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Gary Ching-Pang Lin 4bab48ce88 Make sure the menu shows when the callback fails
Since Pause() doesn't clear the key from the input queue, the next
ReadKeyStroke reads the queued key instead of the new one. If the
user presses "Enter", MokManager exits directly without showing
the menu again.
2013-01-03 12:20:30 +08:00
Cryptlib Remove temp file checked in by accident 2012-07-09 10:38:30 -04:00
cert.S Fix data alignment on vendor_cert so we don't wind up with padding. 2012-09-06 16:43:30 -04:00
COPYRIGHT Add copyright file 2012-07-09 11:03:12 -04:00
dbx.S Initialize the size of vendor dbx as 0 2012-10-30 10:35:36 -04:00
make-certs Sign MokManager with a locally-generated key 2012-11-26 13:43:50 -05:00
Makefile Sign MokManager with a locally-generated key 2012-11-26 13:43:50 -05:00
MokManager.c Make sure the menu shows when the callback fails 2013-01-03 12:20:30 +08:00
MokVars.txt Add documentation of the Mok variables 2012-10-30 16:14:02 -04:00
netboot.c Don't fail if there's no network devices 2012-11-01 16:03:24 -04:00
netboot.h Add draft version of Neil's netboot code 2012-10-12 20:14:14 -04:00
PeImage.h dos2unix PeImage.h 2012-09-06 12:01:43 -04:00
README Add basic documentation 2012-07-28 00:42:43 -04:00
shim.c Add support for deleting specific keys 2013-01-03 12:20:22 +08:00
shim.h Switch to using db format for MokList and MokNew 2012-10-12 19:55:20 -04:00
signature.h Switch to using db format for MokList and MokNew 2012-10-12 19:55:20 -04:00
TODO Update TODO 2012-07-09 10:39:14 -04:00

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 blacklisted 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, and
so calls to it should not be wrapped.

To use shim, simply place a hex dump of the public certificate in cert.h
and build it with make.