Hi Patrick,
I was told that to build an UEFI payload need to get two components from different sites, sounds I got some information out-of-date. I will try getting the corebootPkg and then build a payload myself.
Understood your point that entire coreboot code must contain source code only. I will share this with inside our team.
Thanks, York
-----Original Message----- From: Patrick Georgi [mailto:patrick@georgi-clan.de] Sent: Wednesday, February 04, 2015 6:22 AM To: Yang, York Cc: coreboot@coreboot.org Subject: Re: [coreboot] Can I upstream an UEFI payload binary for MinnowMax board project
Am 2015-02-04 01:18, schrieb Yang, York:
Can I upstream an UEFI payload binary for MinnowMax board project?
No. We don't ship payload binaries, and there's no reason to start doing that. coreboot is an Open Source project.
The reason is we want to reduce the effort that coreboot user spends to build one.
UEFI payload contains two component, 1) is EDK2 infrastructure in tianocore.org, and 2) coreboot library and package in firmware.intel.com/develop. User need to download them separately, and put them together, and build it.
I like to think that the corebootPkg sources are rather easy to obtain: $ git clone https://github.com/pgeorgi/edk2
So the reason that your UEFI payload's sources are harder to assemble must be a problem within that project and its processes, not something that's fundamental to Tianocore based payloads.
For example, I can't imagine a single good reason why that firmware site ships Open Source code in an encrypted zip file.
It could be improved in the future, but for now it takes time.
Then take the time. What incentive is left to improve things in the future if users can simply be diverted to those binaries?
Patrick