Followup to:  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
By author:    Neil Conway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
In newsgroup: linux.dev.kernel
> 
> Since writing the above, I've been searching for more info.  I
> downloaded four different versions of grub (GNU Grub Legacy, GNU Grub2,
> gentoo and Fedora Core 3).  NONE of these showed any evidence of GPT
> support (I was in a hurry, so I searched for strings EFI, GUID, GPT,
> TB).
> 
> Mucho confused puppy here.
> 
> I fail to see how grub can work on a GPT boot device if it can't parse
> the partition table.  I conclude that I'm still missing something. 
> Perhaps a layer before grub is supposed to parse the GPT instead?  If
> so, isn't that getting us straight back to a GPT-aware BIOS?
> 
> Tell me if this logic is broken: even if a special boot sector is used,
> which IS GPT-aware (though fitting that into the boot sector would be a
> challenge ;-)), once grub loads, it's still going to have to figure out
> how to find the root(hdX,Y) partition from which to load the kernel
> image.  This surely means it has to have either a GPT-parser
> internally, or rely on a pre-parsed list.  No?
> 
> Perhaps one of the other several distros (that I didn't check) has a
> GPT-aware grub.  But Tomas Carnecky said early in this thread that
> gentoo had allowed him to set up a GPT-booting system on x86.  I guess
> it's possible that a cheat was used - maybe an old-style partition
> table in the MBR was used to define the first (boot) partition, but
> surely that's forbidden by the whole EFI spec anyway?
> 

No, it's encouraged.

> 
> Andries Brouwer kindly wrote a patch which I haven't had time to test
> yet (see earlier in thread).  While it would be nice to find a way
> around the problem which didn't require deviations from vanilla
> distros, I think Andries' patch is looking like the only sane fix right
> now.
> 

Note that Andries' patch does *EXACTLY* the same thing as the GPT/EFI
spec does (by using an old-style partition table for the first 2 TB.)

It should be pretty easy to add native support for this in EXTLINUX;
the big problem is supporting true access > 2 TB, which I currently
don't have any way to test.

I'll put that on my todo list.

        -hpa
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