IUCODE_TOOL(8)iucode_tool manual IUCODE_TOOL(8)NAMEiucode_tool - Tool to manipulate Intel® IA‐32/X86‐64 microcode bundles
SYNOPSISiucode_tool [options] [[-ttype] filename|dirname] ...
DESCRIPTIONiucode_tool is an utility that can load Intel® processor microcode data
from files in both text and binary microcode bundle formats.
It can output a list of the microcodes in these files, merge them,
upload them to the kernel (to upgrade the microcode in the system pro‐
cessor cores) or write some of them out to a file in binary format for
later use.
iucode_tool will load all microcodes in the specified files and direc‐
tories to memory, in order to process them. Duplicated and outdated
microcodes will be discarded. It can read microcode data from standard
input (stdin), by specifying a file name of “-” (minus sign).
Microcode data files are assumed to be in .dat text format if they have
a .dat suffix, and to be in binary format otherwise. Standard input
(stdin) is assumed to be in .dat text format. The -t option can be
used to change the type of the files specified after it, including for
stdin.
If a directory is specified, all files whose names do not begin with a
dot will be loaded, in unspecified order. Nested directories are
skipped.
Empty files and directories are ignored, and will be skipped.
You can select which microcodes should be written out, listed or
uploaded to the kernel using the -S, -s, --date-before and --date-after
options. Should none of those options be specified, all microcodes
will be selected.
You can upload the selected microcodes to the kernel, write them out to
a file (in binary format), to a Linux early initramfs archive, to per‐
processor‐signature files in a directory, or to per‐microcode files in
a directory using the -w, --write-earlyfw, -k, -K, and -W options.
iucode_tool will identify microcodes in its output and error messages
using a “n/k” notation, where “n” is the bundle number, and “k” is the
microcode number within that bundle. The output of the --list-all
option when processing multiple input files is the best example of how
it works.
For more information about Intel processor microcodes, please read the
included documentation and the Intel manuals listed in the SEE ALSO
section.
OPTIONSiucode_tool accepts the following options:
-q, --quiet
Inhibit usual output.
-v, --verbose
Print more information. Use more than once for added verbosity.
-h, -?, --help
List all available options and their meanings.
--usage
Show summary of options.
-V, --version
Show version of program.
-t type
Sets the file type of the following files. type can be:
b binary format. This is the same format used by the ker‐
nel driver and the BIOS/EFI, which is described in detail
by the Intel 64 and IA‐32 Architectures Software Devel‐
oper's Manual, Volume 3A, section 9.11.
d Intel microcode .dat text format. This is the format
normally used by Intel to distribute microcode data
files.
r recover microcode in binary format. Search uncompressed
generic binary files for microcodes in Intel microcode
binary format to recover. Note: It can find microcode
that will not pass strict checks, and thus cause
iucode_tool to exit if the --no-strict-checks or
--ignore-broken options are not in effect.
a (default) iucode_tool will use the suffix of the file
name to select the file type: .dat text format for files
that have a .dat suffix, and binary type otherwise. Note
that for stdin, .dat text format is assumed.
--downgrade
When multiple versions of the microcode for a specific processor
are available from different files, keep the one from the file
loaded last, regardless of revision levels. Files are always
loaded in the order they were specified in the command line.
This option has no effect when just one file has been loaded.
--no-downgrade
When multiple versions of the microcode for a specific processor
are available from different files, keep the one with the high‐
est revision level. This is the default mode of operation.
--strict-checks
Perform strict checks on the microcode data. It will refuse to
load microcodes and microcode data files with unexpected size
and metadata. It will also refuse to load microcode entries
that have the same metadata, but different payload. This is the
default mode of operation.
--no-strict-checks
Perform less strict checks on the microcode data. Use only if
you happen to come across a microcode data file that has
microcodes with weird sizes or incorrect non‐critical metadata
(such as invalid dates), which you want to retain. If you just
want to skip those, use the --ignore-broken option.
--ignore-broken
Skip broken microcode entries when loading a microcode data
file, instead of aborting program execution. If the microcode
entry has an unsupported format or had its header severely cor‐
rupted, all remaining data in the file will have to be ignored.
In that case, using a file type of recover microcode in binary
format (-tr option) is recommended, as it can skip over badly
mangled microcode data.
--no-ignore-broken
Abort program execution if a broken microcode is found while
loading a microcode data file. This is the default mode of
operation.
-s ! | [!]signature[,pf_mask]
Select microcodes by the specified signature and processor flags
mask (pf_mask). If the processor flags mask is specified, it
will select only microcodes that are suitable for at least one
of the processor flag combinations present in the mask.
Specify more than once to select more microcodes. This option
can be combined with the --scan-system option to select more
microcodes. If signature is prefixed with a “!” (exclamation
mark), it will deselect microcodes instead. Ordering matters,
with later -s options overriding earlier ones, including
--scan-system.
When specifying signature and pf_mask, hexadecimal numbers must
be prefixed with “0x”, and octal numbers with “0”. Decimal num‐
bers must not have leading zeros, otherwise they would be inter‐
preted as octal numbers.
The special notation -s! (with no signature parameter) instructs
iucode_tool to require explicit inclusion of microcode signa‐
tures (using the non-negated form of -s, or using --scan-sys‐
tem).
-S, --scan-system
Select microcodes by scanning online processors on this system
for their signatures.
This option can be used only once, and it can be combined with
the -s option to select more microcodes. The microcodes
selected by --scan-system can also be deselected by a later
-s !signature option.
Should the signature scan fail, the program will print a warning
to the user and continue as if --scan-system had not been speci‐
fied. This is a fail‐safe condition when iucode_tool is used to
install microcode updates for the next boot.
--date-before=YYYY-MM-DD and --date-after=YYYY-MM-DD
Limit the selected microcodes by a date range. The date must be
given in ISO format, with four digits for the year and two dig‐
its for the month and day and “-” (minus sign) for the separa‐
tor. Dates are not range‐checked, so you can use
--date-after=2000-00-00 to select all microcodes dated since
January 1st, 2000.
--loose-date-filtering
When a date range is specified, all revisions of the microcode
will be considered for selection (ignoring just the date range,
all other filters still apply) should any of the microcode's
revisions be within the date range.
--strict-date-filtering
When a date range is specified, select only microcodes which are
within the date range. This is the default mode of operation.
-l, --list
List selected microcode signatures to standard output (stdout).
-L, --list-all
List all microcode signatures while they're being processed to
standard output (stdout).
-k[device], --kernel[=device]
Upload selected microcodes to the kernel. Optionally, the
device path can be specified (default: /dev/cpu/microcode).
This update method is deprecated: it will be removed eventually
from the kernel and from iucode_tool.
-K[directory], --write-firmware[=directory]
Write selected microcodes with the file names expected by the
Linux kernel firmware loader. Optionally, the destination
directory can be specified (default: /lib/firmware/intel‐ucode).
-wfile, --write-to=file
Write selected microcodes to a file in binary format.
--write-earlyfw=file
Write selected microcodes to an early initramfs archive, which
should be prepended to the regular initramfs to allow the kernel
to update processor microcode very early during system boot.
-Wdirectory, --write-named-to=directory
Write selected microcodes to the specified directory, one
microcode per file, in binary format. The file names reflect
the microcode signature, processor flags mask and revision.
--write-all-named-to=directory
Write every microcode to the specified directory, one microcode
per file, in binary format. The file names reflect the
microcode signature, processor flags mask and revision. This is
the only way to write out every revision of the same microcode.
--overwrite
Remove the destination file before writing, if it exists and is
not a directory. The destination file is not overwritten in‐
place. Hardlinks will be severed, and any existing access per‐
missions, ACLs and other extended attributes of the old destina‐
tion file will be lost.
--no-overwrite
Abort if the destination file already exists. This is the
default mode of operation. Do note that iucode_tool does not
follow non‐directory symlinks when writing files.
--mini-earlyfw
Optimize the early initramfs cpio container for minimal size.
It will change the cpio block size to 16 bytes, and remove
header entries for the parent directories of the microcode data
file. As a result, the microcode data file will not be avail‐
able to the regular initramfs, and tools might complain about
the non‐standard cpio block size.
This will typically reduce the early initramfs size by 736
bytes.
--normal-earlyfw
Optimize the early initramfs size for tool compatibility. This
is the default mode of operation. The microcode data file will
be available inside the regular initramfs as well.
NOTESiucode_tool reads all data to memory before doing any processing. It
enforces a sanity limit of a maximum of 1GiB worth of binary microcode
data per microcode data file.
All informational and error messages are sent to standard error
(stderr), while user‐requested output (such as output generated by the
list options) is sent to standard output (stdout).
iucode_tool creates files with permissions 0644 (rw-r--r--), modified
by the current umask.
iucode_tool's selected microcode listing and microcode output files are
sorted first by processor signature (in ascending order), and then by
processor flags mask (in descending order).
When multiple revisions of a microcode are selected, the older ones
will be skipped. Only the newest selected revision of a microcode (or
the last one in load order when the --downgrade option is active) will
be written to a file or uploaded to the kernel.
Intel microcode data files, both in binary and text formats, can be
concatenated to generate a bigger and still valid microcode data file.
iucode_tool does not follow symlinks when writing microcode data files.
It will either refuse to write the file and abort (default mode of
operation), or (when the --overwrite option is active) it will remove
the target symlink or file (and therefore breaking hardlinks) before
writing the new file.
iucode_tool does follow directory symlinks to locate the directory to
write files into.
Linux Notes
Before Linux v4.4, the microcode update driver was split in two parts:
the early microcode update driver (which gets microcode data from the
initramfs) and the late microcode update driver, which could be a mod‐
ule and got microcode data from the firmware subsystem. The two driv‐
ers were unified in Linux v4.4.
The microcode update driver needs to be present in the system at all
times to ensure microcode updates are reapplied on resume from suspend
and CPU hotplug. Do not unload the microcode module, unless you really
know better. Since Linux v4.4, the late microcode driver cannot be a
module anymore and will always be present in the system when enabled.
Updating microcode early is safer. It can only be done at boot and it
requires an initramfs, but it is strongly recommended: late microcode
updates (which read microcode data from /lib/firmware) cannot safely
change visible processor features.
Early microcode updates are available since Linux v3.9. They can
safely change visible processor features (such as the microcode updates
that disabled Intel TSX instructions on Intel Haswell cores do). They
require an uncompressed initramfs image with the microcode update data
in /kernel/x86/microcode/GenuineIntel.bin. This uncompressed initramfs
image must come before any compressed initramfs image(s), and it has an
special name: early initramfs.
The microcode update data inside the early initramfs image must be
aligned to a 16‐byte boundary due to a bug in several versions of the
Linux kernel early microcode update driver. This requires special
steps when creating the initramfs archive with the microcode data, and
will be handled automatically by the iucode_tool--write-earlyfw
option.
Since Linux v4.2, it is also possible to build a kernel with the
microcode update data as built‐in firmware, using the CON‐
FIG_FIRMWARE_IN_KERNEL facility. This feature is not yet mature as of
Linux v4.2.8, v4.4.11, v4.5.5 and v4.6, and might not work in every
case.
The /dev/cpu/microcode update interface has been deprecated and should
not be used. It has one special requirement: each write syscall must
contain whole microcode(s). It can be accessed through iucode_tool--kernel.
Up to Linux v3.5, late microcode updates were required to be triggered
per‐core, by writing the number 1 to /sys/devices/sys‐
tem/cpu/*/microcode/reload for every cpu. Depending on kernel version,
you must either trigger it on every core to avoid a dangerous situation
where some cores are using outdated microcode, or the kernel will
accept the request only for the boot processor and use it to trigger an
update on all system processor cores.
Since Linux v3.6, the late microcode update driver has a new interface
that explicitly triggers an update for every core at once when the num‐
ber 1 is written to /sys/devices/system/cpu/microcode/reload.
EXAMPLES
Updating files in /lib/firmware/intel‐ucode:
iucode_tool -K/lib/firmware/intel‐ucode \
/lib/firmware/intel‐ucode \
/tmp/file-with-new-microcodes.bin
Processing several compressed files at once:
zcat intel-microcode*.dat.gz | iucode_tool-l -
zcat intel-microcode*.bin.gz | iucode_tool-l -tb -
Selecting microcodes and creating an early initramfs:
iucode_tool--scan-system \
--write-earlyfw=/tmp/early.cpio \
/lib/firmware/intel-ucode
iucode_tool-s 0x106a5 -s 0x106a4 -l /lib/firmware/intel-ucode
Using the recovery loader to load and to update microcode in an early
initramfs:
iucode_tool-L -tr /boot/intel-ucode.img
iucode_tool-Ll -S --write-earlyfw=/boot/intel-ucode.img.new \
-tr /boot/intel-ucode.img -tb /lib/firmware/intel-ucode &&
\
mv /boot/intel-ucode.img.new /boot/intel-ucode.img
BUGS
Microcode with negative revision numbers is not special‐cased, and will
not be preferred over regular microcode.
The downgrade mode should be used only for microcodes with the same
processor flags mask. It cannot handle the corner cases where modify‐
ing a processor flags mask would be required to force the kernel to
load a lower revision of a microcode, and iucode_tool will issue an
warning when that happens. So far, this has not proved to be a rele‐
vant limitation as changes to the processor flags mask of post‐launch,
production microcode updates are very rare.
The loader version microcode metadata field is ignored by iucode_tool.
This shouldn't cause problems as long as the same signature never needs
more than a single type of loader.
Files are not replaced atomically: if iucode_tool is interrupted while
writing to a file, that file will be corrupted.
SEE ALSO
The Intel 64 and IA‐32 Architectures Software Developer's Manual, Vol‐
ume 3A: System Programming Guide, Part 1 (order number 253668), section
9.11.
AUTHOR
Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <hmh@hmh.eng.br>
IUCODE_TOOL 2.2 2016‐11‐10 IUCODE_TOOL(8)