/Pci(0x1,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x1)/MAC(002128e7747b),
optional_data:string=AMBO
Boot0006=description:string=[UEFI]SAS:PCIE3:ATA HITACHI HDS7225SA81A,
flags:int=1,
device_path:string=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x3,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/MessagingPath(10,2c
00b4dd87d48b00d911afdc001083ffca4d00000000000000021122334400000000000000001201
0100)/HD(1,GPT,BCB01265-4665-F1CA-8BF5-9C4FB95962FA,0x100,0x80000),
optional_data:string=AMBO
Boot0000=description:string=Oracle Solaris 11.4, flags:int=1,
device_path:string=HD(1,GPT,C7398875-60D2-A9E0-83EE-94DAA21B0383,0x100,0x80000
, file_path:string=/EFI/Oracle/grubx64.efi USB_POINT=5139417f00000000
ConOutDev=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1c,0x7)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/AcpiAdr(2147549440)
/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1f,0x0)/Serial(0x0)/Uart(115200,8,N,1)/UartFlowCtrl(None)/VenPcAnsi()
ConInDev=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1f,0x0)/Serial(0x0)/Uart(115200,8,N,1)/UartFlowCtrl(None)/VenPcAnsi()
/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1d,0x0)/USB(0x1,0x0)/USB(0x8,0x0) BootOptionSupport=0x1
ErrOutDev=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1c,0x7)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/AcpiAdr(2147549440)
/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1f,0x0)/Serial(0x0)/Uart(115200,8,N,1)/UartFlowCtrl(None)/VenPcAnsi()
ErrOut=/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1c,0x7)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/Pci(0x0,0x0)/AcpiAdr(2147549440)
/PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1f,0x0)/Serial(0x0)/Uart(115200,8,N,1)/UartFlowCtrl(None)/VenPcAnsi()
PlatformLangCodes=en-US
S3PerfAdd=hexdump:989fd6aa00000000
LangCodes=eng
BootCurrent=Boot0000
Example 6 Read a Specified UEFI Variable
The following command shows how to read a specified UEFI variable:
example# eeprom -u Boot0000
Boot0000=description:string=Oracle Solaris 11.4, flags:int=1,
device_path:string=HD(1,GPT,C7398875-60D2-A9E0-83EE-94DAA21B0383,0x100,0x80000),
file_path:string=/EFI/Oracle/grubx64.efi
Example 7 Write to a UEFI Variable Using the Command Line
The following command shows how to write to an UEFI variable using the
command line where translation is possible:
example# eeprom -u BootOrder="Boot0006 Boot0001 Boot0002 Boot0003 Boot0004
Boot0005 Boot0000"
Example 8 Delete an UEFI Variable
The following command shows how to delete an UEFI variable:
example# eeprom -u -d Boot0004
FILES
/boot/solaris/bootenv.rc
File storing eeprom values on x86 machines.
/dev/openprom
Device file
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
tab() box; cw(2.75i) |cw(2.75i) lw(2.75i) |lw(2.75i) ATTRIBUTE TYPEAT‐
TRIBUTE VALUE _ Availabilitysystem/core-os
SEE ALSO
kmdb(1), passwd(1), sh(1), svcs(1), tip(1), uname(1), attributes(7),
smf(7), boot(8), init(8), kernel(8), svcadm(8)
SPARC Only
Oracle OpenBoot 4.x Administration Guide
x86 Only
biosconfig(8), ubiosconfig(8)
Oracle Solaris 11.4 3 Nov 2021 eeprom(8)