For an EFI image, I found that grub-install
or grub-mkimage
will always embed an early configuration into the resulting EFI binary, regardless of whether or not you have specified the --config FILE
option.
If you do not specify the --config FILE
option, it will try to embed /boot/grub/x86-64_efi/load.cfg
.
This early configuration file looks like this:
search.fs_uuid 8ef704aa-041d-443c-8ce6-71ac7e7f30da root hd0,gpt1
set prefix=($root)'/boot/grub'
configfile $prefix/grub.cfg # This line seems can be omitted, because
# it seems to be the default next action
- The
uuid
means the UUID of the file system, not of partition. You can use blkid to list it.
- The
hd0,gpt1
is just a hint.
- You can change the first line into
set root=hd0,gpt1
This default behavior of auto embedding is different from BIOS mode. The latter by default only embeds a prefix string like (,gpt3)/boot
without bothering with search.uuid.
I also found that the Ubuntu 18.04 (Bionic Beaver) EFI image embedded an early configuration like build-efi-images
if [ -z "\$prefix" -o ! -e "\$prefix" ]; then
if ! search --file --set=root /.disk/info; then
search --file --set=root /.disk/mini-info
fi
set prefix=(\$root)/boot/grub
fi
if [ -e \$prefix/$platform/grub.cfg ]; then
source \$prefix/$platform/grub.cfg
elif [ -e \$prefix/grub.cfg ]; then
source \$prefix/grub.cfg
else
source \$cmdpath/grub.cfg
fi
The cmdpath
is the directory of the EFI binary, so it will fall back to the grub.cfg file in the same directory of the EFI binary, as you found.