Bootable El-Torito CD with GRUB Legacy
Difficulty level |
---|
Beginner |
This tutorial guides you through making a bootable CD .iso image with GRUB Legacy. We are going to create an El-Torito "no-emulation" bootable CD, which is different from a bootable CD emulating a floppy disc.
Requirements
You will need the following:
- mkisofs, which is in fact superseeded by genisoimage.
- A (Multiboot compliant) kernel that GRUB Legacy can boot.
- The El-Torito GRUB Legacy stage2 file, called
stage2_eltorito
.
Ubuntu/Debian
In Ubuntu or Debian you can install the required software like this:
sudo apt-get install genisoimage grub
We need a place to store the files on the CD image:
cd # Go to your home directory.
mkdir -p isofiles/boot/grub
You now created an isofiles
directory in your home folder and a boot/grub
sub-folder inside that. We need the stage2 file. It is installed from the grub package. Just copy it:
cp /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc/stage2_eltorito ~/isofiles/boot/grub/
Windows
Look at this article about how to install and use mkisofs. We need a place to store the files on the CD image. Create a folder isofiles
, which contains the sub-folder boot\grub
needed by GRUB. We need the stage2 file. You can get it by downloading a package and unpack it using your favourite unpacking application. Find the file stage2_eltorito
and copy it to isofiles\boot\grub
.
Install a kernel
Get a kernel of your own choosing and copy it to wherever you like inside the isofiles
folder. Preferably it should be placed in the boot
sub-folder. Now create a menu.lst
file. This file controls what menu entries GRUB should provide and how the kernels are booted. It must be placed in the GRUB folder boot/grub
and contain something like this:
default 0
#timeout 30
#title Boot from hard disk
#chainloader (hd0)+1
title My kernel
kernel /boot/kernel-file # Edit it to the filename of your kernel.
In GRUB there's a concept called root. It's the disk drive or partition where you access the files, like the kernel image and modules. When booting from CD using stage2_eltorito
you don't need to set the root as it is already set to "(cd)
".
Create the .iso image
In the following I use the command genisoimage
, but you can change it to mkisofs
if that is what its called on your system. Open a command prompt/terminal and go to where the isofiles
folder is located. It is your home directory on Ubuntu. Issue the command:
genisoimage -R -b boot/grub/stage2_eltorito -no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4
-boot-info-table -o bootable.iso isofiles
Now you have a file called bootable.iso
. Test it using your favourite emulator or burn it to a CD and test on a real computer. I will just explain the command line arguments we used for genisoimage:
-R | Use the Rock Ridge protocol, which enables lower-case filenames on the CD. This is needed by GRUB. |
-b file | The file to boot (the filename is in the created ISO 9660 file system). |
-no-emul-boot | Enables no emulation El-Torito boot. |
-boot-load-size 4 | Specifies the number of 512-bytes sectors to load. Four 512-byte sectors (2048 bytes) is one CD sector and is the number supported by most BIOS. |
-boot-info-table | Patches the boot file to contain info about the CD image. It's needed by GRUB. |
-o bootable.iso | The filename of the resulting .iso image. |
isofiles | Other arguments are the files and folders that should be included on the CD. In this case it's only the content of isofiles. |
Advanced stuff
Give it a label
You want to label your CD image, so you can later recognize it when loading your CD. Just pass a -V command line argument to genisoimage followed by the name you want.
Make it be quiet
Some day you probably want to create an .iso image directly in your Makefile. If you don't like the output that genisoimage creates, just pass the command line argument -quiet.
Sometimes you get a warning about the input character set used. If that is a problem just pass the argument -input-charset ascii (or utf8 if that is what you use on your filesystem).
Make the image from different files and folders
When you are building your kernel the parts on the .iso image could be located at different paths. Imagine your project files are like this:
project/ ├── build/ │ ├── modules/ │ │ ├── iso9660.mod │ │ └── kbdrv.mod │ └── my-kernel.elf ├── src/ │ ├── grub/ │ │ └── menu.lst │ └── ... ├── thirdparty/ │ └── grub/ │ └── stage2_eltorito └── Makefile
You don't want to copy those files around in order to create the .iso image. Just use the -graft-points argument, like this:
genisoimage -graft-points # ...other arguments here...
boot/my-kernel.elf=build/my-kernel.elf
boot/grub/menu.lst=src/grub/menu.lst
boot/grub/stage2_eltorito=thirdparty/grub/stage2_eltorito
modules/=build/modules/
You can use both files and folders together with the -graft-points argument.
Solving problems
If you don't find a solution to your problem below, please ask in the forums.
mkisofs says Uh oh, I cant find the boot image
The output of mkisofs looks like this:
mkisofs: Uh oh, I cant find the boot image 'isofiles/boot/grub/stage2_eltorito' !
This problem arises because mkisofs/genisoimage looks for its boot image as a subdirectory of the filesystem on the CD; make sure that the path you specify starts with 'boot/' rather than the name of your ISO directory ('isofiles/' in this example).
Source: this thread
I get a permission denied error in Linux
The output of genisoimage looks like this:
Size of boot image is 4 sectors -> No emulation genisoimage: Permission denied. Error opening boot image file 'isofiles/boot/grub/stage2_eltorito' for update.
The problem is that the -boot-info-table command line argument patches the boot file to include information about the CD, but the boot file is not writable by genisoimage. GRUB needs the boot file to be patched in order to access the CD properly. The solution is to make it writable, like this:
chown myself isofiles/boot/grub/stage2_eltorito # Make sure you are the owner of the file. Replace "myself"
# with your username. Maybe you need to use sudo.
chmod u+w isofiles/boot/grub/stage2_eltorito # Make the file writable for the owner of the file (you).
See Also
Articles
- mkisofs
- Bootable CD - using floppy disk emulation
- GRUB - for info on using GRUB 2 to make a bootable CD with modern GRUB
Forum
External Links
- Package containing the GRUB stages (including
stage2_eltorito
) - Source for GRUB Legacy to build it yourself