bootlist Command

Purpose

Displays and alters the list of boot devices available to the system.

Syntax

bootlist [ { -m Mode } [ -r ] [  -o  ] [ [  -i ] [ -V ] [ -F ]| [ [ -f File ] [  DeviceAttr=Value ... ] ... ] ] ] [ -v ]

Description

The bootlist command allows the user to display and alter the list of possible boot devices from which the system may be booted. When the system is booted, it will scan the devices in the list and attempt to boot from the first device it finds containing a boot image. This command supports the updating of the following:

Support of these boot lists may vary from platform to platform. A boot list can be displayed or altered only if the platform supports the specified boot list. It may even be the case that a particular hardware platform does not support any of the boot lists.

When searching for a boot device, the system selects the first device in the list and determines if it is bootable. If no boot file system is detected on the first device, the system moves on to the next device in the list. As a result, the ordering of devices in the device list is extremely important.

The bootlist command supports the specification of generic device types as well as specific devices for boot candidates. Possible device names are listed either on the command line or in a file. Devices in the boot device list occur in the same order as devices listed on the invocation of this command.

The devices to be entered into the boot list may be specified in a file. This makes an alterable record of the boot devices available for reference or future update. When the -f flag is used, the list of devices is taken from the file specified by the file variable. Devices from this list are then placed in the boot list in the order found in the file.

Attention: Care must be taken in specifying the possible boot devices. A future reboot may fail if the devices specified in the device list become unbootable. The system must not be powered off or reset during the operation of the bootlist command. If the system is reset, or if power fails at a critical point in the execution of this command, the boot list may be corrupted or lost.

The selection of the boot list to display or alter is made with the -m mode option, where the mode variable is one of the keywords: service, normal, both, or prevboot. If the both keyword is specified, then both the normal boot list and the service boot list will be displayed, or if being altered, will be set to the same list of devices. If the prevboot keyword is specified, the only alteration allowed is with the -i (invalidate) flag . The -i flag invalidates the boot list specified by the -m flag.

The devices currently in the boot list may be displayed by using the -o flag. The list of devices that make up the specified boot list will be displayed, one device per line. If a device specified in the boot list is no longer present on the system, a `-' is displayed instead of a name. The output is in a form that can be captured in a file and used as input to the bootlist command with the -f flag. This may be useful for restoring a boot list after making a temporary change.

Note: When you add a hot plug adapter to the system, that adapter and its child devices might not be available for specification as a boot device when you use the bootlist command. You may be required to reboot your system to make all potential boot devices known to the operating system.

When you specify a disk device, additional information might need to be added to the disk by using an attribute=value pair. This extra information is required when the target disk has multiple instances of the AIX® operating system installed on it, or it is required to indicate a path ID when you specify the boot device. When the target disk has multiple instances of the AIX operating system installed on it, identify the boot logical volume on the target disk that is to be included in the boot list by using the blv attribute.

The blv attribute can be used in all cases, but it is only required when the target disk has multiple instances of AIX installed. When bootlist displays information with the -o flag, the blv attribute is always included for each disk, even if there is only one instance of AIX on that disk.

When you specify a path ID, identify the path ID of the target disk by using the pathid attribute. You can specify one or more path IDs with the pathid attribute by entering a comma-separated list of the required paths to be added to the boot list. When the bootlist command displays information with the -o flag, the pathid attribute is included for each disk that has an associated path ID.

Device Choices

The device name specified on the command line (or in a file) can occur in one of two different forms:

Attribute Choices

Attributes are extra pieces of information about a device that the user supplies on the command line. Since this information is specific to a particular device, generic devices do not have attributes. Attributes apply to the device that immediately precedes them on the command line, which allows attributes to be interspersed among devices on the command line. Currently, only network devices have attributes. These are:

Item Description
bserver The IP address of the BOOTP server
gateway The IP address of the gateway
client The IP address of the client
speed Network adapter speed
duplex The mode of the network adapter
vlan_tag The virtual local area network (VLAN) identification value. Valid values are 0 - 4094.
vlan_pri The VLAN priority value. Valid values are 0 - 7.
filename The name of the file that is loaded by Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) from the BOOTP server

These attributes can be combined in the following ways:

Some of these attributes may not be supported on some hardware platforms. Additional hardware platform restrictions may apply.

The syntax for specifying an attribute is attr=value, where attr is the attribute name, value is the value, and there are no spaces before or after the =.

File Format When Using the -f Flag

The file specified by the file variable should contain device names separated by white space:

hdisk0 hdisk1 cd1

or one device per line:

hdisk0
hdisk1
cd1

Error Handling

If this command returns with an error, the device lists are not altered. The following device list errors are possible:

If you add too many devices to the boot list, the command adds only the number of devices to the boot list that the system supports.

Flags

Item Description
Device Provides the names of the specific or generic devices to include in the boot list.
-f File Indicates that the device information is to be read from the specified file name.
-F Indicates that the boot list must be modified even if the validation of the speed and duplex attributes, if specified, is not possible.
-i Indicates that the device list specified by the -m flag should be invalidated.
-m Mode Specifies which boot list to display or alter. Possible values for the mode variable are normal, service, both, or prevboot.
-o Indicates that the specified boot list is to be displayed after any specified alteration is performed. The output is a list of device names.
-r Indicates that the specified boot list is to be displayed after any specified alteration is performed. The output is hardware-platform dependent. It may be a hexadecimal dump of the boot list or a list of device names. (This is normally used for problem determination.)
-V Indicates that the speed and duplex attributes, if specified, are to be verified only. The boot list is not modified.
-v Displays verbose output. This flag is for problem determination only.

Security

Privilege Control

Only the root user and members of the security group should have execute (x) access to this command.

Auditing Events

Event Information
NVRAM_Config File name

Attention RBAC users and Trusted AIX users: This command can perform privileged operations. Only privileged users can run privileged operations. For more information about authorizations and privileges, see Privileged Command Database in Security. For a list of privileges and the authorizations associated with this command, see the lssecattr command or the getcmdattr subcommand.

Examples

  1. To invalidate the Service mode boot list, enter:
    bootlist -m service -i
  2. To make a boot list for Normal mode with devices listed on the command line, enter:
    bootlist -m normal hdisk0 hdisk1 rmt0 fd
  3. To make a boot list for Normal mode with a device list from a file, enter:
    bootlist -m normal -f /bootlist.norm
    where bootlist.norm is a file containing device names to be placed in the boot list for Normal mode. The device names in the bootlist.norm file must comply with the described format.
  4. To invalidate the previous boot device entry, enter:
    bootlist -m prevboot -i
  5. To boot from a Token-Ring device in slot 2, enter:
    bootlist -m normal tok0
  6. To attempt to boot through a gateway using Ethernet, and then try other devices, enter:
    bootlist -m normal ent0 gateway=129.35.21.1 bserver=129.12.2.10
    \ client=129.35.9.23 hdisk0 rmt0 tok0 bserver=129.35.10.19
    hdisk1
  7. To specify boot logical volume hd5 on disk hdisk0 for a normal boot, type:
    bootlist -m normal hdisk0 blv=hd5
  8. To view the boot list set in the preceding example, type:
    bootlist -m normal -o
    hdisk0 blv=hd5
  9. To specify booting in normal mode from the only boot logical volume on hdisk0, or the mb_hd5 boot logical volume on hdisk1, type:
    bootlist -m normal hdisk0 hdisk1 blv=mb_hd5 cd0
  10. To view the boot list set in the preceding example, type:
    bootlist -m normal -o
    hdisk0
    hdisk1 blv=mb_hd5
    cd0
  11. To specify path ID 0 on disk hdisk0 for a normal boot operation, type:
    bootlist -m normal hdisk0 pathid=0
  12. To specify path ID 0 and path ID 2 on disk hdisk0 for a normal boot operation, type one of the following commands:
    • bootlist -m normal hdisk0 pathid=0,2
    • bootlist -m normal hdisk0 pathid=0 hdisk0 pathid=2