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diff --git a/contrib/syslinux/syslinux-4.03/doc/menu.txt b/contrib/syslinux/syslinux-4.03/doc/menu.txt deleted file mode 100644 index e2dd1e1..0000000 --- a/contrib/syslinux/syslinux-4.03/doc/menu.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,566 +0,0 @@ -There are two menu systems included with Syslinux, the advanced menu -system, and the simple menu system. - - -+++ THE ADVANCED MENU SYSTEM +++ - -The advanced menu system, written by Murali Krishnan Ganapathy, is -located in the menu/ subdirectly. It allows the user to create -hierarchial submenus, dynamic options, checkboxes, and just about -anything you want. It requires that the menu is compiled from a -simple C file, see menu/simple.c and menu/complex.c for examples. - -The advanced menu system doesn't support serial console at this time. - -See menu/README for more information. - - -+++ THE SIMPLE MENU SYSTEM +++ - -The simple menu system is a single module located at -com32/modules/vesamenu.c32 (graphical) or com32/modules/menu.c32 (text -mode only). It uses the same configuration file as the regular -Syslinux command line, and displays all the LABEL statements. - -To use the menu system, simply make sure [vesa]menu.c32 is in the -appropriate location for your boot medium (the same directory as the -configuration file for SYSLINUX, EXTLINUX and ISOLINUX, and the same -directory as pxelinux.0 for PXELINUX), and put the following options -in your configuration file: - -UI menu.c32 - - -There are a few menu additions to the configuration file, all starting -with the keywords MENU or TEXT; like the rest of the Syslinux config -file language, it is case insensitive: - - -MENU TITLE title - - Give the menu a title. The title is presented at the top of - the menu. - - -MENU HIDDEN - - Do not display the actual menu unless the user presses a key. - All that is displayed is a timeout message. - - -MENU CLEAR - - Clear the screen when exiting the menu, instead of leaving the - menu displayed. For vesamenu, this means the graphical - background is still displayed without the menu itself for as - long as the screen remains in graphics mode. - - -MENU SHIFTKEY - - Exit the menu system immediately unless either the Shift or Alt - key is pressed, or Caps Lock or Scroll Lock is set. - - -MENU SEPARATOR - - Insert an empty line in the menu. - - -MENU LABEL label - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - Changes the label displayed for a specific entry. This allows - you to have a label that isn't suitable for the command line, - for example: - - # Soft Cap Linux - LABEL softcap - MENU LABEL Soft Cap ^Linux 9.6.36 - KERNEL softcap-9.6.36.bzi - APPEND whatever - - # A very dense operating system - LABEL brick - MENU LABEL ^Windows CE/ME/NT - KERNEL chain.c32 - APPEND hd0 2 - - The ^ symbol in a MENU LABEL statement defines a hotkey. - The hotkey will be highlighted in the menu and will move the - menu cursor immediately to that entry. - - Reusing hotkeys is disallowed, subsequent entries will not be - highlighted, and will not work. - - Keep in mind that the LABELs, not MENU LABELs, must be unique, - or odd things will happen to the command-line. - - -MENU INDENT count - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - Will add "count" spaces in front of the displayed menu entry. - - -MENU DISABLE - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - Makes the entry unselectable. This allows you to make a - section in your menu with different options below it. - for example: - - # Entries for network boots - LABEL - - MENU LABEL Network: - MENU DISABLE - - # Soft Cap Linux - LABEL softcap - MENU LABEL Soft Cap ^Linux 9.6.36 - MENU INDENT 1 - KERNEL softcap-9.6.36.bzi - APPEND whatever - - # Dos 6.22 - LABEL dos - MENU LABEL ^Dos 6.22 - MENU INDENT 1 - KERNEL memdisk - APPEND initrd=dos622.imz - - # Separator - MENU SEPARATOR - - # Entries for local boots - LABEL - - MENU LABEL Local: - MENU DISABLE - - # Windows 2000 - LABEL w2k - MENU LABEL ^Windows 2000 - MENU INDENT 1 - KERNEL chain.c32 - APPEND hd0 1 - - # Windows XP - LABEL xp - MENU LABEL Windows ^XP - MENU INDENT 1 - KERNEL chain.c32 - APPEND hd0 2 - -MENU HIDE - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - Suppresses a particular LABEL entry from the menu. - - -MENU DEFAULT - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - - Indicates that this entry should be the default for this - particular submenu. See also the DEFAULT directive below. - - -TEXT HELP -Help text ... -... which can span multiple lines -ENDTEXT - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - - Specifies a help text that should be displayed when a particular - selection is highlighted. - - -MENU PASSWD passwd - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - - Sets a password on this menu entry. "passwd" can be either a - cleartext password or a password encrypted with one of the - following algorithms: - - MD5 (Signature: $1$) - SHA-1 (Signature: $4$) - SHA-2-256 (Signature: $5$) - SHA-2-512 (Signature: $6$) - - Use the included Perl scripts "sha1pass" or "md5pass" to - encrypt passwords. MD5 passwords are compatible with most - Unix password file utilities; SHA-1 passwords are probably - unique to Syslinux; SHA-2 passwords are compatible with very - recent Linux distributions. Obviously, if you don't encrypt - your passwords they will not be very secure at all. - - If you are using passwords, you want to make sure you also use - the settings "NOESCAPE 1", "PROMPT 0", and either set - "ALLOWOPTIONS 0" or use a master password (see below.) - - If passwd is an empty string, this menu entry can only be - unlocked with the master password. - - -MENU MASTER PASSWD passwd - - Sets a master password. This password can be used to boot any - menu entry, and is required for the [Tab] and [Esc] keys to - work. - - -MENU RESOLUTION height width - - Requests a specific screen resolution when in graphics mode. - The default is "640 480" corresponding to a resolution of - 640x480 pixels, which all VGA-compatible monitors should be - able to display. - - If the selected resolution is unavailable, the text mode menu - is displayed instead. - - -MENU BACKGROUND background - - For vesamenu.c32, sets the background image. The background - can either be a color (see MENU COLOR) or the name of an image - file, which should be the size of the screen (normally 640x480 - pixels, but see MENU RESOLUTION) and either in PNG, JPEG or - LSS16 format. - - -MENU BEGIN [tagname] -MENU END - - Begin/end a submenu. The entries between MENU BEGIN and MENU - END form a submenu, which is marked with a > mark on the right - hand of the screen. Submenus inherit the properties of their - parent menus, but can override them, and can thus have their - own backgrounds, master passwords, titles, timeouts, messages - and so forth. - - -MENU GOTO tagname - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - - This label will transfer to the named submenu instead of - booting anything. To transfer to the top-level menu, specify - "menu goto .top". - - -MENU EXIT [tagname] - - (Only valid after a label statement inside MENU BEGIN ... - MENU END) - - Exit to the next higher menu, or, if tagname is specified, to - the named menu. - - -MENU QUIT - - (Only valid after a LABEL statement.) - - This label quits the menu system. - - WARNING: if MENU MASTER PASSWD or ALLOWOPTIONS 0 is set, this - will still allow exiting to the CLI; however, a separate MENU - PASSWD can of course be set for this label. - - -MENU START - - (Only valid inside MENU BEGIN ... MENU END) - - Indicates that the menu system should start at the menu being - defined instead of at the top-level menu. See also the - DEFAULT directive below. - - -DEFAULT label - - Set the global default. If "label" points into a submenu, - that menu becomes the start menu; in other words, this - directive has the same effect as both MENU DEFAULT and MENU - START. - - For backwards compatibility with earlier versions of Syslinux, - this directive is ignored unless the configuration file also - contains a UI directive. - - Note: the CLI accepts options after the label, or even a - non-label. The menu system does not support that. - - -MENU SAVE -MENU NOSAVE - - Remember the last entry selected and make that the default for - the next boot. A password-protected menu entry is *not* - saved. This requires the ADV data storage mechanism, which is - currently only implemented for EXTLINUX, although the other - Syslinux derivatives will accept the command (and ignore it.) - - NOTE: MENU SAVE stores the LABEL tag of the selected entry; - this mechanism therefore relies on LABEL tags being unique. - On the other hand, it handles changes in the configuration - file gracefully. - - NOTE: In software RAID-1 setups MENU SAVE only stores the - default label on the actual boot disk. This may lead to - inconsistent reads from the array, or unexpectedly change the - default label after array resynchronization or disk failure. - - The MENU SAVE information can be fully cleared with - "extlinux --reset-adv <bootdir>". - - A MENU SAVE or MENU NOSAVE at the top of a (sub)menu affects - all entries underneath that (sub)menu except those that in - turn have MENU SAVE or MENU NOSAVE declared. This can be used - to only save certain entires when selected. - - -INCLUDE filename [tagname] -MENU INCLUDE filename [tagname] - - Include the contents of the configuration file filename at - this point. - - In the case of MENU INCLUDE, the included data is only seen by - the menu system; the core syslinux code does not parse this - command, so any labels defined in it are unavailable. - - If a tagname is included, the whole file is considered to have - been bracketed with a MENU BEGIN tagname ... MENU END pair, - and will therefore show up as a submenu. - - -MENU AUTOBOOT message - - Replaces the message "Automatic boot in # second{,s}...". The - symbol # is replaced with the number of seconds remaining. - The syntax "{singular,[dual,]plural}" can be used to conjugate - appropriately. - - -MENU TABMSG message - - Replaces the message "Press [Tab] to edit options". - - -MENU NOTABMSG message - - Takes the place of the TABMSG message if option editing is - disabled. Defaults to blank. - - -MENU PASSPROMPT message - - Replaces the message "Password required". - - -MENU COLOR element ansi foreground background shadow - - Sets the color of element "element" to the specified color - sequence: - - screen Rest of the screen - border Border area - title Title bar - unsel Unselected menu item - hotkey Unselected hotkey - sel Selection bar - hotsel Selected hotkey - disabled Disabled menu item - scrollbar Scroll bar - tabmsg Press [Tab] message - cmdmark Command line marker - cmdline Command line - pwdborder Password box border - pwdheader Password box header - pwdentry Password box contents - timeout_msg Timeout message - timeout Timeout counter - help Help text - msgXX Message (F-key) file attribute XX - - ... where XX is two hexadecimal digits (the "plain text" is 07). - - "ansi" is a sequence of semicolon-separated ECMA-48 Set - Graphics Rendition (<ESC>[m) sequences: - - 0 reset all attributes to their defaults - 1 set bold - 4 set underscore (simulated with color on a color display) - 5 set blink - 7 set reverse video - 22 set normal intensity - 24 underline off - 25 blink off - 27 reverse video off - 30 set black foreground - 31 set red foreground - 32 set green foreground - 33 set brown foreground - 34 set blue foreground - 35 set magenta foreground - 36 set cyan foreground - 37 set white foreground - 38 set underscore on, set default foreground color - 39 set underscore off, set default foreground color - 40 set black background - 41 set red background - 42 set green background - 43 set brown background - 44 set blue background - 45 set magenta background - 46 set cyan background - 47 set white background - 49 set default background color - - These are used (a) in text mode, and (b) on the serial - console. - - "foreground" and "background" are color codes in #AARRGGBB - notation, where AA RR GG BB are hexadecimal digits for alpha - (opacity), red, green and blue, respectively. #00000000 - represents fully transparent, and #ffffffff represents opaque - white. - - "shadow" controls the handling of the graphical console text - shadow. Permitted values are "none" (no shadowing), "std" or - "standard" (standard shadowing - foreground pixels are - raised), "all" (both background and foreground raised), and - "rev" or "reverse" (background pixels are raised.) - - If any field is set to "*" or omitted (at the end of the line) - then that field is left unchanged. - - - The current defaults are: - - menu color screen 37;40 #80ffffff #00000000 std - menu color border 30;44 #40000000 #00000000 std - menu color title 1;36;44 #c00090f0 #00000000 std - menu color unsel 37;44 #90ffffff #00000000 std - menu color hotkey 1;37;44 #ffffffff #00000000 std - menu color sel 7;37;40 #e0000000 #20ff8000 all - menu color hotsel 1;7;37;40 #e0400000 #20ff8000 all - menu color disabled 1;30;44 #60cccccc #00000000 std - menu color scrollbar 30;44 #40000000 #00000000 std - menu color tabmsg 31;40 #90ffff00 #00000000 std - menu color cmdmark 1;36;40 #c000ffff #00000000 std - menu color cmdline 37;40 #c0ffffff #00000000 std - menu color pwdborder 30;47 #80ffffff #20ffffff std - menu color pwdheader 31;47 #80ff8080 #20ffffff std - menu color pwdentry 30;47 #80ffffff #20ffffff std - menu color timeout_msg 37;40 #80ffffff #00000000 std - menu color timeout 1;37;40 #c0ffffff #00000000 std - menu color help 37;40 #c0ffffff #00000000 std - menu color msg07 37;40 #90ffffff #00000000 std - - -MENU MSGCOLOR fg_filter bg_filter shadow - - Sets *all* the msgXX colors to a color scheme derived from the - fg_filter and bg_filter values. Background color zero is - always treated as transparent. The default corresponds to: - - menu msgcolor #90ffffff #80ffffff std - - This directive should come before any directive that - customizes individual msgXX colors. - - -MENU WIDTH 80 -MENU MARGIN 10 -MENU PASSWORDMARGIN 3 -MENU ROWS 12 -MENU TABMSGROW 18 -MENU CMDLINEROW 18 -MENU ENDROW -1 -MENU PASSWORDROW 11 -MENU TIMEOUTROW 20 -MENU HELPMSGROW 22 -MENU HELPMSGENDROW -1 -MENU HIDDENROW -2 -MENU HSHIFT 0 -MENU VSHIFT 0 - - These options control the layout of the menu on the screen. - The values above are the defaults. - - A negative value is relative to the calculated length of the - screen (25 for text mode, 28 for VESA graphics mode.) - - -F1 textfile [background] -... -F12 textfile [background] - - Displays full-screen help (also available at the command line.) - The same control code sequences as in the command line - interface are supported, although some are ignored. - - Additionally, a optional second argument allows a different - background image (see MENU BACKGROUND for supported formats) - to be displayed. - - -MENU HELP textfile [background] - - Creates a menu entry which, when selected, displays - full-screen help in the same way as the F-key help. - - -The menu system honours the TIMEOUT command; if TIMEOUT is specified -it will execute the ONTIMEOUT command if one exists, otherwise it will -pick the default menu option. WARNING: the timeout action will bypass -password protection even if one is set for the specified or default -entry! - -Normally, the user can press [Tab] to edit the menu entry, and [Esc] -to return to the Syslinux command line. However, if the configuration -file specifies ALLOWOPTIONS 0, these keys will be disabled, and if -MENU MASTER PASSWD is set, they require the master password. - -The simple menu system supports serial console, using the normal -SERIAL directive. However, it can be quite slow over a slow serial -link; you probably want to set your baudrate to 38400 or higher if -possible. It requires a Linux/VT220/ANSI-compatible terminal on the -other end. - - - +++ USING AN ALTERNATE CONFIGURATION FILE +++ - - -It is also possible to load a secondary configuration file, to get to -another menu. To do that, invoke menu.c32 with the name of the -secondary configuration file. - -LABEL othermenu - MENU LABEL Another Menu - KERNEL menu.c32 - APPEND othermenu.conf - -If you specify more than one file, they will all be read, in the order -specified. The dummy filename ~ (tilde) is replaced with the filename -of the main configuration file. - -# The file graphics.conf contains common color and layout commands for -# all menus. -LABEL othermenu - MENU LABEL Another Menu - KERNEL vesamenu.c32 - APPEND graphics.conf othermenu.conf - -# Return to the main menu -LABEL mainmenu - MENU LABEL Return to Main Menu - KERNEL vesamenu.c32 - APPEND graphics.conf ~ - -See also the MENU INCLUDE directive above. |