loader.conf systemd loader.conf 5 loader.conf Configuration file for systemd-boot ESP/loader/loader.conf, ESP/loader/entries/*.conf Description systemd-boot7 will read ESP/loader/loader.conf and any files with the .conf extension under ESP/loader/entries/ on the EFI system partition (ESP). Each configuration file must consist of an option name, followed by whitespace, and the option value. # may be used to start a comment line. Empty and comment lines are ignored. Boolean arguments may be written as yes/y/true/t/on/1 or no/n/false/f/off/0. Options The following configuration options in loader.conf are understood: default A glob pattern to select the default entry. The default entry may be changed in the boot menu itself, in which case the name of the selected entry will be stored as an EFI variable, overriding this option. If set to @saved the chosen entry will be saved as an EFI variable on every boot and automatically selected the next time the boot loader starts. Automatically detected entries will use the following names: Name Description auto-efi-default EFI Default Loader auto-efi-shell EFI Shell auto-osx macOS auto-reboot-to-firmware-setup Reboot Into Firmware Interface auto-windows Windows Boot Manager
timeout How long the boot menu should be shown before the default entry is booted, in seconds. This may be changed in the boot menu itself and will be stored as an EFI variable in that case, overriding this option. If set to menu-hidden or 0 no menu is shown and the default entry will be booted immediately. The menu can be shown by pressing and holding a key before systemd-boot is launched. Setting this to menu-force disables the timeout while always showing the menu. console-mode This option configures the resolution of the console. Takes a number or one of the special values listed below. The following values may be used: 0 Standard UEFI 80x25 mode 1 80x50 mode, not supported by all devices 2 the first non-standard mode provided by the device firmware, if any auto Pick a suitable mode automatically using heuristics max Pick the highest-numbered available mode keep Keep the mode selected by firmware (the default) editor Takes a boolean argument. Enable (the default) or disable the editor. The editor should be disabled if the machine can be accessed by unauthorized persons. auto-entries Takes a boolean argument. Enable (the default) or disable entries for other boot entries found on the boot partition. In particular, this may be useful when loader entries are created to show replacement descriptions for those entries. auto-firmware A boolean controlling the presence of the "Reboot into firmware" entry (enabled by default). If this is disabled, the firmware interface may still be reached by using the f key. beep Beep once as soon as the boot menu is shown (default disabled). Currently, only x86 is supported, where it uses the PC speaker. reboot-for-bitlocker Work around BitLocker requiring a recovery key when the boot loader was updated (enabled by default). Try to detect BitLocker encrypted drives along with an active TPM. If both are found and Windows Boot Manager is selected in the boot menu, set the BootNext EFI variable and restart the system. The firmware will then start Windows Boot Manager directly, leaving the TPM PCRs in expected states so that Windows can unseal the encryption key. This allows systemd-boot to be updated without having to provide the recovery key for BitLocker drive unlocking. Note that the PCRs that Windows uses can be configured with the Configure TPM platform validation profile for native UEFI firmware configurations group policy under Computer Configuration\Administrative Templates\Windows Components\BitLocker Drive Encryption. When secure boot is enabled, changing this to PCRs 0,2,7,11 should be safe. The TPM key protector needs to be removed and then added back for the PCRs on an already encrypted drive to change. If PCR 4 is not measured, this setting can be disabled to speed up booting into Windows. random-seed-mode Takes one of off, with-system-token and always. If off no random seed data is read off the ESP, nor passed to the OS. If with-system-token (the default) systemd-boot will read a random seed from the ESP (from the file /loader/random-seed) only if the LoaderSystemToken EFI variable is set, and then derive the random seed to pass to the OS from the combination. If always the boot loader will do so even if LoaderSystemToken is not set. This mode is useful in environments where protection against OS image reuse is not a concern, and the random seed shall be used even with no further setup in place. Use bootctl random-seed to initialize both the random seed file in the ESP and the system token EFI variable. See Random Seeds for further information.
Example # /boot/efi/loader/loader.conf timeout 0 default 01234567890abcdef1234567890abdf0-* editor no The menu will not be shown by default (the menu can still be shown by pressing and holding a key during boot). One of the entries with files with a name starting with 01234567890abcdef1234567890abdf0- will be selected by default. If more than one entry matches, the one with the highest priority will be selected (generally the one with the highest version number). The editor will be disabled, so it is not possible to alter the kernel command line. See Also systemd-boot7, bootctl1