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LILO(8)                                                                LILO(8)

NAME
       lilo - install boot loader

SYNOPSIS
       Main function:

        /sbin/lilo - install boot loader

       Auxiliary uses:

        /sbin/lilo -A - activate/show active partition
        /sbin/lilo -E - edit header or update a bitmap file
        /sbin/lilo -I - inquire path name of current kernel
        /sbin/lilo -M - write a Master Boot Loader on a device
        /sbin/lilo -q - query map
        /sbin/lilo -R - set default command line for next reboot
        /sbin/lilo -T - tell more about specified topic
        /sbin/lilo {-u|-U} - uninstall LILO boot loader

DESCRIPTION
       lilo  installs  a  boot loader that will be activated the next time you
       boot your system. The default configuration  file  /etc/lilo.conf  (see
       'man  lilo.conf')  will contain most options, but many, including those
       which override the configuration file, may be specified on the  command
       line.

       -A master-device [ N ]
              Used  with  a  single  argument,  inquire of active partition on
              device master-device; e.g., /dev/hda.  With N==0, deactivate all
              partitions  on the device.  With N in the range [1..n], activate
              the specified partition and deactivate  all  others.   Normally,
              only  primary  partitions  [1..4]  may  be activated, but if the
              Extended Master Boot Loader is present on the Master Boot Record
              of  the  device  (see  the -M option), any partition may be made
              active.  Whether the actual OS in the partition will  boot  from
              an  extended partition depends on the characteristics of the OS.
              LILO boot records for Linux may be booted from an extended  par-
              tition.

       -b bootdev
              Specify  the  boot  device;  i.e., where the boot loader will be
              installed.  "-b /dev/hda" specifies the Master Boot Record;  "-b
              /dev/sdb5"  specifies the first extended partition on the second
              SCSI disk.

       -B bitmap-file
              Specify a bitmap file for the boot-time graphics screen, prefer-
              ably one already pre-processed with the 'lilo -E' command.

       -c     Enable  map compaction. This will merge read requests from adja-
              cent sectors. Speeds up the booting (especially from floppy).

       -C config-file
              lilo Specify an alternate pathname for the  configuration  file.
              This option overrides the use of the default configuration file,
              /etc/lilo.conf.

       -d delay
              Specifies the delay time in tenths of a  second  (20  =  2  sec)
              before automatically booting the first image.  Gives you time to
              interrupt the automatic boot  process  with  Shift,  Alt,  Ctrl,
              ScrollLock,  or CapsLock.  If interrupted, the `boot:' prompt is
              displayed.  This switch  is  overridden  by  the  appearance  of
              prompt in the configuration file.

       -D label
              Use the kernel with the given label, instead of the first one in
              the list, as the default kernel to boot.

       -E filename.ext
              If .ext is .bmp, then take the file to be a bitmap graphic  file
              for use in the "bitmap=" configuration file directive.  Enter an
              interactive editor  to  create  or  update  the  color/placement
              information  in the bitmap file LILO header.  (see 'bmp-colors',
              'bmp-table',   and   'bmp-timer'   on   the   man    page    for
              'lilo.conf(5)'.)

              If  .ext  is .dat, then take the file to be a configuration file
              which specifies bitmap graphic parameters, which are transferred
              into the LILO header in the bitmap file of the same name.

              When  a  .bmp  file  is  modified using a graphics editor (e.g.,
              GIMP), the LILO header will be lost.  It can be  restored  using
              the .dat file, which is used as a text-based backup for the LILO
              header information.

       -f disk-tab
              Specify disk geometry parameter file. (The default is /etc/disk-
              tab.)

       -F     Override  boot  sector  check  for filesystems (e.g., swap, XFS,
              ...) which might be destroyed by the installation  of  the  LILO
              boot  sector  on  the  first  sector  of  the  partition.  These
              filesystems use the first sector as a superblock.

              Compare with "-P ignore", which bypasses certain partition table
              checks.

       -g     Generate  cylinder/head/sector (geometric) disk addresses.  Lim-
              ited to cylinders up to 1023.  Forces compatibility  with  older
              versions of LILO.

       -H     Override  fatal  halt  when a RAID array does not have all disks
              active.

       -i boot-loader
              Specify a file to be used as the new boot loader.  (The  default
              is /boot/boot.b.)

       -I label [D|a|i|k|r|R]
              label  is taken to be the name of an image specified in the con-
              figuration file.  This command will print the path name  of  the
              corresponding  kernel file, keytable file, initial ramdisk file,
              root specification, or "append=" string ("i", "k", "r", "R",  or
              "a"  option).   The  "D" option ignores the label parameter, and
              prints the default "image=" label, or first "image=" label if no
              default image is specified.

       -l     Generate  24-bit  linear  sector  addresses  instead  of  cylin-
              der/head/sector addresses.

       -L     Generate  32-bit  Logical  Block  Addresses  instead  of  cylin-
              der/head/sector  addresses, allowing access to all partitions on
              disks with more than 1024 cylinders.

       -m map-file
              Use specified map file instead of the default.

       -M master-device [mbr|ext]
              Install a Master Boot Record on the device specified as  master-
              device,  selecting  the  Standard or Extended Master Boot Loader
              per the option.  The primary partition table on master-device is
              undisturbed.   If no valid Volume-ID (serial number) is present,
              then generate one and write it to the MBR.  If mbr is specified,
              the  Standard  Master Boot Loader will search partitions 1-4 for
              an active flag, and boot the flagged partition.  Only one active
              flag  is allowed.  If ext is specified, the search for an active
              partition will include extended partitions as well.   The  pres-
              ence  of  the  Extended  Master  Boot  Loader on the Master Boot
              Record (MBR = sector 0) of a disk affects the operation  of  the
              -A option.

       -p     Require  interactive  entry  of all passwords specified as "" in
              the configuration file.

       -P {fix|ignore|<global-option>}
              Fix or ignore `corrupt' partition tables, i.e., partition tables
              with  linear and cylinder/head/sector addresses that do not cor-
              respond.  Always try -P ignore first, as -P  fix  will  re-write
              the  partition  table, possibly destroying all partitions on the
              disk.

              -P ignore is also used to bypass the partition table  check  for
              partition types within the partition table which might not allow
              the installation of a LILO boot sector.  Compare with  the  "-F"
              flag, which overrides the check of the actual boot sector.

              -P <global-option> allows the passing of any global option which
              may appear in the global section (top) of the configuration file
              (/etc/lilo.conf).    For  instance,  -P  nowarn  will  pass  the
              "nowarn" option, just as though "nowarn" appeared in the config-
              uration  file  (same  as  the "-w" switch).  Similarly, -P time-
              out=50 will add or override the "timeout=" line in the  configu-
              ration  file.   Note  that the general -P switch actually dupli-
              cates a number of command line option switches.  However, it  is
              not  strictly  the same as some switches whick cause an override
              of other options; e.g., "-g" (-P geometric), "-L" (-P lba32).

       -q     List the currently mapped files.   lilo  maintains  a  file,  by
              default  /boot/map, containing the name and location of the ker-
              nel(s) to boot.  This option will list the names  therein.   Use
              with  -v  for more detailed information about the installed boot
              loader.

       -r root-directory
              Before doing anything else, do a chroot to the indicated  direc-
              tory.  The new root directory must contain a /dev directory, and
              may need a /boot directory. It may also need  an  /etc/lilo.conf
              file.

       -R command line
              This  option  sets  the  default command for the boot loader the
              next time it executes. The boot  loader  will  then  erase  this
              line:  this  is  a  once-only  command.  It is typically used in
              reboot scripts, just before calling `shutdown -r'.  Used without
              any  arguments,  it  will  cancel  a lock-ed or fallback command
              line.

       -s save-file
              When lilo writes a new boot sector, it preserves the former con-
              tents of the sector in a file, named by default /boot/boot.NNNN,
              where NNNN is the hexadecimal representation of  the  major  and
              minor  device numbers of the drive/partition. This option speci-
              fies the backup save file in one of three ways: a save directory
              (default  is  '/boot') using the default filename 'boot.NNNN' in
              the specified directory; a pathname template to which '.NNNN' is
              appended  (default  would be '/boot/boot'); or the full pathname
              of the file, which must include the correct '.NNNN' suffix. When
              used  with  the -u option, the full file pathname must be speci-
              fied.

       -S save-file
              Normally, lilo will not overwrite an existing boot  sector  save
              file.  This  options  says  that overwriting is to be forced. As
              with -s, the specification may be of a save directory,  pathname
              template, or full pathname (which includes the '.NNNN' suffix.)

       -t     Test  only.  Do  not really write a new boot sector or map file.
              Use together with -v to find out what lilo is about to do.

       -T option
              Print out system information, some of it extracted from the sys-
              tem  bios.   This is more convenient than booting the LILO diag-
              nostic floppy on problem systems.  option may be any one of  the
              following:

                 help  - print a list of available diagnostics
                 ChRul - list the partition types subject to
                         Change-Rules
                 EBDA  - list Extended BIOS Data Area information
                 geom=<drive> list drive geometry for bios drive;
                         e.g., geom=0x80
                 geom  - list drive geometry for all drives
                 table=<drive> list the primary partition table;
                         e.g., table=/dev/sda
                 video - list graphic modes available to boot
                         loader

       -u [device-name]
              Uninstall  lilo by copying the saved boot sector back.  The '-s'
              and '-C' switches may be used with this option.  The device-name
              is optional.  A time-stamp is checked.

       -U [device-name]
              Idem, but do not check the time-stamp.

       -v     Increase verbosity. Giving one to five -v options will make lilo
              more verbose, or use, -v n (n=1..5) to set verbosity level 'n'.

       -V     Print version number.

       -w     Used as -w or -w-, suppress  warning  messages.   Used  as  -w+,
              override nowarn in the configuration file, and show warning mes-
              sages.

       -x option
              For RAID installations only.  The option may be any of the  key-
              words  none,  auto,  mbr, mbr-only, or a comma separated list of
              additional boot devices (no spaces allowed in the list).

       -X     Reserved for LILO internal use.  May  produce  different  output
              for  different  LILO versions. The line beginning "CFLAGS=" will
              contain the compiler options used to generate  this  version  of
              LILO.

       -z     When  used  with  the  -M switch, clears the Volume-ID.  Usually
              used in the following sequence to generate a new Volume-ID:
                   lilo -z -M /dev/hda
                   lilo -M /dev/hda

       -Z option
              Tells the boot installer whether special precautions need to  be
              taken  because the BIOS fails to pass the correct device code in
              DL (-Z0). Or may specify that the  BIOS  always  gets  DL  right
              (-Z1).  Corresponds  to,  and  overrides, the configuration file
              option 'bios-passes-dl='.

       The above command line options correspond to the key words in the  con-
       fig file indicated below.

              -b bootdev       boot=bootdev
              -B file.bmp      bitmap=file.bmp
              -c               compact
              -d dsec          delay=dsec
              -D label         default=label
              -i boot-loader   install=boot-loader
              -f file          disktab=file
              -g               geometric
              -l               linear
              -L               lba32
              -m mapfile       map=mapfile
              -P fix           fix-table
              -P ignore        ignore-table
              -s file          backup=file
              -S file          force-backup=file
              -v [N]           verbose=N
              -w               nowarn
              -x option        raid-extra-boot=option
              -Z option        bios-passes-dl=option

BOOT OPTIONS
       The options described here may be specified at boot time on the command
       line when a kernel image is booted.  These  options  are  processed  by
       LILO,  and are removed from the command line before it is passed to the
       kernel, unless otherwise noted.

       lock   Locks the command line, as though 'lock' had been  specified  in
              'lilo.conf.'

       mem=###[,K,M,G]
              Specifies  the maximum memory in the system in bytes, kilobytes,
              megabytes, or gigabytes.  This option is not  removed  from  the
              command line, and is always passed to the kernel.

       nobd   Suppresses the BIOS data check.  This option is reserved for use
              with non-IBM-compliant BIOS's which hang with the lines:

                   Loading...............
                   BIOS data check

       vga=[ASK,EXT,EXTENDED,NORMAL,###,0x###]
              Allows overriding the default video mode upon kernel startup.

BOOT ERRORS
       The boot process takes place in two stages.  The first stage loader  is
       a single sector, and is loaded by the BIOS or by the loader in the MBR.
       It loads the multi-sector second stage loader, but is very  space  lim-
       ited.   When  the  first stage loader gets control, it types the letter
       "L"; when it is ready to transfer control to the second stage loader it
       types  the letter "I".  If any error occurs, like a disk read error, it
       will put out a hexadecimal error code, and  then  it  will  re-try  the
       operation.   All hex error codes are BIOS return values, except for the
       lilo-generated 40, 99 and 9A.  A partial list of error codes follows:

              00  no error

              01  invalid disk command
              02  address mark not found
              03  disk write-protected
              04  sector not found
              06  floppy disk removed
              08  DMA overrun
              0A  bad sector flag
              0B  bad track flag
              20  controller failure
              40  seek failure (BIOS)
              40  cylinder>1023 (LILO)
              99  invalid second stage index sector (LILO)
              9A  no second stage loader signature (LILO)
              AA  drive not ready
              FF  sense operation failed

       Error code 40 is generated by the BIOS, or by LILO during  the  conver-
       sion  of a linear (24-bit) disk address to a geometric (C:H:S) address.
       On older systems which do not support lba32 (32-bit)  addressing,  this
       error  may  also  be  generated.  Errors 99 and 9A usually mean the map
       file (-m or map=) is not readable, likely because LILO was  not  re-run
       after some system change, or there is a geometry mis-match between what
       LILO used (lilo -v3 to display) and what is actually being used by  the
       BIOS (one of the lilo diagnostic disks, available in the source distri-
       bution, may be needed to diagnose this problem).

       When the second stage loader has received control from the first stage,
       it prints the letter "L", and when it has initialized itself, including
       verifying the "Descriptor Table" - the list of kernels/others to boot -
       it  will  print the letter "O", to form the full word "LILO", in upper-
       case.

       All second stage loader error messages are English  text,  and  try  to
       pinpoint, more or less successfully, the point of failure.

INCOMPATIBILITIES
       lilo  is  known  to have problems with the reiserfs introduced with the
       2.2.x kernels, unless the file system  is  mounted  with  the  'notail'
       option.   This  incompatibility  has been resolved with reiserfs 3.6.18
       and lilo 21.6.  reiser4 introduced with the 2.5.x kernels requires lilo
       22.5.2 or later.

       Beginning  with  version 22.0, RAID installations write the boot record
       to the RAID partition. Conditional writing of MBRs may occur to aid  in
       making  the  RAID set bootable in a recovery situation, but all default
       actions may be overridden.  Action  similar  to  previous  versions  is
       achieved using the `-x mbr-only' switch.

BUGS
       Configuration file options `backup' and `force-backup' should specify a
       backup directory or backup file pathname template on all RAID installa-
       tions.  Use of an explicit filename may not allow multiple backup files
       to be created correctly. It is best to use the default mechanism, as it
       works correctly in all cases.

SEE ALSO
       fdisk(8), lilo.conf(5), mkrescue(8), mkinitrd(8).

       The  lilo  distribution  comes  with  very  extensive TeX documentation
       through Version 21.  Text file README's in the source directory provide
       updates    on   more   recent   topics.    This   can   be   found   in
       /usr/share/doc/lilo on Debian systems.

AUTHORS
       Werner Almesberger <almesber@lrc.epfl.ch> (versions 0 to 21)
       John Coffman <johninsd@san.rr.com> (21.2 to present date)

                                  07 Oct 2005                          LILO(8)

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