# shim, a first-stage UEFI bootloader shim is a trivial EFI application that, when run, attempts to open and execute another application. It will initially attempt to do this via the standard EFI `LoadImage()` and `StartImage()` calls. If these fail (because Secure Boot is enabled and the binary is not signed with an appropriate key, for instance) it will then validate the binary against a built-in certificate. If this succeeds and if the binary or signing key are not forbidden then shim will relocate and execute the binary. shim will also install a protocol which permits the second-stage bootloader to perform similar binary validation. This protocol has a GUID as described in the shim.h header file and provides a single entry point. On 64-bit systems this entry point expects to be called with SysV ABI rather than MSABI, so calls to it should not be wrapped. On systems with a TPM chip enabled and supported by the system firmware, shim will extend various PCRs with the digests of the targets it is loading. A full list is in the file [README.tpm](README.tpm) . To use shim, simply place a DER-encoded public certificate in a file such as pub.cer and build with `make VENDOR_CERT_FILE=pub.cer`. There are a couple of build options, and a couple of ways to customize the build, described in [BUILDING](BUILDING). See the [test plan](testplan.txt), and file a ticket if anything fails!