# Automatic Boot Assessment
systemd provides support for automatically reverting back to the previous
-version of the OS or kernel in case the system consistently fails to boot. This
-support is built into various of its components. When used together these
-components provide a complete solution on UEFI systems, built as add-on to the
-[Boot Loader Specification](BOOT_LOADER_SPECIFICATION.md).
-However, the different components may also be used independently, and in
-combination with other software, to implement similar schemes, for example with
-other boot loaders or for non-UEFI systems. Here's a brief overview of the
-complete set of components:
+version of the OS or kernel in case the system consistently fails to boot. The
+[Boot Loader Specification](https://uapi-group.org/specifications/specs/boot_loader_specification/#boot-counting)
+describes how to annotate boot loader entries with a counter that specifies how
+many attempts should be made to boot it. This document describes how systemd
+implements this scheme.
+
+The many different components involved in the implementation may be used
+independently and in combination with other software to, for example, support
+other boot loaders or take actions outside of the boot loader.
+
+Here's a brief overview of the complete set of components:
+
+* The
+ [`kernel-install(8)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/kernel-install.html)
+ script can optionally create boot loader entries that carry an initial boot
+ counter (the initial counter is configurable in `/etc/kernel/tries`).
* The
[`systemd-boot(7)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-boot.html)
- boot loader optionally maintains a per-boot-loader-entry counter that is
- decreased by one on each attempt to boot the entry, prioritizing entries that
- have non-zero counters over those which already reached a counter of zero
- when choosing the entry to boot.
+ boot loader optionally maintains a per-boot-loader-entry counter described by
+ the [Boot Loader Specification](https://uapi-group.org/specifications/specs/boot_loader_specification/#boot-counting)
+ that is decreased by one on each attempt to boot the entry, prioritizing
+ entries that have non-zero counters over those which already reached a
+ counter of zero when choosing the entry to boot.
+
+* The `boot-complete.target` target unit (see
+ [`systemd.special(7)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.special.html))
+ serves as a generic extension point both for units that are necessary to
+ consider a boot successful (e.g. `systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service`
+ described below), and units that want to act only if the boot is
+ successful (e.g. `systemd-bless-boot.service` described below).
+
+* The
+ [`systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service(8)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service.html)
+ service is a simple service health check tool. When enabled it becomes an
+ indirect dependency of `systemd-bless-boot.service` (by means of
+ `boot-complete.target`, see below), ensuring that the boot will not be
+ considered successful if there are any failed services.
* The
[`systemd-bless-boot.service(8)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-bless-boot.service.html)
generator automatically pulls in `systemd-bless-boot.service` when use of
`systemd-boot` with boot counting enabled is detected.
-* The
- [`systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service(8)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service.html)
- service is a simple health check tool that determines whether the boot
- completed successfully. When enabled it becomes an indirect dependency of
- `systemd-bless-boot.service` (by means of `boot-complete.target`, see
- below), ensuring that the boot will not be considered successful if there are
- any failed services.
-
-* The `boot-complete.target` target unit (see
- [`systemd.special(7)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.special.html))
- serves as a generic extension point both for units that are necessary to
- consider a boot successful (example: `systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service`
- as described above), and units that want to act only if the boot is
- successful (example: `systemd-bless-boot.service` as described above).
-
-* The
- [`kernel-install(8)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/kernel-install.html)
- script can optionally create boot loader entries that carry an initial boot
- counter (the initial counter is configurable in `/etc/kernel/tries`).
-
## Details
-The boot counting data `systemd-boot` and `systemd-bless-boot.service`
-manage is stored in the name of the boot loader entries. If a boot loader entry
-file name contains `+` followed by one or two numbers (if two numbers, then
-those need to be separated by `-`) right before the `.conf` suffix, then boot
-counting is enabled for it. The first number is the "tries left" counter
-encoding how many attempts to boot this entry shall still be made. The second
-number is the "tries done" counter, encoding how many failed attempts to boot
-it have already been made. Each time a boot loader entry marked this way is
-booted the first counter is decreased by one, and the second one increased by
-one. (If the second counter is missing, then it is assumed to be equivalent to
-zero.) If the "tries left" counter is above zero the entry is still considered
-for booting (the entry's state is considered to be "indeterminate"), as soon as
-it reached zero the entry is not tried anymore (entry state "bad"). If the boot
-attempt completed successfully the entry's counters are removed from the name
-(entry state "good"), thus turning off boot counting for the future.
+As described in the
+[Boot Loader Specification](https://uapi-group.org/specifications/specs/boot_loader_specification/#boot-counting),
+the boot counting data is stored in the file name of the boot loader entries as
+a plus (`+`), followed by a number, optionally followed by `-` and another
+number, right before the file name suffix (`.conf` or `.efi`).
+
+The first number is the "tries left" counter encoding how many attempts to boot
+this entry shall still be made. The second number is the "tries done" counter,
+encoding how many failed attempts to boot it have already been made. Each time
+a boot loader entry marked this way is booted the first counter is decremented,
+and the second one incremented. (If the second counter is missing, then it is
+assumed to be equivalent to zero.) If the boot attempt completed successfully
+the entry's counters are removed from the name (entry state "good"), thus
+turning off boot counting for the future.
## Walkthrough
Here's an example walkthrough of how this all fits together.
-1. The user runs `echo 3 > /etc/kernel/tries` to enable boot counting.
+1. The user runs `echo 3 >/etc/kernel/tries` to enable boot counting.
2. A new kernel is installed. `kernel-install` is used to generate a new boot
loader entry file for it. Let's say the version string for the new kernel is
`4.14.11-300.fc27.x86_64`, a new boot loader entry
`/boot/loader/entries/4.14.11-300.fc27.x86_64+3.conf` is hence created.
-3. The system is booted for the first time after the new kernel is
+3. The system is booted for the first time after the new kernel has been
installed. The boot loader now sees the `+3` counter in the entry file
name. It hence renames the file to `4.14.11-300.fc27.x86_64+2-1.conf`
- indicating that at this point one attempt has started and thus only one less
- is left. After the rename completed the entry is booted as usual.
+ indicating that at this point one attempt has started.
+ After the rename completed, the entry is booted as usual.
4. Let's say this attempt to boot fails. On the following boot the boot loader
- will hence see the `+2-1` tag in the name, and hence rename the entry file to
+ will hence see the `+2-1` tag in the name, and will hence rename the entry file to
`4.14.11-300.fc27.x86_64+1-2.conf`, and boot it.
-5. Let's say the boot fails again. On the subsequent boot the loader hence will
+5. Let's say the boot fails again. On the subsequent boot the loader will hence
see the `+1-2` tag, and rename the file to
`4.14.11-300.fc27.x86_64+0-3.conf` and boot it.
-6. If this boot also fails, on the next boot the boot loader will see the
- tag `+0-3`, i.e. the counter reached zero. At this point the entry will be
- considered "bad", and ordered to the beginning of the list of entries. The
- next newest boot entry is now tried, i.e. the system automatically reverted
- back to an earlier version.
+6. If this boot also fails, on the next boot the boot loader will see the tag
+ `+0-3`, i.e. the counter reached zero. At this point the entry will be
+ considered "bad", and ordered after all non-bad entries. The next newest
+ boot entry is now tried, i.e. the system automatically reverted to an
+ earlier version.
The above describes the walkthrough when the selected boot entry continuously
fails. Let's have a look at an alternative ending to this walkthrough. In this
that are required to succeed for the boot process to be considered
successful. One such unit is `systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service`.
-9. `systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service` is run after all its own
+9. The graphical desktop environment installed on the machine starts a
+ service called `graphical-session-good.service`, which is also ordered before
+ `boot-complete.target`, that registers a D-Bus endpoint.
+
+10. `systemd-boot-check-no-failures.service` is run after all its own
dependencies completed, and assesses that the boot completed
successfully. It hence exits cleanly.
-10. This allows `boot-complete.target` to be reached. This signifies to the
+11. `graphical-session-good.service` waits for a user to log in. In the user
+ desktop environment, one minute after the user has logged in and started the
+ first program, a user service is invoked which makes a D-Bus call to
+ `graphical-session-good.service`. Upon receiving that call,
+ `graphical-session-good.service` exits cleanly.
+
+12. This allows `boot-complete.target` to be reached. This signifies to the
system that this boot attempt shall be considered successful.
-11. Which in turn permits `systemd-bless-boot.service` to run. It now
+13. Which in turn permits `systemd-bless-boot.service` to run. It now
determines which boot loader entry file was used to boot the system, and
renames it dropping the counter tag. Thus
`4.14.11-300.fc27.x86_64+1-2.conf` is renamed to
`4.14.11-300.fc27.x86_64.conf`. From this moment boot counting is turned
- off.
+ off for this entry.
-12. On the following boot (and all subsequent boots after that) the entry is
+14. On the following boot (and all subsequent boots after that) the entry is
now seen with boot counting turned off, no further renaming takes place.
## How to adapt this scheme to other setups
1. To support alternative boot loaders in place of `systemd-boot` two scenarios
are recommended:
- a. Boot loaders already implementing the Boot Loader Specification can simply
- implement an equivalent file rename based logic, and thus integrate fully
- with the rest of the stack.
+ a. Boot loaders already implementing the Boot Loader Specification can
+ simply implement the same rename logic, and thus integrate fully with
+ the rest of the stack.
b. Boot loaders that want to implement boot counting and store the counters
elsewhere can provide their own replacements for
good. Note that the target unit shall pull in these boot checking units, not
the other way around.
+ Depending on the setup, it may be most convenient to pull in such units
+ through normal enablement symlinks, or during early boot using a
+ [`generator`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.generator.html),
+ or even during later boot. In the last case, care must be taken to ensure
+ that the start job is created before `boot-complete.target` has been
+ reached.
+
3. To support additional components that shall only run on boot success, simply
wrap them in a unit and order them after `boot-complete.target`, pulling it
in.
+ Such unit would be typically wanted (or required) by one of the
+ [`bootup`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/bootup.html) targets,
+ for example, `multi-user.target`. To avoid potential loops due to conflicting
+ [default dependencies](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.unit.html#Default%20Dependencies)
+ ordering, it is recommended to also add an explicit dependency (e.g.
+ `After=multi-user.target`) to the unit. This overrides the implicit ordering
+ and allows `boot-complete.target` to start after the given bootup target.
+
## FAQ
-1. *Why do you use file renames to store the counter? Why not a regular file?*
- — Mainly two reasons: it's relatively likely that renames can be implemented
- atomically even in simpler file systems, while writing to file contents has
- a much bigger chance to be result in incomplete or corrupt data, as renaming
- generally avoids allocating or releasing data blocks. Moreover it has the
- benefit that the boot count metadata is directly attached to the boot loader
- entry file, and thus the lifecycle of the metadata and the entry itself are
- bound together. This means no additional clean-up needs to take place to
- drop the boot loader counting information for an entry when it is removed.
-
-2. *Why not use EFI variables for storing the boot counter?* — The memory chips
- used to back the persistent EFI variables are generally not of the highest
- quality, hence shouldn't be written to more than necessary. This means we
- can't really use it for changes made regularly during boot, but can use it
- only for seldom made configuration changes.
-
-3. *I have a service which — when it fails — should immediately cause a
- reboot. How does that fit in with the above?* — Well, that's orthogonal to
+1. *I have a service which — when it fails — should immediately cause a
+ reboot. How does that fit in with the above?* — That's orthogonal to
the above, please use `FailureAction=` in the unit file for this.
-4. *Under some condition I want to mark the current boot loader entry as bad
+2. *Under some condition I want to mark the current boot loader entry as bad
right-away, so that it never is tried again, how do I do that?* — You may
invoke `/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-bless-boot bad` at any time to mark the
current boot loader entry as "bad" right-away so that it isn't tried again