TODO(53594): //docs/gen/boot-options.md is now the source of truth. kernel_cmdlind.md is in the process of being replaced. Please do not update it without coordinating with the migration effort.
The Zircon kernel receives a textual command line from the bootloader, which can be used to alter some behaviours of the system. Kernel command line parameters are in the form of option or option=value, separated by spaces, and may not contain spaces.
For boolean options, option=0, option=false, or option=off will disable the option. Any other form (option, option=true, option=wheee, etc) will enable it.
The kernel command line is passed from the kernel to the userboot process and the device manager, so some of the options described below apply to those userspace processes, not the kernel itself.
If keys are repeated, the last value takes precedence, that is, later settings override earlier ones.
The devmgr reads the file /boot/config/devmgr (if it exists) at startup and imports name=value lines into its environment, augmenting or overriding the values from the kernel command line. Leading whitespace is ignored and lines starting with # are ignored. Whitespace is not allowed in names.
In order to specify options in the build, see this guide.
If this option is set, the system will not use Address Space Layout Randomization.
For address spaces that use ASLR this controls the number of bits of entropy in the randomization. Higher entropy results in a sparser address space and uses more memory for page tables. Valid values range from 0-36, with default being 30.
Controls blobfs' eviction strategy for pager-backed blobs with no open handles or VMO clones. If unset, an internally defined system default is used.
Blobs that are not pager-backed are not affected by this knob.
The following values are supported:
NEVER_EVICT
: Nodes are never evicted. It is recommended to enable kernel page eviction (kernel.page-scanner.enable-eviction
) in this case, as otherwise blobfs will indefinitely retain all data pages in memory.EVICT_IMMEDIATELY
: Nodes are evicted as soon as they have no open handles or VMO clones. They will need to be loaded from disk again on next access.The compression algorithm that blobfs should use for writing blobs at runtime. If unset, an internally defined system default is used.
The following values are supported:
ZSTD_CHUNKED
UNCOMPRESSED
If true, indicates that the boot storage medium is connected over a USB bus. This is used by the live_usb component in //src/sys/live_usb to determine whether or not it should run.
Controls what program is executed by bootsvc to continue the boot process. If this is not specified, the default next program will be used.
Arguments to the program can optionally be specified using a comma separator between the program and individual arguments. For example, ‘bootsvc.next=bin/mybin,arg1,arg2’.
Sets the initial offset (from the Unix epoch, in seconds) for the UTC clock. The clock will be set by the device coordinator at boot time, and then later, if an RTC is present, the RTC clock will be sanitized to at least this time.
If this option is set to true driver_manager will launch the shell if kernel.shell has not already been launched. Defaults to false.
If this is false, it also disables the zircon.autorun.boot and zircon.autorun.system options.
Add a tag to the allow list. Log entries with matching tags will be output to the console. This takes precedent over tags passed via process args.
Add a tag to the deny list. Log entries with matching tags will be prevented from being printed the console. This takes precedent over tags passed via process args as well as the allow list.
For each driver listed as an argument to this option, the driver manager will not wait for all other drivers to be loaded before attempting to bind it, even if the driver is marked as a fallback driver by including ‘*’ at the start of its version string.
Enables loading drivers ephemerally. This should only be used on eng builds for development purposes.
Instructs the devmgr that a /system volume is required. Without this, devmgr assumes this is a standalone Zircon build and not a full Fuchsia system.
If this option is set, the system invokes kernel fallback to reboot or poweroff the device when the operation did not finish in 10 seconds.
This option must be set if any drivers not included directly in /boot are built with -fsanitize=address
. If there are -fsanitize=address
drivers in /boot, then all -fsanitize=address
drivers will be supported regardless of this option. If this option is not set and there are no such drivers in /boot, then drivers built with -fsanitize=address
cannot be loaded and will be rejected.
If this option is set, devmgr and all drivers will output logs to debuglog, as opposed to syslog.
If this option is set, devmgr will enable verbose logging.
Sets the policy for what action to take when a driver host crash is observed by the driver manager.
Valid options include:
restart-driver-host
: Restarts the driver host (up to 3 times).reboot-system
: Reboots the system.do-nothing
: Take no action on observed crash.If this option is set, devmgr will run compatibility tests for the driver. zircon_driver_info, and can be found as the first argument to the ZIRCON_DRIVER_BEGIN macro.
This timeout lets you configure the wait time in milliseconds for each of bind/unbind/suspend hooks to complete in compatibility tests. zircon_driver_info, and can be found as the first argument to the ZIRCON_DRIVER_BEGIN macro.
Disables the driver with the given name. The driver name comes from the zircon_driver_info, and can be found as the first argument to the ZIRCON_DRIVER_BEGIN macro.
Example: driver.usb_audio.disable
Set the minumum log severity for a driver. The textual constants “error”, “warn”, “info”, “debug”, “trace”, may be used, and they map to the corresponding bits in DDK_LOG_... in ddk/debug.h
. If an unknown value is passed, the minimum log severity will be set to “trace”. The default minimum log severity for a driver is “info”.
Note again that the name of the driver is the “Driver” argument to the ZIRCON_DRIVER macro. It is not, for example, the name of the device, which for some drivers is almost identical, except that the device may be named “foo-bar” whereas the driver name must use underscores, e.g., “foo_bar”.
Enable the unit tests for an individual driver. The unit tests will run before the driver binds any devices. If driver.tests.enable
is true then this defaults to enabled, otherwise the default is disabled.
Note again that the name of the driver is the “Driver” argument to the ZIRCON_DRIVER macro. It is not, for example, the name of the device, which for some drivers is almost identical, except that the device may be named “foo-bar” whereas the driver name must use underscores, e.g., “foo_bar”.
Overrides the board-driver-specified size for sysmem's default protected memory pool. Value is in bytes.
Overrides the board-driver-specified size for sysmem's contiguous memory pool. Value is in bytes.
Enable the unit tests for all drivers. The unit tests will run before the drivers bind any devices. It's also possible to enable tests for an individual driver, see driver.\<name>.enable_tests
. The default is disabled.
Enable or disable support for tracing drivers. When enabled drivers may participate in Fuchsia tracing.
Implementation-wise, what this option does is tell each devhost whether to register as “trace provider”.
The default is enabled. This options exists to provide a quick fallback should a problem arise.
This option (disabled by default) allows the system to use a hardware IOMMU if present.
When enabled, each ARM cpu will enable an event stream generator, which per-cpu sets the hidden event flag at a particular rate. This has the effect of kicking cpus out of any WFE states they may be sitting in. The default is false.
If the event stream is enabled, specifies the frequency at which it will attempt to run. The resolution is limited, so the driver will only be able to pick the nearest power of 2 from the cpu timer counter. The default is 10000.
When enabled and if HW RNG fails at reseeding, CPRNG panics. Defaults to false.
When enabled and if jitterentropy fails at reseeding, CPRNG panics. Defaults to false.
When enabled and if HW RNG fails at initial seeding, CPRNG panics. Defaults to false.
When enabled and if jitterentrop fails initial seeding, CPRNG panics. Defaults to false.
When enabled and if you do not provide entropy input from the kernel command line, CPRNG panics. Defaults to false.
Provides entropy to be mixed into the kernel's CPRNG.
Sets the “memory block size” parameter for jitterentropy (the default is 64). When jitterentropy is performing memory operations (to increase variation in CPU timing), the memory will be accessed in blocks of this size.
Sets the “memory block count” parameter for jitterentropy (the default is 512). When jitterentropy is performing memory operations (to increase variation in CPU timing), this controls how many blocks (of size kernel.jitterentropy.bs
) are accessed.
Sets the “memory loops” parameter for jitterentropy (the default is 32). When jitterentropy is performing memory operations (to increase variation in CPU timing), this controls how many times the memory access routine is repeated. This parameter is only used when kernel.jitterentropy.raw
is true. If the value of this parameter is 0
or if kernel.jitterentropy.raw
is false
, then jitterentropy chooses the number of loops is a random-ish way.
Sets the “LFSR loops” parameter for jitterentropy (the default is 1). When jitterentropy is performing CPU-intensive LFSR operations (to increase variation in CPU timing), this controls how many times the LFSR routine is repeated. This parameter is only used when kernel.jitterentropy.raw
is true. If the value of this parameter is 0
or if kernel.jitterentropy.raw
is false
, then jitterentropy chooses the number of loops is a random-ish way.
When true (the default), the jitterentropy entropy collector will return raw, unprocessed samples. When false, the raw samples will be processed by jitterentropy, producing output data that looks closer to uniformly random. Note that even when set to false, the CPRNG will re-process the samples, so the processing inside of jitterentropy is somewhat redundant.
On x64, some additional values are supported for configuring 8250-like UARTs:
legacy
, the legacy COM1 interface is used.acpi
, the UART specified by the DBG2
ACPI entry on the system will be used, if available.ioport,\<portno>,\<irq>
.mmio,\<physaddr>,\<irq>
.For example, ioport,0x3f8,4
would describe the legacy COM1 interface.
All numbers may be in any base accepted by strtoul().
All other values are currently undefined.
This option can be used to force the selection of a particular wall clock. It only is used on pc builds. Options are “tsc”, “hpet”, and “pit”.
This option (disabled by default) turns on dynamic linker trace output. The output is in a form that is consumable by clients like Intel Processor Trace support.
This option indicates to the live_usb
component that the system is booting into a full system rather than a recovery environment. If this is not set to true, the live_usb
component does nothing.
This option requests that command be run at boot, after devmgr starts up.
Any +
characters in command are treated as argument separators, allowing you to pass arguments to an executable.
This option is disabled if console.shell is false.
This option requests that command be run once the system partition is mounted and init is launched. If there is no system bootfs or system partition, it will never be launched.
Any +
characters in command are treated as argument separators, allowing you to pass arguments to an executable.
This option is disabled if console.shell is false.
This option prevents the fshost from auto-mounting any disk filesystems (/system, /data, etc), which can be useful for certain low level test setups. It is false by default. It is implied by netsvc.netboot=true
This option requests that command be run once the blob partition is mounted. Any +
characters in command are treated as argument separators, allowing you to pass arguments to an executable.
The executable and its dependencies (dynamic linker and shared libraries) are found in the blob filesystem. The executable path is command before the first +
. The dynamic linker (PT_INTERP
) and shared library (DT_NEEDED
) name strings sent to the loader service are prefixed with lib/
to produce a path. Each such path is resolved to a blob ID (i.e. merkleroot in ASCII hex) using the zircon.system.pkgfs.file.
path command line argument. In this way, /boot/config/devmgr
contains a fixed manifest of files used to start the process.
The new process receives a PA_USER0
channel handle at startup that will be used as the client filesystem handle mounted at /pkgfs
. /pkgfs/system
will also be mounted as /system
.
Used with zircon.system.pkgfs.cmd
, above.
This option specifies where to find the “/system” volume.
It may be set to: “any”, in which case the first volume of the appropriate type will be used. “local” in which the first volume that's non-removable of the appropriate type will be used. “none” (default), which avoids mounting anything.
A “/system” ramdisk provided by bootdata always supersedes this option.
This option requests that filesystems automatically mounted by the system are pre-verified using a filesystem consistency checker before being mounted.
By default, this option is set to false.
If true, zircon will attempt to netboot into another instance of zircon upon booting.
More specifically, zircon will fetch a new zircon system from a bootserver on the local link and attempt to kexec into the new image, thereby replacing the currently running instance of zircon.
This setting implies zircon.system.disable-automount=true
If set to true (default), netsvc
is disabled.
If true, netsvc will seek a bootserver by sending netboot advertisements. Defaults to true.
This option instructs netsvc to use only the ethernet device at the given topological path. All other ethernet devices are ignored by netsvc. The topological path for a device can be determined from the shell by running the lsdev
command on the ethernet class device (e.g., /dev/class/ethernet/000
).
This is useful for configuring network booting for a device with multiple ethernet ports, which may be enumerated in a non-deterministic order.
This option makes netsvc
work normally and support all features. By default, netsvc
starts in a minimal mode where only device discovery is supported.
This option instructs the userboot process (the first userspace process) to execute the specified binary within the bootfs, instead of following the normal userspace startup process (launching the device manager, etc).
It is useful for alternate boot modes (like a factory test or system unit tests).
The pathname used here is relative to userboot.root
(below), if set, or else relative to the root of the BOOTFS (which later is ordinarily seen at /boot
). It should not start with a /
prefix.
If this executable uses PT_INTERP
(i.e. the dynamic linker), the userboot process provides a loader service to resolve the PT_INTERP
(dynamic linker) name and any shared library names it may request. That service simply looks in the lib/
directory (under userboot.root
) in the BOOTFS.
Arguments to the next program can optionally be specified using a ‘+’ separator between the program and individual arguments. The next program name will always be provided as the first argument.
Example: userboot.next=bin/core-tests+arg1+arg2=foo
This sets a “root” path prefix within the BOOTFS where the userboot.next
path and the lib/
directory for the loader service will be found. By default, there is no prefix so paths are treated as exact relative paths from the root of the BOOTFS. e.g. with userboot.root=pkg/foo
and userboot.next=bin/app
, the names found in the BOOTFS will be pkg/foo/bin/app
, pkg/foo/lib/ld.so.1
, etc.
If this option is set, userboot will attempt to reboot the machine after waiting 3 seconds when the process it launches exits.
If running a “ZBI test” image in QEMU, this will cause the system to continually run tests and reboot. For QEMU, userboot.shutdown
is usually preferable.
If this option is set, userboot will attempt to power off the machine when the process it launches exits. Note if userboot.reboot
is set then userboot.shutdown
will be ignored.
Do not launch the virtual console service if this option is present.
If this option is present, the virtual console will not take ownership of any displays until the user switches to it with a device control key combination.
If this option is present, the virtual console service will keep the debug log (vc0) visible instead of switching to the first shell (vc1) at startup.
Specify the keymap for the virtual console. “qwerty” and “dvorak” are supported.
Specify the font for the virtual console. “9x16” and “18x32” are supported.
Set the system nodename, as used by bootserver
, loglistener
, and the net{addr,cp,ls,runcmd}
tools. If omitted, the system will generate a nodename from its MAC address. This cmdline is honored by GigaBoot and Zircon.
Set the system nodename generation style. If omitted or unknown, the system uses style 1. It has no effect if zircon.nodename
is set. Older name generation styles may be removed in the future. This cmdline is honored by GigaBoot and Zircon.
Styles: - 0: Uses a four-word-name-style using based on the MAC address. - 1: fuchsia-0123-4567-89ab based on the MAC address.
Makes Fuchsia aware of the slot booted by the bootloader. Setting this also informs the paver that ABR is supported, and that it should update the ABR metadata.
An alternative to zvb.current_slot - makes Fuchsia aware of the slot booted by the bootloader by passing the UUID of the partition containing the Zircon kernel that was booted. Setting this also informs the paver that ABR is supported, and that it should update the ABR metadata.
Specify console device path. If not specified device manager will open /dev/misc/console
. Only has effect if kernel.shell=false.
Specify if the device given with console.path
is a virtio-console device. Defaults to false. This is needed as a workaround due to drivers not being able to implement fuchsia.io.File themselves.
This option sets the boot timeout in the bootloader, with a default of 3 seconds. Set to zero to skip the boot menu.
This option sets the framebuffer resolution. Use the bootloader menu to display available resolutions for the device.
Example: bootloader.fbres=640x480
This option sets the default boot device to netboot, use a local zircon.bin or to netboot via zedboot.
Pass each option using -c, for example:
fx qemu -c gfxconsole.font=18x32 -c gfxconsole.early=false
Pass the kernel command line at the end, after a -- separator, for example:
bootserver zircon.bin bootfs.bin -- gfxconsole.font=18x32 gfxconsole.early=false
Create a text file named “cmdline” in the root of the USB flash drive's filesystem containing the command line.