Ard Biesheuvel 69edb31205 loader/arm64/linux: Remove magic number header field check
The "ARM\x64" magic number in the file header identifies an image as one
that implements the bare metal boot protocol, allowing the loader to
simply move the file to a suitably aligned address in memory, with
sufficient headroom for the trailing .bss segment (the required memory
size is described in the header as well).

Note of this matters for GRUB, as it only supports EFI boot. EFI does
not care about this magic number, and nor should GRUB: this prevents us
from booting other PE linux images, such as the generic EFI zboot
decompressor, which is a pure PE/COFF image, and does not implement the
bare metal boot protocol.

So drop the magic number check.

Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ardb@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Kiper <daniel.kiper@oracle.com>
2022-08-19 21:48:16 +02:00
2012-02-23 17:21:38 +01:00
2020-09-18 22:31:30 +02:00
2021-09-06 17:00:53 +02:00
2011-01-11 00:06:01 +01:00
2013-11-20 00:52:23 +01:00
2017-02-04 00:06:57 +01:00
2021-06-08 14:24:34 +02:00
2021-06-08 16:28:15 +02:00
2021-06-08 14:24:34 +02:00
2021-06-08 14:24:34 +02:00
2016-02-12 17:51:52 +01:00

This is GRUB 2, the second version of the GRand Unified Bootloader.
GRUB 2 is rewritten from scratch to make GNU GRUB cleaner, safer, more
robust, more powerful, and more portable.

See the file NEWS for a description of recent changes to GRUB 2.

See the file INSTALL for instructions on how to build and install the
GRUB 2 data and program files.

See the file MAINTAINERS for information about the GRUB maintainers, etc.

If you found a security vulnerability in the GRUB please check the SECURITY
file to get more information how to properly report this kind of bugs to
the maintainers.

Please visit the official web page of GRUB 2, for more information.
The URL is <http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/grub.html>.

More extensive documentation is available in the Info manual,
accessible using 'info grub' after building and installing GRUB 2.

There are a number of important user-visible differences from the
first version of GRUB, now known as GRUB Legacy. For a summary, please
see:

  info grub Introduction 'Changes from GRUB Legacy'
Description
No description provided
Readme
Languages
C 82.5%
Assembly 13.6%
M4 1.4%
Shell 1.3%
Makefile 0.5%
Other 0.5%