What is SEC?
Quick note explaining SEC for BIOS/UEFI and embedded firmware readers.
What is SEC?
SEC is the earliest PI phase responsible for establishing a minimal execution environment before PEI.
Why it matters
- Explains the core language used in BIOS/UEFI source and logs.
- Helps identify where a concept appears in the boot flow.
- Serves as a bridge between specification terms and real firmware debugging.
Practical example
Example: when reading a boot log, search for SEC-related messages and note which phase produced them before jumping into source code.
Quick checklist
- Which phase is the last confirmed point in the log?
- Is there enough context around the failure?
- Can UEFI Shell output confirm the same state?
Quick takeaway
SEC is a small concept, but it often becomes important when reading logs or debugging real firmware.
Related notes
Public references
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