Now let's try to actually save some user input with a form.
For the data we will choose the most simple element - checkbox (https://edk2-docs.gitbook.io/edk-ii-vfr-specification/2_vfr_description_in_bnf/211_vfr_form_definition#2.11.6.5.1-vfr-checkbox-statement-definition)
Let's create an application HIIFormCheckbox
which is based on the code of our HIIStaticFormDriver
application:
UefiLessonsPkg/HIIFormCheckbox/HIIFormCheckbox.inf
:
[Defines]
INF_VERSION = 1.25
BASE_NAME = HIIFormCheckbox
FILE_GUID = 771a4631-43ba-4852-9593-919d9de079f1
MODULE_TYPE = UEFI_DRIVER
VERSION_STRING = 1.0
ENTRY_POINT = HIIFormCheckboxEntryPoint
UNLOAD_IMAGE = HIIFormCheckboxUnload
[Sources]
HIIStaticFormDriver.c
Strings.uni
Form.vfr
[Packages]
MdePkg/MdePkg.dec
MdeModulePkg/MdeModulePkg.dec
[LibraryClasses]
UefiDriverEntryPoint
UefiLib
HiiLib
UefiLessonsPkg/HIIFormCheckbox/HIIFormCheckbox.c
:
#include <Library/UefiBootServicesTableLib.h>
#include <Library/UefiLib.h>
#include <Library/HiiLib.h>
extern UINT8 FormBin[];
EFI_HII_HANDLE mHiiHandle = NULL;
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
HIIFormCheckboxUnload (
EFI_HANDLE ImageHandle
)
{
if (mHiiHandle != NULL)
HiiRemovePackages(mHiiHandle);
return EFI_SUCCESS;
}
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
HIIFormCheckboxEntryPoint (
IN EFI_HANDLE ImageHandle,
IN EFI_SYSTEM_TABLE *SystemTable
)
{
mHiiHandle = HiiAddPackages(
&gEfiCallerIdGuid,
NULL,
HIIFormCheckboxStrings,
FormBin,
NULL
);
if (mHiiHandle == NULL) {
return EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES;
}
return EFI_SUCCESS;
}
UefiLessonsPkg/HIIFormCheckbox/Strings.uni
#langdef en-US "English"
#string FORMSET_TITLE #language en-US "Simple Formset"
#string FORMSET_HELP #language en-US "This is a very simple formset"
#string FORMID1_TITLE #language en-US "Simple Form"
UefiLessonsPkg/HIIFormCheckbox/Form.vfr
#include <Uefi/UefiMultiPhase.h>
#define FORMSET_GUID {0xef2acc91, 0x7b50, 0x4ab9, {0xab, 0x67, 0x2b, 0x4, 0xf8, 0xbc, 0x13, 0x5e}}
formset
guid = FORMSET_GUID,
title = STRING_TOKEN(FORMSET_TITLE),
help = STRING_TOKEN(FORMSET_HELP),
form
formid = 1,
title = STRING_TOKEN(FORMID1_TITLE);
endform;
endformset;
Now if you build our driver you can load it with the load HIIFormCheckbox
command.
FS0:\> load HIIFormCheckbox.efi
Image 'FS0:\HIIFormCheckbox.efi' loaded at 688B000 - Success
Verify that HII resources were created with a help of our ShowHII.efi
application:
FS0:\> ShowHII.efi
...
PackageList[20]: GUID=771A4631-43BA-4852-9593-919D9DE079F1; size=0x114
Package[0]: type=FORMS; size=0x41
Package[1]: type=STRINGS; size=0xBB
Package[2]: type=END; size=0x4
And if you use our DisplayHIIByGuid.efi
application, you could see the form:
FS0:\> DisplayHIIByGuid.efi 771A4631-43BA-4852-9593-919D9DE079F1
Now let's start to add new functionality.
Insert the following code inside the form:
checkbox
prompt = STRING_TOKEN(CHECKBOX_PROMPT),
help = STRING_TOKEN(CHECKBOX_HELP),
endcheckbox;
And define the strings in our UNI file:
#string CHECKBOX_PROMPT #language en-US "Checkbox prompt"
#string CHECKBOX_HELP #language en-US "Checkbox help"
This will give you the following element on the form
Which you can toggle with a spacebar
But unfortunately our Form doesn't save any data. No matter in what state you will leave the checkbox on the form exit, once you launch the form again, the checkbox will be cleared. So right now our form is useless.
Let's investigate IFR code from our new element (Build/UefiLessonsPkg/RELEASE_GCC5/X64/UefiLessonsPkg/HIIFormCheckbox/HIIFormCheckbox/DEBUG/Form.lst
).
The checkbox element will produce EFI_IFR_CHECKBOX
and EFI_IFR_END
opcodes:
checkbox
>00000039: 06 8E 05 00 06 00 01 00 00 00 FF FF 00 00
prompt = STRING_TOKEN(0x0005),
help = STRING_TOKEN(0x0006),
endcheckbox;
>00000047: 29 02
Here is a definition for the EFI_IFR_CHECKBOX
:
EFI_IFR_CHECKBOX
Summary:
Creates a boolean checkbox.
Prototype:
#define EFI_IFR_CHECKBOX_OP 0x06
typedef struct _EFI_IFR_CHECKBOX {
EFI_IFR_OP_HEADER Header;
EFI_IFR_QUESTION_HEADER Question;
UINT8 Flags;
} EFI_IFR_CHECKBOX;
Members:
Header The standard question header, where Header.OpCode = EFI_IFR_CHECKBOX_OP.
Question The standard question header.
Flags Flags that describe the behavior of the question. All undefined bits should be zero.
Description:
Creates a Boolean checkbox question and adds it to the current form. The checkbox has two values:
FALSE if the box is not checked and TRUE if it is.
Just in case you've forgot, EFI_IFR_OP_HEADER
takes 2 bytes, so it would take 06 8E
from the 06 8E 05 00 06 00 01 00 00 00 FF FF 00 00
:
typedef struct _EFI_IFR_OP_HEADER {
UINT8 OpCode;
UINT8 Length:7;
UINT8 Scope:1;
} EFI_IFR_OP_HEADER;
Now let's start checking the EFI_IFR_QUESTION_HEADER
field which is represented by the rest 05 00 06 00 01 00 00 00 FF FF 00 00
data:
EFI_IFR_QUESTION_HEADER
Summary:
Standard question header.
Prototype:
typedef struct _EFI_IFR_QUESTION_HEADER {
EFI_IFR_STATEMENT_HEADER Header;
EFI_QUESTION_ID QuestionId;
EFI_VARSTORE_ID VarStoreId;
union {
EFI_STRING_ID VarName;
UINT16 VarOffset;
} VarStoreInfo;
UINT8 Flags;
} EFI_IFR_QUESTION_HEADER;
Members:
Header The standard statement header.
QuestionId The unique value that identifies the particular question being defined by the opcode. The value of zero is reserved.
Flags A bit-mask that determines which unique settings are active for this question.
VarStoreId Specifies the identifier of a previously declared variable store to use when storing the question’s value.
A value of zero indicates no associated variable store.
VarStoreInfo If VarStoreId refers to Buffer Storage (EFI_IFR_VARSTORE or EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_EFI), then VarStoreInfo contains a 16-bit Buffer Storage offset (VarOffset).
If VarStoreId refers to Name/Value Storage (EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_NAME_VALUE), then VarStoreInfo contains the String ID of the name (VarName) for this name/value pair.
Description:
This is the standard header for questions.
First the EFI_IFR_STATEMENT_HEADER
:
EFI_IFR_STATEMENT_HEADER
Summary:
Standard statement header.
Prototype:
typedef struct _EFI_IFR_STATEMENT_HEADER {
EFI_STRING_ID Prompt;
EFI_STRING_ID Help;
} EFI_IFR_STATEMENT_HEADER;
Members:
Prompt The string identifier of the prompt string for this particular statement. The value 0 indicates no prompt string.
Help The string identifier of the help string for this particular statement. The value 0 indicates no help string.
Description:
This is the standard header for statements, including questions
According to the https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/MdePkg/Include/Uefi/UefiInternalFormRepresentation.h:
typedef UINT16 EFI_STRING_ID;
So basically it means this (remember we've left with 05 00 06 00 01 00 00 00 FF FF 00 00
data):
EFI_STRING_ID Prompt = 00 05
EFI_STRING_ID Help = 00 06
This is just references to the strings in the HII String package.
Now we've left with a 01 00 00 00 FF FF 00 00
code.
According to the same UefiInternalFormRepresentation.h
file:
typedef UINT16 EFI_QUESTION_ID;
typedef UINT16 EFI_VARSTORE_ID;
So if we continue to match data to fields we would get:
EFI_QUESTION_ID QuestionId; = 00 01
EFI_VARSTORE_ID VarStoreId; = 00 00
union {
EFI_STRING_ID VarName; = FF FF
UINT16 VarOffset;
} VarStoreInfo;
UINT8 Flags; = 00
And the last 00
byte that is left (in case you track it) a UINT8 Flags
field from the end of the EFI_IFR_CHECKBOX
structure.
You might guess already the source of our problem. To save something we need to create a link to some variable storage. Because right now VarStoreId = 0
, which according to the docs above means no associated variable store
.
There are several possible variable storages. You can even even create you callback logic on form submit and don't use any variable storage at all.
We need to start with something, so in this lesson we are going to look at most simple storage efivarstore
.
efivarstore
is a simple UEFI variable storage. Basically you supply GUID+name
combination for the UEFI variable and its type and flags (https://edk2-docs.gitbook.io/edk-ii-vfr-specification/2_vfr_description_in_bnf/27_vfr_variable_store_definition#2.7.2-vfr-efi-variable-store-definition):
For example if you want to represent UEFI variable with your special MyCustomStructure
type which exist under MyVariableGuid
with a name MyVariableName
in the system and has EFI_VARIABLE_BOOTSERVICE_ACCESS
flag, you should declare it like this:
efivarstore MyCustomStructure
attribute = EFI_VARIABLE_BOOTSERVICE_ACCESS,
name = MyVariableName,
guid = MyVariableGuid;
We don't need any special structure, simple UINT8
will do for the checkbox.
Let's declare our variable EFI_VARIABLE_BOOTSERVICE_ACCESS | EFI_VARIABLE_NON_VOLATILE
and place it under the FORMSET_GUID
with a name CheckboxValue
.
To link checkbox value with this variable we can use varid = CheckboxValue
syntax
formset
guid = FORMSET_GUID,
title = STRING_TOKEN(FORMSET_TITLE),
help = STRING_TOKEN(FORMSET_HELP),
+ efivarstore UINT8,
+ attribute = EFI_VARIABLE_BOOTSERVICE_ACCESS | EFI_VARIABLE_NON_VOLATILE,
+ name = CheckboxValue,
+ guid = FORMSET_GUID;
form
formid = 1,
title = STRING_TOKEN(FORMID1_TITLE);
checkbox
+ varid = CheckboxValue,
prompt = STRING_TOKEN(CHECKBOX_PROMPT),
help = STRING_TOKEN(CHECKBOX_HELP),
endcheckbox;
endform;
endformset;
Let's investigate how this new VFR code have changed our IFR sructures.
First we've added efivarstore
, it have produced the following code:
efivarstore UINT8,
>00000033: 26 28 01 00 91 CC 2A EF 50 7B B9 4A AB 67 2B 04 F8 BC 13 5E 03 00 00 00 01 00 43 68 65 63 6B 62 6F 78 56 61 6C 75 65 00
attribute = 0x00000002 | 0x00000001,
name = CheckboxValue,
guid = {0xef2acc91, 0x7b50, 0x4ab9, {0xab, 0x67, 0x2b, 0x4, 0xf8, 0xbc, 0x13, 0x5e}};
It starts with an opcode 0x26 which is:
#define EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_EFI_OP 0x26
So the first 2 bytes is the EFI_IFR_OP_HEADER
.
The rest of data is the EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_EFI
structure:
EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_EFI
Summary:
Creates a variable storage short-cut for EFI variable storage.
Prototype:
#define EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_EFI_OP 0x26
typedef struct _EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_EFI {
EFI_IFR_OP_HEADER Header;
EFI_VARSTORE_ID VarStoreId;
EFI_GUID Guid;
UINT32 Attributes
UINT16 Size;
//UINT8 Name[];
} EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_EFI;
Members:
Header The byte sequence that defines the type of opcode as well as the length of the opcode being defined. For this tag,
Header.OpCode = EFI_IFR_VARSTORE_EFI_OP.
VarStoreId The variable store identifier, which is unique within the current form set. This field is the value that uniquely identifies
this variable store definition instance from others. Question headers refer to this value to designate which is the active
variable that is being used. A value of zero is invalid.
Guid The EFI variable’s GUID definition. This field comprises one half of the EFI variable name, with the other half being the
human-readable aspect of the name, which is specified in the Name field below.
Attributes Specifies the flags to use for the variable.
Size The size of the variable store.
Name A null-terminated ASCII string that specifies one half of the EFI name for this variable store. The other half is specified in
the Guid field (above). The Name field is not actually included in the structure but is included here to help illustrate the
encoding of the opcode. The size of the string, including the null termination, is included in the opcode's header size.
Description:
This opcode describes an EFI Variable Variable Store within a form set. The Guid and Name specified here will be used with GetVariable() and SetVariable().
Let's look how binary data fills structure fields:
EFI_VARSTORE_ID VarStoreId // 01 00
EFI_GUID Guid; // 91 CC 2A EF 50 7B B9 4A AB 67 2B 04 F8 BC 13 5E (= FORMSET_GUID)
UINT32 Attributes // 03 00 00 00
UINT16 Size; // 01 00
//UINT8 Name[]; // 43 68 65 63 6B 62 6F 78 56 61 6C 75 65 00 (= "C h e c k b o x V a l u e")
As you see the code provides GUID+name
combination for the UEFI variable and its type and flags like it should.
Now let's look at the reference to this storage. We've added varid = CheckboxValue
to our form:
>00000061: 06 8E 05 00 06 00 01 00 01 00 00 00 00 00
varid = CheckboxValue,
prompt = STRING_TOKEN(0x0005),
help = STRING_TOKEN(0x0006),
endcheckbox;
Basically the data has changed like this:
- 06 8E 05 00 06 00 01 00 00 00 FF FF 00 00
+ 06 8E 05 00 06 00 01 00 01 00 00 00 00 00
Which means this:
- +
EFI_VARSTORE_ID VarStoreId; = 00 00 // 01 00
union {
EFI_STRING_ID VarName; = FF FF // 00 00
UINT16 VarOffset;
} VarStoreInfo;
So now checkbox code points to the varstore with an id = 1 (which is the id of the storage that we've declared above).
If you look at the form from our application again, you'll see, that now it has several new help messages in the bottom panel, particularly:
-
F9=Reset to Defaults
-
F10=Save
Now when you change configuration there are would be Configuration changed
message:
To save the settings you can use F10
like it is described in the bottom panel. It would produce the following confirmation window:
But if you try to press Y
the form will fail with the following message:
To make things work we need to add some modifications to our driver code.