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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/menu/vesamenu.c32 (graphical) or com32/menu/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 HIDDENKEY key[,key...] command... 
 If they key used to interrupt MENU HIDDEN is <key>, then 
 execute the specified command instead of displaying the menu. 
 Currently, the following key names are recognized: 
 Backspace, Tab, Enter, Esc, Space, F1..F12, Up, Down, Left, 
 Right, PgUp, PgDn, Home, End, Insert, Delete 
 ... in addition to all single characters plus the syntax ^X 
 for Ctrl-X.  Note that single characters are treated as case 
 sensitive, so a different command can be bound to "A" than 
 "a".  One can bind the same command to multiple keys by giving 
 a comma-separated list of keys: 
 menu hiddenkey A,a key_a_command 
 
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. 
 
 
 
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