Am 18.04.2018 um 10:14 schrieb tt-...@kky.ttu.ee: > > I can second to that. I installed a SuperMicro X10SLM-F based server > last month and did not find any option in the BIOS to PXE-boot FAI > into UEFI mode. Ended up using disklabel:gpt-bios and GRUB_PC. I did > not try to boot off an USB stick, so it is worth investigating if an > option exists for booting that in UEFI mode. > > > > From my experiments I was left with the impression that it is not easy > (or even possible) to “cross-install” UEFI-boot-capable disk if the > system was booted into legacy (BIOS) mode. If someone has found a way > to do it, I would also appreciate suggestions. > > > > Regards, > > Toomas > > > > *From:*linux-fai <linux-fai-boun...@uni-koeln.de> *On Behalf Of > *Andreas Heinlein > *Sent:* Wednesday, April 18, 2018 9:56 AM > *To:* linux-fai@uni-koeln.de > *Subject:* Re: GRUB EFI blues - Debian 9/FAI 5.3.6 > > > > Am 18.04.2018 um 00:28 schrieb Bob Apodaca: > > I think the first issue is FAI is setting the GRUB_PC class > instead of the GRUB_EFI class and I'm not sure why. > > I am pretty sure this depends on how the installation was started. > That means you will have to boot your FAI installation using UEFI as > well. This can be a bit tricky if you want to install from network - I > also tried setting up PXE with UEFI some time ago and failed. > Bye, > Andreas > I am pretty sure it is not possible to set up grub-efi correctly when booted in legacy mode. While it is possible to detect that we are actually running an EFI-capable machine (dmidecode or lshw can detect that), we cannot access the efi variables under /sys/efi since the firmware doesn't expose them to the host when running under CSM aka "Legacy mode".
Booting from USB with UEFI is possible, in fact I have such a USB device here somewhere. But I need to remember what I did, it was not (yet) completed in FAI at that time. I remember I wanted to make some patches available, but never found the time. This is almost a year ago now. What you basically need is a small FAT partition preferrably of type 'ef' (EFI Boot Partition) on the USB drive, which contains a grub efi image as EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI. That image can be created with grub-mkimage and needs to include at least all modules for reading the "main" partition and the grub.cfg on it. That will be mostly ext filesystem and msdos partition table, I think. That image should also include an embedded config file with a one-liner like configfile (hd0,msdos1) if the main partition is the second on the USB drive. I will try to find this again and post it here. Bye, Andreas