bootctl systemd bootctl 1 bootctl Control EFI firmware boot settings and manage boot loader bootctl OPTIONS COMMAND Description bootctl can check the EFI firmware and boot loader status, list and manage available boot loaders and boot loader entries, and install, update, or remove the systemd-boot7 boot loader on the current system. Generic EFI Firmware/Boot Loader Commands These commands are available on any EFI system, regardless of the boot loader used. Shows brief information about the system firmware, the boot loader that was used to boot the system, the boot loaders currently available in the ESP, the boot loaders listed in the firmware's list of boot loaders and the current default boot loader entry. If no command is specified, this is the implied default. See the example below for details of the output. BOOL Query or set the "Reboot-Into-Firmware-Setup" flag of the EFI firmware. Takes a boolean argument which controls whether to show the firmware setup on next system reboot. If the argument is omitted shows the current status of the flag, or whether the flag is supported. This controls the same flag as systemctl reboot --firmware-setup, but is more low-level and allows setting the flag independently from actually requesting a reboot. Hint: use systemctl reboot --firmware-setup to reboot into firmware setup once. See systemctl1 for details. STRING When called without the optional argument, prints the current value of the SystemdOptions EFI variable. When called with an argument, sets the variable to that value. See systemd1 for the meaning of that variable. Boot Loader Specification Commands These commands are available for all boot loaders that implement the Boot Loader Specification and/or the Boot Loader Interface, such as systemd-boot. Shows all available boot loader entries implementing the Boot Loader Specification, as well as any other entries discovered or automatically generated by a boot loader implementing the Boot Loader Interface. JSON output may be requested with . See the example below for details of the output. ID ID Sets the default boot loader entry. Takes a single boot loader entry ID string or a glob pattern as argument. The command will set the default entry only for the next boot, the will set it persistently for all future boots. bootctl list can be used to list available boot loader entries and their IDs. In addition, the boot loader entry ID may be specified as one of: , or , which correspond to the current default boot loader entry for all future boots, the current default boot loader entry for the next boot, and the currently booted boot loader entry. These special IDs are resolved to the current values of the EFI variables LoaderEntryDefault, LoaderEntryOneShot and LoaderEntrySelected, see Boot Loader Specification for details. These special IDs are primarily useful as a quick way to persistently make the currently booted boot loader entry the default choice, or to upgrade the default boot loader entry for the next boot to the default boot loader entry for all future boots, but may be used for other operations too. If set to the chosen entry will be saved as an EFI variable on every boot and automatically selected the next time the boot loader starts. When an empty string ("") is specified as the ID, then the corresponding EFI variable will be unset. Hint: use systemctl reboot --boot-loader-entry=ID to reboot into a specific boot entry and systemctl reboot --boot-loader-menu=timeout to reboot into the boot loader menu once. See systemctl1 for details. TIMEOUT TIMEOUT Sets the boot loader menu timeout in seconds. The command will set the timeout only for the next boot. See systemd.time7 for details about the syntax of time spans. If this is set to or no menu is shown and the default entry will be booted immediately, while setting this to disables the timeout while always showing the menu. When an empty string ("") is specified the bootloader will revert to its default menu timeout. <command>systemd-boot</command> Commands These commands manage the systemd-boot EFI boot loader, and do not work in conjunction with other boot loaders. Installs systemd-boot into the EFI system partition. A copy of systemd-boot will be stored as the EFI default/fallback loader at ESP/EFI/BOOT/BOOT*.EFI. The boot loader is then added to the top of the firmware's boot loader list. Updates all installed versions of systemd-boot7, if the available version is newer than the version installed in the EFI system partition. This also includes the EFI default/fallback loader at ESP/EFI/BOOT/BOOT*.EFI. The boot loader is then added to end of the firmware's boot loader list if missing. Removes all installed versions of systemd-boot from the EFI system partition and the firmware's boot loader list. Checks whether systemd-boot is installed in the ESP. Note that a single ESP might host multiple boot loaders; this hence checks whether systemd-boot is one (of possibly many) installed boot loaders — and neither whether it is the default nor whether it is registered in any EFI variables. Generates a random seed and stores it in the EFI System Partition, for use by the systemd-boot boot loader. Also, generates a random 'system token' and stores it persistently as an EFI variable, if one has not been set before. If the boot loader finds the random seed in the ESP and the system token in the EFI variable it will derive a random seed to pass to the OS and a new seed to store in the ESP from the combination of both. The random seed passed to the OS is credited to the kernel's entropy pool by the system manager during early boot, and permits userspace to boot up with an entropy pool fully initialized very early on. Also see systemd-boot-system-token.service8. See Random Seeds for further information. Options The following options are understood: Path to the EFI System Partition (ESP). If not specified, /efi/, /boot/, and /boot/efi/ are checked in turn. It is recommended to mount the ESP to /efi/, if possible. Path to the Extended Boot Loader partition, as defined in the Boot Loader Specification. If not specified, /boot/ is checked. It is recommended to mount the Extended Boot Loader partition to /boot/, if possible. This option modifies the behaviour of status. Only prints the path to the EFI System Partition (ESP) to standard output and exits. This option modifies the behaviour of status. Only prints the path to the Extended Boot Loader partition if it exists, and the path to the ESP otherwise to standard output and exit. This command is useful to determine where to place boot loader entries, as they are preferably placed in the Extended Boot Loader partition if it exists and in the ESP otherwise. Boot Loader Specification Type #1 entries should generally be placed in the directory $(bootctl -x)/loader/entries/. Existence of that directory may also be used as indication that boot loader entry support is available on the system. Similarly, Boot Loader Specification Type #2 entries should be placed in the directory $(bootctl -x)/EFI/Linux/. Note that this option (similar to the option mentioned above), is available independently from the boot loader used, i.e. also without systemd-boot being installed. Do not touch the firmware's boot loader list stored in EFI variables. Ignore failure when the EFI System Partition cannot be found, when EFI variables cannot be written, or a different or newer boot loader is already installed. Currently only applies to is-installed, update, and random-seed verbs. Suppress printing of the results of various commands and also the hints about ESP being unavailable. Controls creation and deletion of the Boot Loader Specification Type #1 entry directory on the file system containing resources such as kernel images and initial RAM disk images during and , respectively. The directory is named after the entry token, as specified with parameter described below, and is placed immediately below the $BOOT root directory (i.e. beneath the file system returned by the option, see above). Defaults to no. Controls how to name and identify boot loader entries for this OS installation. Accepted during , and takes one of auto, machine-id, os-id, os-image-id or an arbitrary string prefixed by literal: as argument. If set to the entries are named after the machine ID of the running system (e.g. b0e793a9baf14b5fa13ecbe84ff637ac). See machine-id5 for details about the machine ID concept and file. If set to the entries are named after the OS ID of the running system, i.e. the ID= field of os-release5 (e.g. fedora). Similar, if set to the entries are named after the OS image ID of the running system, i.e. the IMAGE_ID= field of os-release (e.g. vendorx-cashier-system). If set to (the default), the /etc/kernel/entry-token file will be read if it exists, and the stored value used. Otherwise if the local machine ID is initialized it is used. Otherwise IMAGE_ID= from os-release will be used, if set. Otherwise, ID= from os-release will be used, if set. Unless set to machine-id, or when is used the selected token string is written to a file /etc/kernel/entry-token, to ensure it will be used for future entries. This file is also read by kernel-install8, in order to identify under which name to generate boot loader entries for newly installed kernels, or to determine the entry names for removing old ones. Using the machine ID for naming the entries is generally preferable, however there are cases where using the other identifiers is a good option. Specifically: if the identification data that the machine ID entails shall not be stored on the (unencrypted) $BOOT partition, or if the ID shall be generated on first boot and is not known when the entries are prepared. Note that using the machine ID has the benefit that multiple parallel installations of the same OS can coexist on the same medium, and they can update their boot loader entries independently. When using another identifier (such as the OS ID or the OS image ID), parallel installations of the same OS would try to use the same entry name. To support parallel installations, the installer must use a different entry token when adding a second installation. Install binaries for all supported EFI architectures (this implies ). Signed .efi files bootctl and will look for a systemd-boot file ending with the .efi.signed suffix first, and copy that instead of the normal .efi file. This allows distributions or end-users to provide signed images for UEFI SecureBoot. Exit status On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. Environment If $SYSTEMD_RELAX_ESP_CHECKS=1 is set the validation checks for the ESP are relaxed, and the path specified with may refer to any kind of file system on any kind of partition. Similarly, $SYSTEMD_RELAX_XBOOTLDR_CHECKS=1 turns off some validation checks for the Extended Boot Loader partition. Examples Output from <command>status</command> and <command>list</command> $ bootctl status System: Firmware: UEFI 2.40 (firmware-version) ← firmware vendor and version Secure Boot: disabled (setup) ← secure boot status TPM2 Support: yes Boot into FW: supported ← does the firmware support booting into itself Current Boot Loader: ← details about sd-boot or another boot loader Product: systemd-boot version implementing the Boot Loader Interface Features: ✓ Boot counting ✓ Menu timeout control ✓ One-shot menu timeout control ✓ Default entry control ✓ One-shot entry control ✓ Support for XBOOTLDR partition ✓ Support for passing random seed to OS ✓ Load drop-in drivers ✓ Boot loader sets ESP information ESP: /dev/disk/by-partuuid/01234567-89ab-cdef-dead-beef00000000 File: └─/EFI/systemd/systemd-bootx64.efi Random Seed: ← random seed used for entropy in early boot Passed to OS: yes System Token: set Exists: yes Available Boot Loaders on ESP: ESP: /boot/efi (/dev/disk/by-partuuid/01234567-89ab-cdef-dead-beef00000000) File: └─/EFI/systemd/systemd-bootx64.efi (systemd-boot 251 File: └─/EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI (systemd-boot 251 Boot Loaders Listed in EFI Variables: Title: Linux Boot Manager ID: 0x0001 Status: active, boot-order Partition: /dev/disk/by-partuuid/… File: └─/EFI/systemd/systemd-bootx64.efi Title: Fedora ID: 0x0000 Status: active, boot-order Partition: /dev/disk/by-partuuid/… File: └─/EFI/fedora/shimx64.efi Title: Linux-Firmware-Updater ID: 0x0002 Status: active, boot-order Partition: /dev/disk/by-partuuid/… File: └─/EFI/fedora/fwupdx64.efi Boot Loader Entries: $BOOT: /boot/efi (/dev/disk/by-partuuid/01234567-89ab-cdef-dead-beef00000000) Default Boot Loader Entry: type: Boot Loader Specification Type #1 (.conf) title: Fedora Linux 36 (Workstation Edition) id: … source: /boot/efi/loader/entries/entry-token-kernel-version.conf version: kernel-version machine-id: … linux: /entry-token/kernel-version/linux initrd: /entry-token/kernel-version/initrd options: root=… $ bootctl list Boot Loader Entries: type: Boot Loader Specification Type #1 (.conf) title: Fedora Linux 36 (Workstation Edition) (default) (selected) id: … source: /boot/efi/loader/entries/entry-token-kernel-version.conf version: kernel-version machine-id: … linux: /entry-token/kernel-version/linux initrd: /entry-token/kernel-version/initrd options: root=… type: Boot Loader Specification Type #2 (.efi) title: Fedora Linux 35 (Workstation Edition) id: … source: /boot/efi/EFI/Linux/fedora-kernel-version.efi version: kernel-version machine-id: … linux: /EFI/Linux/fedora-kernel-version.efi options: root=… type: Automatic title: Reboot Into Firmware Interface id: auto-reboot-to-firmware-setup source: /sys/firmware/efi/efivars/LoaderEntries-4a67b082-0a4c-41cf-b6c7-440b29bb8c4f In the listing, (default) specifies the entry that will be used by default, and (selected) specifies the entry that was selected the last time (i.e. is currently running). See Also systemd-boot7, Boot Loader Specification, Boot Loader Interface, systemd-boot-system-token.service8