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Instructions to Update the BIOS/UEFI for an HP Laptop on Linux

Instructions to Update the BIOS/UEFI for an HP Laptop on Linux

To update the BIOS/UEFI firmware requires HP-specific files in the EFI System Partition, also referred to as ESP.

On a Linux system, the ESP is typically mounted on /boot/efi or /efi. Whithin you should also find a EFI directory, e.g. /boot/efi/EFI or /efi/EFI. This article assumes that the ESP is mounted on /efi and that the /efi/EFI directory exists. You can replace that with the mount point your system uses.

The HP-specific files are located in /efi/EFI/HP or /efi/EFI/Hewlet-Packard. These files typically come preinstalled in HP Windows PCs. If you have these files you could skip Install HP-specific files.

Install HP-specific files

We can obtain the HP-specific files using HP's HP PC Hardware Diagnostics 4-IN-1 USB KEY installer. This installer contains the needed files. We can simply extract this installer and copy the needed files to the ESP

HP's installer only runs on Windows, but it is possible to extract it by running the self-extracting executable on Wine. You cannot simply extract the executable using 7-zip because the executable needs to do some file generation.

Download the executable. You can get the URL to the latest executable from HP's website.

$ wget https://ftp.hp.com/pub/softpaq/sp112501-113000/sp112853.exe

Run the executable using wine. This will extract its contents to ./sp112853.

$ wine sp112853.exe /s /e /f sp112853

Copy the HP-specific files to the the ESP.

# cp -r sp142721/field/{Hewlett-Packard,HP} /efi/EFI/

According to HP, this works for most hardware. For some cases you may need additional files. I have tired this with an HP Pavilion 13-an0008ne Laptop only, which required no additional steps.

Install BIOS update

You'll need to find you updated BIOS image. You can find one by going to HP's Software and Drivers page, and input your serial number. Make sure you select Windows as your Operating System, otherwise it may not show the updates.

These drivers often also come in Windows executables, you should run them in wine. The executable will first fail to install automatically. Then it will display different options on how to procede. Select the Copy option and select a directory where the BIOS image and the key file should be copied to.

$ wget https://ftp.hp.com/pub/softpaq/sp112501-113000/sp112516.exe
$ wine sp112516.exe /s /f sp112516           # extract and execute

Complete BIOS update using HP Hardware Diagnostics

There should be a .bin and an .s12 file. Copy these files to the ESP to the directory /efi/EFI/Hewlett-Packard/BIOS/New and /efi/EFI/HP/BIOS/New. Here I am using 084C5 as an example.

# mkdir /efi/EFI/Hewlett-Packard/BIOS/New
# cp sp112516/084C5{.bin,.s12} /efi/EFI/Hewlett-Packard/BIOS/New
# mkdir /efi/EFI/HP/BIOS/New
# cp sp112516/084C5{.bin,.s12} /efi/EFI/HP/BIOS/New

At this point you should have the needed HP-specific files and the BIOS update installed in the ESP. Now, you can actually complete the update.

Boot into firmware settings and press F2 to enter HP Hardware Diagnostics. You should be presented a menu and there should a menu entry named BIOS Management. Navigate to BIOS Management > Update BIOS. Your BIOS should start updating.

If you have enabled Secure Boot with custom keys, you will first need to sign the HP-specific .efi files.

Complete BIOS update using Win+B key combination

Sometimes the previous method does not work, and the BIOS Management option does not show up. You can alternatively copy the .bin and .s12 file to /efi/EFI/Hewlett-Packard/BIOS/Current or /efi/EFI/HP/BIOS/Current, and press Win-B while the PC is booting up. This key combination should cause a BIOS firmware recovery using the files you copied.

Also note that updating will re-enable Secure Boot if had it disabled. If so, you might want to disable it again. Your custom Secure Boot keys will be preserved.

@genterminl
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For my HP 255 G10, the support page says I need F.18 (from memory at this point) and gives me sp160012.ext. Extracting with wine gives me 08B2FF19.EXE. Running sp16002.exe in Windows in a VirtualBox Guest gives me four pairs of .bin and .sig files. Putting these either in a USB thumb drive or in /boot/efi/EFI/HP/new and booting into UEFI I find no entry realated to updgrading. This laptop has Linux installed on a new SDD, so no HP or HewlettPackard folder present. I've also tried Win-B when booting, but still no way to upgrade UEFI. Any suggestions?

@DJCrashdummy
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DJCrashdummy commented Jul 23, 2025

@genterminl i'm pretty sure my comment may help in your case: https://gist.github.com/eNV25/c8001491dc0440656ff7b0ae18993ba1?permalink_comment_id=4857502#gistcomment-4857502
-> to mention it explicitly: it might also be necessary to (temporarily) deactivate secureboot while flashing, but i'm not sure about that.

to be on the safe side a clarification:

[...] so no HP or HewlettPackard folder present.

this doesn't matter, just create them exactly how they are mentioned (case sensitive!).

FWIW: i also wrote a comment on how you get the files just with Wine, so no virtual machine needed at all: https://gist.github.com/eNV25/c8001491dc0440656ff7b0ae18993ba1?permalink_comment_id=4857473#gistcomment-4857473

@tsvenson
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On my HP OmniBook Ultra Laptop 14 Ryzen HX 375 I did the following:

  1. Extracted sp163053.exe using right-click/file-roller in Nautilus on Arch with Gnome
  2. Renamed to firmware.bin
  3. Copied to /boot/EFI/HP/DEVFW/
  4. Used the BIOS flash from local

After flash, firmware.bin is still there, but also ParadeRetimer.bin and Realtek.bin.

The `HP/DEVFW/ path was mentioned in the .htm file from the extracted files.

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