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1.1. Acronyms and Definitions
1.2. Recommended System Requirements
1.3. Installation Folders
1.4. Boot Flow Overview
1.5. Getting Started
1.6. Enabling the UEFI DXE Phase and the UEFI Shell
1.7. Using the Network Feature Under the UEFI Shell
1.8. Creating your First UEFI Application
1.9. Using Arm* DS-5* Intel® SoC FPGA Edition (For Windows* Only)
1.10. Pit Stop Utility Guide
1.11. Porting HWLIBs to UEFI Guidelines
1.12. Tera Term Installation
1.13. Minicom Installation
1.14. Win32DiskImager Tool Installation
1.15. TFTPd64 By Ph.Jounin Installation
1.16. Revision History of Intel® Arria® 10 SoC UEFI Boot Loader User Guide
1.5.1. Compiling the Hardware Design
1.5.2. Generating the Boot Loader and Device Tree for UEFI Boot Loader
1.5.3. Building the UEFI Boot Loader
1.5.4. Creating an SD Card Image
1.5.5. Creating a QSPI Image
1.5.6. Booting the Board with SD/MMC
1.5.7. Booting the Board with QSPI
1.5.8. Early I/O Release
1.5.9. Booting Linux* Using the UEFI Boot Loader
1.5.10. Debugging an Example Project
1.5.11. UEFI Boot Loader Customization
1.5.12. Enabling Checksum for the FPGA Image
1.5.13. NAND Bad Block Management
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1.7. Using the Network Feature Under the UEFI Shell
Task time: 20 minutes
This section describes how to use Ethernet features under the UEFI Shell after booting to the DXE Phase. The UEFI Shell network stack supports static and dynamic host configuration protocol (DHCP) IP Addressing. The basic functionality includes the standard network commands:
- ifconfig
- ping
- tftp
Verify that your the HPS Ethernet port on your board is connected to the network.