On Monday, April 17, 2017 at 9:53:36 PM UTC+2, babel wrote:
> On Monday, April 17, 2017 at 9:38:26 PM UTC+2, Mark Elston wrote:
> > I tried searching on this platform and qubes and haven't found anyone yet 
> > who has posted anything so here goes.  I tried to install 3.2 on the Intel 
> > Skull Canyon Skylake NUC with Iris Pro Gfx.  Tried UEFI mode and it seems 
> > to install fine but when I reboot it says "No bootable.." on startup.  If I 
> > try to install in Legacy Mode it seems unable to start graphical installer 
> > and goes into a text-only mode.  So finally I took a working install from a 
> > small/regular NUC that has been working fine, and when it boots it seems to 
> > go into text mode as well.  I'm guessing maybe a gfx driver issue, but not 
> > sure if there is an easy way to update/fix.  Any ideas?
> > 
> > Thanks,
> > Mark
> 
> 
> You are following the guide written at the Qubes website here...
> https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/uefi-troubleshooting/
> Which is not very easy to follow..
> 
> Your problem is either the first or the third (I did not really understand 
> which mine was either, so I followed both).  
> 
> 1) reinstall qubes, and at the end of the install, follow # 4, 5, 11, 12, 
> etc. on the first "problem".  
> 
> 2)  On reboot, boot into a live cd of some sort (anything where you can get a 
> terminal, I used Ubuntu because it's easy on the eyes).  You are now trying 
> to fix the third problem on the "troubleshooting" page.  
> When I tried to copy the /boot/efi/EFI..., I got an fstab error.  Because the 
> drive isn't mounted.  I ran..
> ""
> sudo umount /dev/YourQubesDrive
> mkdir /tmp/MyDrive
> sudo mount -o rw /dev/YourQubesDrive /tmp/MyDrive
> """
> where YourQubesDrive is the drive you have just installed qubes on.  I used 
> gparted to make sure that it was the right one, but you can look where you're 
> installing qubes as you're installing it or there is probably some linux 
> command to do so.  
> I got that info from.. 
> https://askubuntu.com/questions/794468/mount-cant-find-dev-sdb1-in-etc-fstab-or-etc-mtab
> 
> Then you can copy the stuff over from within the folder you made.  reboot 
> after.
> cd /tmp/MyDrive

And I realized you can just do the second step while you're doing the first 
one..
Hey, it's a learning process.  

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