The UEFI Secure Boot is a technology that secures the boot process
by verifying if the drivers and operating system loaders are signed
by the key that is authorized by the firmware. When enabled, Secure
Boot makes sure that:
BIOS boot option is disabled.
Only UEFI-based operating systems are supported for operating
system deployment in all management applications.
Only authenticated EFI images and operating system loaders are
started from UEFI firmware.
You can enable or disable the Secure Boot attribute locally or
remotely using Dell management applications. Lifecycle Controller
supports deploying an operating system with the Secure Boot option
only in the UEFI boot mode.
There are two BIOS attributes that are associated with Secure Boot:
Secure Boot — Displays if the Secure Boot is enabled or disabled.
Secure Boot Policy — Allows you to specify
the policy or digital signature that BIOS uses to authenticate. The
policy can be classified as:
Standard — BIOS uses the default set
of certificates to validate the drivers and operating system loaders
during the boot process.
Custom — BIOS uses the specific set
of certificates that you can import or delete from the standard certificates
to validate the drivers and operating system loaders during the boot
process.
NOTE: The Secure Boot Policy is read-only in Lifecycle Controller.
You can change this setting only in the BIOS. To enter BIOS system
setup, press <F2> during POST.
NOTE: The Secure
Boot feature is supported on the Dell 13th generation PowerEdge
servers, only if BIOS on the system supports this feature. To deploy
an operating system using the Secure boot option, see Installing An Operating
System.
NOTE: For more information
on UEFI, go to uefi.org.
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