* [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues @ 2018-06-12 13:12 Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-12 13:59 ` Laszlo Ersek 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-12 13:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: edk2-devel Hey people, We are experiencing issues with UEFI secure boot enabled on UDK 2018 for the OvmfPkg. Reproducible issue: 1) Add following code + files as dxe driver. https://gist.github.com/zaolin/976d0d2ad68bcd05c10ffdb2530341fc 2) Build OvmfPkg with -DSECURE_BOOT_ENABLE=TRUE 3) Windows 10 boots and crashes in Qemu with a /KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED./ If we don't populate the keys or use Linux in with secure boot turned on everything is totally fine. Any suggestions ? Best Regards, Philipp ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-12 13:12 [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-12 13:59 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-12 14:51 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-12 13:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Philipp Deppenwiese; +Cc: edk2-devel On 06/12/18 15:12, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: > Hey people, > > We are experiencing issues with UEFI secure boot enabled > on UDK 2018 for the OvmfPkg. UDK2018 does not include OvmfPkg; no UDK does, to my knowledge. > Reproducible issue: > > 1) Add following code + files as dxe driver. > https://gist.github.com/zaolin/976d0d2ad68bcd05c10ffdb2530341fc This looks like a modified copy of (a possibly older version of) my EnrollDefaultKeys module. The latest source for that is available from the "edk2-20180529gitee3198e672e2-1.fc29" SRPM at <https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1087595>. > 2) Build OvmfPkg with -DSECURE_BOOT_ENABLE=TRUE > 3) Windows 10 boots and crashes in Qemu with a > /KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED./ > > If we don't populate the keys or use Linux in with secure boot turned on > everything is totally fine. Relative to the EnrollDefaultKeys.c source that I know, your variant does not include the certificates as UINT8 arrays in the source code; instead it seems to include them in firmware filesystem (FFS) files, and to look them up with GetSectionFromAnyFv(). I assume you have some INF file changes as well, where you build the certificates as binary blobs into DXEFV. Did you verify that the exact same blobs (and same other arguments) are passed to the gRT->SetVariable() calls in your variant? I've now retested my variant with Windows 10 Enterprise N 2015 LTSB; it works as expected. Thanks, Laszlo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-12 13:59 ` Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-12 14:51 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-12 18:14 ` Laszlo Ersek 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-12 14:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laszlo Ersek; +Cc: edk2-devel Hey Laszlo, On 12.06.2018 15:59, Laszlo Ersek wrote: > On 06/12/18 15:12, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >> Hey people, >> >> We are experiencing issues with UEFI secure boot enabled >> on UDK 2018 for the OvmfPkg. > UDK2018 does not include OvmfPkg; no UDK does, to my knowledge. I mean the UDK2018 branch of https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/tree/UDK2018 > >> Reproducible issue: >> >> 1) Add following code + files as dxe driver. >> https://gist.github.com/zaolin/976d0d2ad68bcd05c10ffdb2530341fc > This looks like a modified copy of (a possibly older version of) my > EnrollDefaultKeys module. The latest source for that is available from > the "edk2-20180529gitee3198e672e2-1.fc29" SRPM at > <https://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=1087595>. Correct, I just moved it into a DXE driver and load certificates from the FFS. Do you know if there is a more common/normal/better way for populating vendor certificates? > >> 2) Build OvmfPkg with -DSECURE_BOOT_ENABLE=TRUE >> 3) Windows 10 boots and crashes in Qemu with a >> /KMODE_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED./ >> >> If we don't populate the keys or use Linux in with secure boot turned on >> everything is totally fine. > Relative to the EnrollDefaultKeys.c source that I know, your variant > does not include the certificates as UINT8 arrays in the source code; > instead it seems to include them in firmware filesystem (FFS) files, and > to look them up with GetSectionFromAnyFv(). I assume you have some INF > file changes as well, where you build the certificates as binary blobs > into DXEFV. > > Did you verify that the exact same blobs (and same other arguments) are > passed to the gRT->SetVariable() calls in your variant? > > I've now retested my variant with Windows 10 Enterprise N 2015 LTSB; it > works as expected. Thanks for the help. I am going to check if I do something wrong. But I have ran the FWTS testsuite and checked the certificates with the mokutil under Linux, everything looks fine so far. Also Windows 10 in safe mode with secure boot works but not the normal mode. We use the 14393.0.160715-1616.RS1_RELEASE_CLIENTENTERPRISE_S_EVAL_X64 LTSB release for testing. > > Thanks, > Laszlo Best Regards, Philipp ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-12 14:51 ` Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-12 18:14 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-13 13:45 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-12 18:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Philipp Deppenwiese; +Cc: edk2-devel On 06/12/18 16:51, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: > Also Windows 10 in safe mode with secure boot works but not the > normal mode. > > We use the > 14393.0.160715-1616.RS1_RELEASE_CLIENTENTERPRISE_S_EVAL_X64 LTSB > release for testing. Interesting, this reminds me of the "new" driver signing requirements when Secure Boot is enabled. Something something about cross-signed drivers not being accepted by recent Windows 10 when SB is enabled. I could imagine that some of your native guest drivers (paravirt / virtio drivers) aren't "appropriately signed" (whatever that may mean), and then something crashes when windows *rejects* loading those drivers. In safe mode, I could imagine Windows doesn't even attempt to load those drivers. Really I'm just speculating here. In support of the speculation: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/quick-docs/en-US/creating-windows-virtual-machines-using-virtio-drivers.html """ Fedora VirtIO Drivers vs. RHEL VirtIO Drivers The RPMs in the virtio-win-stable repository are the same driver builds as what is shipped with Red Hat Enterprise Linux. All the Windows binaries are from builds done on Red Hat’s internal build system, which are generated using publicly available code. For more details about how the RPM and repo are built, see the README for this repo. The drivers are cryptographically signed with Red Hat’s vendor signature. However they are not signed with Microsoft’s WHQL signature. """ In addition, please see <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1376048#c0>. Thanks Laszlo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-12 18:14 ` Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-13 13:45 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-13 19:21 ` Laszlo Ersek 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-13 13:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laszlo Ersek; +Cc: edk2-devel Hey Laszlo, We are using VirtualBox as virtualization solution and don't load guest drivers. But we had the same issue with the current Qemu version as well. Can you try to test your setup with the latest Windows 10 LTSB ? That would help us to understand if that's a general EDK2 issue or just our problem. Best Regards, Philipp On 12.06.2018 20:14, Laszlo Ersek wrote: > On 06/12/18 16:51, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: > >> Also Windows 10 in safe mode with secure boot works but not the >> normal mode. >> >> We use the >> 14393.0.160715-1616.RS1_RELEASE_CLIENTENTERPRISE_S_EVAL_X64 LTSB >> release for testing. > Interesting, this reminds me of the "new" driver signing requirements > when Secure Boot is enabled. Something something about cross-signed > drivers not being accepted by recent Windows 10 when SB is enabled. > > I could imagine that some of your native guest drivers (paravirt / > virtio drivers) aren't "appropriately signed" (whatever that may mean), > and then something crashes when windows *rejects* loading those drivers. > > In safe mode, I could imagine Windows doesn't even attempt to load those > drivers. > > Really I'm just speculating here. In support of the speculation: > > https://docs.fedoraproject.org/quick-docs/en-US/creating-windows-virtual-machines-using-virtio-drivers.html > > """ > Fedora VirtIO Drivers vs. RHEL VirtIO Drivers > > The RPMs in the virtio-win-stable repository are the same driver builds > as what is shipped with Red Hat Enterprise Linux. All the Windows > binaries are from builds done on Red Hat’s internal build system, which > are generated using publicly available code. For more details about how > the RPM and repo are built, see the README for this repo. > > The drivers are cryptographically signed with Red Hat’s vendor > signature. However they are not signed with Microsoft’s WHQL signature. > """ > > In addition, please see > <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1376048#c0>. > > Thanks > Laszlo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-13 13:45 ` Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-13 19:21 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-13 19:41 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-13 19:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Philipp Deppenwiese; +Cc: edk2-devel On 06/13/18 15:45, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: > Hey Laszlo, > > We are using VirtualBox as virtualization solution and > don't load guest drivers. But we had the same issue with > the current Qemu version as well. > > Can you try to test your setup with the latest Windows 10 LTSB ? > That would help us to understand if that's a general EDK2 > issue or just our problem. My testing yesterday was supposed to cover the "latest in Windows 10 LTSB" -- I had indeed installed the OS earlier from a Windows 10 Enterprise N 2015 LTSB ISO, but yesterday that long-term guest of mine pulled down all pending updates. Is that not what you mean? Can you give me an ISO filename and a SHA1 checksum then? I could try looking it up in MSDN. (It's not guaranteed that my subscription will allow me access to it though.) Thanks Laszlo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-13 19:21 ` Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-13 19:41 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-13 21:18 ` Laszlo Ersek 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-13 19:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laszlo Ersek; +Cc: edk2-devel Hey Laszlo, It's free for trial and available under: https://www.microsoft.com/de-de/evalcenter/evaluate-windows-10-enterprise Best Regards, Philipp On 13.06.2018 21:21, Laszlo Ersek wrote: > On 06/13/18 15:45, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >> Hey Laszlo, >> >> We are using VirtualBox as virtualization solution and >> don't load guest drivers. But we had the same issue with >> the current Qemu version as well. >> >> Can you try to test your setup with the latest Windows 10 LTSB ? >> That would help us to understand if that's a general EDK2 >> issue or just our problem. > My testing yesterday was supposed to cover the "latest in Windows 10 > LTSB" -- I had indeed installed the OS earlier from a Windows 10 > Enterprise N 2015 LTSB ISO, but yesterday that long-term guest of mine > pulled down all pending updates. > > Is that not what you mean? Can you give me an ISO filename and a SHA1 > checksum then? I could try looking it up in MSDN. (It's not guaranteed > that my subscription will allow me access to it though.) > > Thanks > Laszlo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-13 19:41 ` Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-13 21:18 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-13 21:25 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-13 21:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Philipp Deppenwiese; +Cc: edk2-devel On 06/13/18 21:41, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: > Hey Laszlo, > > It's free for trial and available under: > > https://www.microsoft.com/de-de/evalcenter/evaluate-windows-10-enterprise I tried the following ISO: af9a46ddd2a88ea01e9d3a52f56cf48e6e9d989e5a35f6e88d68be48dccfcb8d 14393.0.160715-1616.rs1_release_cliententerprise_s_eval_x64fre_en-us.iso I simply took my Windows 10 libvirt domain that I used yesterday for testing, and booted it off of the above ISO, rather than the virtual hard disk. I didn't go through with the entire installation, just until it asked for the virtio-win driver CD (so that it could continue reading the virtio-scsi Windows installer ISO, post-EFI), at which point I forced off the VM. Nonetheless, until that point, everything seemed to work fine. Did you encounter the crash after that point, or before it? Thanks Laszlo > On 13.06.2018 21:21, Laszlo Ersek wrote: >> On 06/13/18 15:45, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >>> Hey Laszlo, >>> >>> We are using VirtualBox as virtualization solution and >>> don't load guest drivers. But we had the same issue with >>> the current Qemu version as well. >>> >>> Can you try to test your setup with the latest Windows 10 LTSB ? >>> That would help us to understand if that's a general EDK2 >>> issue or just our problem. >> My testing yesterday was supposed to cover the "latest in Windows 10 >> LTSB" -- I had indeed installed the OS earlier from a Windows 10 >> Enterprise N 2015 LTSB ISO, but yesterday that long-term guest of mine >> pulled down all pending updates. >> >> Is that not what you mean? Can you give me an ISO filename and a SHA1 >> checksum then? I could try looking it up in MSDN. (It's not guaranteed >> that my subscription will allow me access to it though.) >> >> Thanks >> Laszlo > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-13 21:18 ` Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-13 21:25 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-14 17:29 ` Laszlo Ersek 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-13 21:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laszlo Ersek; +Cc: edk2-devel We are getting the error after the Windows 10 installation. Windows boots up for few seconds and then crashes. On 13.06.2018 23:18, Laszlo Ersek wrote: > On 06/13/18 21:41, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >> Hey Laszlo, >> >> It's free for trial and available under: >> >> https://www.microsoft.com/de-de/evalcenter/evaluate-windows-10-enterprise > I tried the following ISO: > > af9a46ddd2a88ea01e9d3a52f56cf48e6e9d989e5a35f6e88d68be48dccfcb8d > 14393.0.160715-1616.rs1_release_cliententerprise_s_eval_x64fre_en-us.iso > > I simply took my Windows 10 libvirt domain that I used yesterday for > testing, and booted it off of the above ISO, rather than the virtual > hard disk. I didn't go through with the entire installation, just until > it asked for the virtio-win driver CD (so that it could continue reading > the virtio-scsi Windows installer ISO, post-EFI), at which point I > forced off the VM. Nonetheless, until that point, everything seemed to > work fine. Did you encounter the crash after that point, or before it? > > Thanks > Laszlo > >> On 13.06.2018 21:21, Laszlo Ersek wrote: >>> On 06/13/18 15:45, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >>>> Hey Laszlo, >>>> >>>> We are using VirtualBox as virtualization solution and >>>> don't load guest drivers. But we had the same issue with >>>> the current Qemu version as well. >>>> >>>> Can you try to test your setup with the latest Windows 10 LTSB ? >>>> That would help us to understand if that's a general EDK2 >>>> issue or just our problem. >>> My testing yesterday was supposed to cover the "latest in Windows 10 >>> LTSB" -- I had indeed installed the OS earlier from a Windows 10 >>> Enterprise N 2015 LTSB ISO, but yesterday that long-term guest of mine >>> pulled down all pending updates. >>> >>> Is that not what you mean? Can you give me an ISO filename and a SHA1 >>> checksum then? I could try looking it up in MSDN. (It's not guaranteed >>> that my subscription will allow me access to it though.) >>> >>> Thanks >>> Laszlo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-13 21:25 ` Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-14 17:29 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-18 12:14 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-14 17:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Philipp Deppenwiese; +Cc: edk2-devel On 06/13/18 23:25, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: > We are getting the error after the Windows 10 installation. > > Windows boots up for few seconds and then crashes. I've installed a brand new libvirt domain from the installer ISO discussed below, reusing the virtual hardware config from my previous Windows 10 domain -- after enabling SB with EnrollDefaultKeys.efi as very first step. I've installed a bunch of virtio drivers in the guest. As I mentioned earlier, Windows would permit the installation of those drivers from the Fedora virtio-win ISO, but it would also block those drivers from being launched: "Windows cannot verify the digital signature for the drivers required for this device. A recent hardware or software change might have installed a file that is signed incorrectly or damaged, or that might be malicious software from an unknown source. (Code 52)" Using the WHQL'd RHEL variants, the virtio drivers work fine. I also installed Firefox in the guest, Cygwin (for having an openssh server), and the QEMU guest agent. I haven't experienced any issues with the guest, beyond the usual "Windows Update hogs resources beyond recognition" (once I installed the virtio-net driver). Thanks, Laszlo > On 13.06.2018 23:18, Laszlo Ersek wrote: >> On 06/13/18 21:41, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >>> Hey Laszlo, >>> >>> It's free for trial and available under: >>> >>> https://www.microsoft.com/de-de/evalcenter/evaluate-windows-10-enterprise >> I tried the following ISO: >> >> af9a46ddd2a88ea01e9d3a52f56cf48e6e9d989e5a35f6e88d68be48dccfcb8d >> 14393.0.160715-1616.rs1_release_cliententerprise_s_eval_x64fre_en-us.iso >> >> I simply took my Windows 10 libvirt domain that I used yesterday for >> testing, and booted it off of the above ISO, rather than the virtual >> hard disk. I didn't go through with the entire installation, just until >> it asked for the virtio-win driver CD (so that it could continue reading >> the virtio-scsi Windows installer ISO, post-EFI), at which point I >> forced off the VM. Nonetheless, until that point, everything seemed to >> work fine. Did you encounter the crash after that point, or before it? >> >> Thanks >> Laszlo >> >>> On 13.06.2018 21:21, Laszlo Ersek wrote: >>>> On 06/13/18 15:45, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >>>>> Hey Laszlo, >>>>> >>>>> We are using VirtualBox as virtualization solution and >>>>> don't load guest drivers. But we had the same issue with >>>>> the current Qemu version as well. >>>>> >>>>> Can you try to test your setup with the latest Windows 10 LTSB ? >>>>> That would help us to understand if that's a general EDK2 >>>>> issue or just our problem. >>>> My testing yesterday was supposed to cover the "latest in Windows 10 >>>> LTSB" -- I had indeed installed the OS earlier from a Windows 10 >>>> Enterprise N 2015 LTSB ISO, but yesterday that long-term guest of mine >>>> pulled down all pending updates. >>>> >>>> Is that not what you mean? Can you give me an ISO filename and a SHA1 >>>> checksum then? I could try looking it up in MSDN. (It's not guaranteed >>>> that my subscription will allow me access to it though.) >>>> >>>> Thanks >>>> Laszlo > > _______________________________________________ > edk2-devel mailing list > edk2-devel@lists.01.org > https://lists.01.org/mailman/listinfo/edk2-devel > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-14 17:29 ` Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-18 12:14 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-18 12:30 ` Laszlo Ersek 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-18 12:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Laszlo Ersek; +Cc: edk2-devel Hey Laszlo, We guess that's an issue on our side because of some NVRAM issues with VirtualBox. We located it through Windows 10 debugging. Thanks a lot for your support and testing! Maybe you are interested to join the www.osfc.io and talk about some OVMF details. :) Best Regards, Philipp On 14.06.2018 19:29, Laszlo Ersek wrote: > On 06/13/18 23:25, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >> We are getting the error after the Windows 10 installation. >> >> Windows boots up for few seconds and then crashes. > I've installed a brand new libvirt domain from the installer ISO > discussed below, reusing the virtual hardware config from my previous > Windows 10 domain -- after enabling SB with EnrollDefaultKeys.efi as > very first step. > > I've installed a bunch of virtio drivers in the guest. As I mentioned > earlier, Windows would permit the installation of those drivers from the > Fedora virtio-win ISO, but it would also block those drivers from being > launched: > > "Windows cannot verify the digital signature for the drivers required > for this device. A recent hardware or software change might have > installed a file that is signed incorrectly or damaged, or that might be > malicious software from an unknown source. (Code 52)" > > Using the WHQL'd RHEL variants, the virtio drivers work fine. I also > installed Firefox in the guest, Cygwin (for having an openssh server), > and the QEMU guest agent. > > I haven't experienced any issues with the guest, beyond the usual > "Windows Update hogs resources beyond recognition" (once I installed the > virtio-net driver). > > Thanks, > Laszlo > >> On 13.06.2018 23:18, Laszlo Ersek wrote: >>> On 06/13/18 21:41, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >>>> Hey Laszlo, >>>> >>>> It's free for trial and available under: >>>> >>>> https://www.microsoft.com/de-de/evalcenter/evaluate-windows-10-enterprise >>> I tried the following ISO: >>> >>> af9a46ddd2a88ea01e9d3a52f56cf48e6e9d989e5a35f6e88d68be48dccfcb8d >>> 14393.0.160715-1616.rs1_release_cliententerprise_s_eval_x64fre_en-us.iso >>> >>> I simply took my Windows 10 libvirt domain that I used yesterday for >>> testing, and booted it off of the above ISO, rather than the virtual >>> hard disk. I didn't go through with the entire installation, just until >>> it asked for the virtio-win driver CD (so that it could continue reading >>> the virtio-scsi Windows installer ISO, post-EFI), at which point I >>> forced off the VM. Nonetheless, until that point, everything seemed to >>> work fine. Did you encounter the crash after that point, or before it? >>> >>> Thanks >>> Laszlo >>> >>>> On 13.06.2018 21:21, Laszlo Ersek wrote: >>>>> On 06/13/18 15:45, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: >>>>>> Hey Laszlo, >>>>>> >>>>>> We are using VirtualBox as virtualization solution and >>>>>> don't load guest drivers. But we had the same issue with >>>>>> the current Qemu version as well. >>>>>> >>>>>> Can you try to test your setup with the latest Windows 10 LTSB ? >>>>>> That would help us to understand if that's a general EDK2 >>>>>> issue or just our problem. >>>>> My testing yesterday was supposed to cover the "latest in Windows 10 >>>>> LTSB" -- I had indeed installed the OS earlier from a Windows 10 >>>>> Enterprise N 2015 LTSB ISO, but yesterday that long-term guest of mine >>>>> pulled down all pending updates. >>>>> >>>>> Is that not what you mean? Can you give me an ISO filename and a SHA1 >>>>> checksum then? I could try looking it up in MSDN. (It's not guaranteed >>>>> that my subscription will allow me access to it though.) >>>>> >>>>> Thanks >>>>> Laszlo >> _______________________________________________ >> edk2-devel mailing list >> edk2-devel@lists.01.org >> https://lists.01.org/mailman/listinfo/edk2-devel >> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues 2018-06-18 12:14 ` Philipp Deppenwiese @ 2018-06-18 12:30 ` Laszlo Ersek 0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Laszlo Ersek @ 2018-06-18 12:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Philipp Deppenwiese; +Cc: edk2-devel On 06/18/18 14:14, Philipp Deppenwiese wrote: > Hey Laszlo, > > We guess that's an issue on our side because of some > NVRAM issues with VirtualBox. We located it through Windows 10 > debugging. Good job! :) > Thanks a lot for your support and testing! > > Maybe you are interested to join the www.osfc.io > and talk about some OVMF details. :) Due to family circumstances, I travel once per year at most, and that's usually to the KVM Forum (whenever I can manage). If a conference is brought to Budapest, Hungary, there's a much better chance I can drop by on a daily basis. (Linaro Connect 2017 was like this, and it was fantastic.) I don't do public speaking, as a rule. At the KVM Fora, I attempt to participate in BoF / round-table discussions about OVMF. These have been very small historically, and on the scale that's still approachable to me. Thanks! Laszlo ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2018-06-18 12:30 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 12+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2018-06-12 13:12 [OvmfPkg] Secure Boot issues Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-12 13:59 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-12 14:51 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-12 18:14 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-13 13:45 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-13 19:21 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-13 19:41 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-13 21:18 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-13 21:25 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-14 17:29 ` Laszlo Ersek 2018-06-18 12:14 ` Philipp Deppenwiese 2018-06-18 12:30 ` Laszlo Ersek
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