Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-08-04 Thread Thomas Mueller
 On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 3:09 PM, Torfinn Ingolfsen
 torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no wrote:
  Just a short update on this machine (Acer Aspire X1470) and the GPT / UEFI 
  situation.

  Today I set up another partition, EFI system partition. The partyitions now 
  looks like this:
  root@kg-vm2# gpart show ada0
  =   34  250069613  ada0  GPT  (119G)
   34128 1  freebsd-boot  (64k)
  162  119537664 2  freebsd-ufs  (57G)
1195378268388608 3  freebsd-swap  (4.0G)
127926434  121634816 4  freebsd-ufs  (58G)
249561250 204800 5  efi  (100M)
249766050 303597- free -  (148M)

  I formatted the partition like this:
  root@kg-vm2# newfs_msdos -F32 /dev/ada0p5
  newfs_msdos: trim 50 sectors to adjust to a multiple of 63
  /dev/ada0p5: 204512 sectors in 12782 FAT32 clusters (8192 bytes/cluster)
  BytesPerSec=512 SecPerClust=16 ResSectors=32 FATs=2 Media=0xf0 
  SecPerTrack=63 Heads=16 HiddenSecs=0 HugeSectors=204750 FATsecs=100 
  RootCluster=2 FSInfo=1
 +Backup=2

  I have tried putting an EFI shell on it (I got the idea from this[1] page, 
  I have tried both the 1.0 and 2.0 x64 shell), like this:
  root@kg-vm2# mount -t msdosfs /dev/ada0p5 /mnt
  root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt
  total 848
  drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel8192 Aug  3 14:30 EFI
  drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel8192 Aug  3 16:21 boot
  -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  847232 Aug  3 14:56 shellx64.efi
  root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/boot
  total 760
  -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  771072 Aug  3 16:23 bootx64.efi
  root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/EFI
  total 16
  drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  8192 Aug  3 14:30 FreeBSD
  drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  8192 Aug  3 15:06 boot
  root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/EFI/boot
  total 760
  -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  771072 Aug  3 15:29 bootx64.efi

  but no dice - it is not working, it still prints ERROR: No boot disk has 
  been detected or the disk has failed.
  when I try to boot from this disk.
  How do I figure out where this UEFI firmware that Acer has put in this 
  machine is getting it's boot manager and or boot loader from?
  I tried running 'strings -f' on the BIOS file (sorry, UEFI firmware), that 
  got me all the EFI error messages, but nothing useful.
  Googling didn't help either.
 
  References:
  1) 
  https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface

 It's not clear from your message, but did you use the gpart bootcode
 command to write the protective MBR and the gptboot code as documented
 in the gpart(8) man page?
 --
 R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
 E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com

The gpart bootcode command is quite apart from and unrelated to (as far as I 
can tell) the EFI partition.

I think the EFI partition is supposed to be the first partition on a 
GPT-partitioned disk.

I have installed FreeBSD to a USB stick, GPT-partitioned with three partitions: 
boot, root and swap.

I used gpart bootcode command to make the USB stick bootable, there was no EFI 
partition in this case.

This is good if FreeBSD is the only OS installed to a disk.

EFI partition is to allow sharing a hard drive with multiple OS installations.

Tom
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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-08-04 Thread Torfinn Ingolfsen
On Fri, 03 Aug 2012 22:58:52 -0700
Kevin Oberman kob6...@gmail.com wrote:

 
 It's not clear from your message, but did you use the gpart bootcode
 command to write the protective MBR and the gptboot code as documented
 in the gpart(8) man page?

Yes (this is why I wrote this message as a followup to the thread), all that 
was done in my first attempt, the problem is that the brain-dead firmware in 
this machine 
sees a GPT-partitioned disk and decides for itself that GPT = (U)EFI, and thus 
looks only for the EFI system partition, it does not try to boot from the 
gptboot in the freebsd-boot partition.
If I use a  MBR-partitoned drive, it boots ok.
And yes, the BIOS (sorry, UEFI firmware) is the latest that Acer has provided 
for this machine.

Just trying to make haeds and tails out of this UEFI thing, to see if it is a 
workable solution.
-- 
Torfinn Ingolfsen torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no
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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-08-04 Thread Torfinn Ingolfsen
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012 03:10:52 -0400
Thomas Mueller muelle...@insightbb.com wrote:

  On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 3:09 PM, Torfinn Ingolfsen
  torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no wrote:
   Just a short update on this machine (Acer Aspire X1470) and the GPT / 
   UEFI situation.
 
   Today I set up another partition, EFI system partition. The partyitions 
   now looks like this:
   root@kg-vm2# gpart show ada0
   =   34  250069613  ada0  GPT  (119G)
34128 1  freebsd-boot  (64k)
   162  119537664 2  freebsd-ufs  (57G)
 1195378268388608 3  freebsd-swap  (4.0G)
 127926434  121634816 4  freebsd-ufs  (58G)
 249561250 204800 5  efi  (100M)
 249766050 303597- free -  (148M)
 
   I formatted the partition like this:
   root@kg-vm2# newfs_msdos -F32 /dev/ada0p5
   newfs_msdos: trim 50 sectors to adjust to a multiple of 63
   /dev/ada0p5: 204512 sectors in 12782 FAT32 clusters (8192 bytes/cluster)
   BytesPerSec=512 SecPerClust=16 ResSectors=32 FATs=2 Media=0xf0 
   SecPerTrack=63 Heads=16 HiddenSecs=0 HugeSectors=204750 FATsecs=100 
   RootCluster=2 FSInfo=1
  +Backup=2
 
   I have tried putting an EFI shell on it (I got the idea from this[1] 
   page, I have tried both the 1.0 and 2.0 x64 shell), like this:
   root@kg-vm2# mount -t msdosfs /dev/ada0p5 /mnt
   root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt
   total 848
   drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel8192 Aug  3 14:30 EFI
   drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel8192 Aug  3 16:21 boot
   -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  847232 Aug  3 14:56 shellx64.efi
   root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/boot
   total 760
   -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  771072 Aug  3 16:23 bootx64.efi
   root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/EFI
   total 16
   drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  8192 Aug  3 14:30 FreeBSD
   drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  8192 Aug  3 15:06 boot
   root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/EFI/boot
   total 760
   -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  771072 Aug  3 15:29 bootx64.efi
 
   but no dice - it is not working, it still prints ERROR: No boot disk has 
   been detected or the disk has failed.
   when I try to boot from this disk.
   How do I figure out where this UEFI firmware that Acer has put in this 
   machine is getting it's boot manager and or boot loader from?
   I tried running 'strings -f' on the BIOS file (sorry, UEFI firmware), 
   that got me all the EFI error messages, but nothing useful.
   Googling didn't help either.
  
   References:
   1) 
   https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface
 
  It's not clear from your message, but did you use the gpart bootcode
  command to write the protective MBR and the gptboot code as documented
  in the gpart(8) man page?
  --
  R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
  E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
 
 The gpart bootcode command is quite apart from and unrelated to (as far as I 
 can tell) the EFI partition.

Yes, this is what I have found out too.

 I think the EFI partition is supposed to be the first partition on a 
 GPT-partitioned disk.

This is not required by the specification as far as I can tell, but there are 
writings on the net saying that some implementations
requires this (MS Win7 for example).


 I have installed FreeBSD to a USB stick, GPT-partitioned with three 
 partitions: boot, root and swap.

FWIW, I also use GPT-partitoned disks on many of my other machines; they work 
fine. It is (so far) only this machine which has this problem.

 
 EFI partition is to allow sharing a hard drive with multiple OS installations.

The EFI system partition is also the place where (U)EFI firmwae will look for 
boot loaders, in order to load operating systems.

YMMV.
-- 
Torfinn Ingolfsen torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no
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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-08-04 Thread Scot Hetzel
On Sat, Aug 4, 2012 at 9:23 AM, Torfinn Ingolfsen
torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no wrote:
 The gpart bootcode command is quite apart from and unrelated to (as far as I 
 can tell) the EFI partition.

 Yes, this is what I have found out too.

 I think the EFI partition is supposed to be the first partition on a 
 GPT-partitioned disk.

 This is not required by the specification as far as I can tell, but there are 
 writings on the net saying that some implementations
 requires this (MS Win7 for example).


http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/hardware/gg463525.aspx

Microsoft wants the GPT Disks partitions layouted as:

  Extensible Firmware Interface System Partition (ESP) ~100MB

  OEM Partition (optional)

  Microsoft Reserved Partition (MSR) [Drive 16GB - MSR = 32MB, Drive
= 16GB - MSR = 128MB]
  - used to reserve space that is later broken in to smaller partition
for use by meta data (i.e. dynamic disks)

  Data Partitions (FAT, NTFS, ...)

If these partitions (ESP, OEM and MSR) were mixed in with the Data
Partions, then you would be unable to grow the filesystems.

Scot
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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-08-03 Thread Torfinn Ingolfsen
Just a short update on this machine (Acer Aspire X1470) and the GPT / UEFI 
situation.

Today I set up another partition, EFI system partition. The partyitions now 
looks like this:
root@kg-vm2# gpart show ada0
=   34  250069613  ada0  GPT  (119G)
 34128 1  freebsd-boot  (64k)
162  119537664 2  freebsd-ufs  (57G)
  1195378268388608 3  freebsd-swap  (4.0G)
  127926434  121634816 4  freebsd-ufs  (58G)
  249561250 204800 5  efi  (100M)
  249766050 303597- free -  (148M)

I formatted the partition like this: 
root@kg-vm2# newfs_msdos -F32 /dev/ada0p5
newfs_msdos: trim 50 sectors to adjust to a multiple of 63
/dev/ada0p5: 204512 sectors in 12782 FAT32 clusters (8192 bytes/cluster)
BytesPerSec=512 SecPerClust=16 ResSectors=32 FATs=2 Media=0xf0 SecPerTrack=63 
Heads=16 HiddenSecs=0 HugeSectors=204750 FATsecs=100 RootCluster=2 FSInfo=1 
Backup=2

I have tried putting an EFI shell on it (I got the idea from this[1] page, I 
have tried both the 1.0 and 2.0 x64 shell), like this:
root@kg-vm2# mount -t msdosfs /dev/ada0p5 /mnt
root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt
total 848
drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel8192 Aug  3 14:30 EFI
drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel8192 Aug  3 16:21 boot
-rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  847232 Aug  3 14:56 shellx64.efi
root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/boot
total 760
-rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  771072 Aug  3 16:23 bootx64.efi
root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/EFI
total 16
drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  8192 Aug  3 14:30 FreeBSD
drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  8192 Aug  3 15:06 boot
root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/EFI/boot
total 760
-rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  771072 Aug  3 15:29 bootx64.efi

but no dice - it is not working, it still prints ERROR: No boot disk has been 
detected or the disk has failed.
when I try to boot from this disk.
How do I figure out where this UEFI firmware that Acer has put in this machine 
is getting it's boot manager and or boot loader from?
I tried running 'strings -f' on the BIOS file (sorry, UEFI firmware), that got 
me all the EFI error messages, but nothing useful.
Googling didn't help either.

References:
1) https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface
-- 
Torfinn Ingolfsen torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no
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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-08-03 Thread Kevin Oberman
On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 3:09 PM, Torfinn Ingolfsen
torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no wrote:
 Just a short update on this machine (Acer Aspire X1470) and the GPT / UEFI 
 situation.

 Today I set up another partition, EFI system partition. The partyitions now 
 looks like this:
 root@kg-vm2# gpart show ada0
 =   34  250069613  ada0  GPT  (119G)
  34128 1  freebsd-boot  (64k)
 162  119537664 2  freebsd-ufs  (57G)
   1195378268388608 3  freebsd-swap  (4.0G)
   127926434  121634816 4  freebsd-ufs  (58G)
   249561250 204800 5  efi  (100M)
   249766050 303597- free -  (148M)

 I formatted the partition like this:
 root@kg-vm2# newfs_msdos -F32 /dev/ada0p5
 newfs_msdos: trim 50 sectors to adjust to a multiple of 63
 /dev/ada0p5: 204512 sectors in 12782 FAT32 clusters (8192 bytes/cluster)
 BytesPerSec=512 SecPerClust=16 ResSectors=32 FATs=2 Media=0xf0 SecPerTrack=63 
 Heads=16 HiddenSecs=0 HugeSectors=204750 FATsecs=100 RootCluster=2 FSInfo=1 
 Backup=2

 I have tried putting an EFI shell on it (I got the idea from this[1] page, I 
 have tried both the 1.0 and 2.0 x64 shell), like this:
 root@kg-vm2# mount -t msdosfs /dev/ada0p5 /mnt
 root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt
 total 848
 drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel8192 Aug  3 14:30 EFI
 drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel8192 Aug  3 16:21 boot
 -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  847232 Aug  3 14:56 shellx64.efi
 root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/boot
 total 760
 -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  771072 Aug  3 16:23 bootx64.efi
 root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/EFI
 total 16
 drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  8192 Aug  3 14:30 FreeBSD
 drwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  8192 Aug  3 15:06 boot
 root@kg-vm2# ls -l /mnt/EFI/boot
 total 760
 -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel  771072 Aug  3 15:29 bootx64.efi

 but no dice - it is not working, it still prints ERROR: No boot disk has 
 been detected or the disk has failed.
 when I try to boot from this disk.
 How do I figure out where this UEFI firmware that Acer has put in this 
 machine is getting it's boot manager and or boot loader from?
 I tried running 'strings -f' on the BIOS file (sorry, UEFI firmware), that 
 got me all the EFI error messages, but nothing useful.
 Googling didn't help either.

 References:
 1) https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface

It's not clear from your message, but did you use the gpart bootcode
command to write the protective MBR and the gptboot code as documented
in the gpart(8) man page?
-- 
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-04-01 Thread Torfinn Ingolfsen
On Sat, 24 Mar 2012 17:26:03 +0100
Torfinn Ingolfsen torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no wrote:

 Hi,
 I just installed FreeBSD 9.0-release / amd64 on a new machine (Acer Aspire 
 X1470).
 I installed from a usb memory stick (the default amd64 image), which I booted 
 by pressing F12 and selecting it from the boot menu on the machine.
 I installed on a SSD (which replaced the hard drive originally in the 
 machine), using the default scheme for 9.0 (GPT).
 The installation was painless (many thanks to all who made it that way), but 
 when I try to boot the machine from the SSD afterwards, I just get this 
 message from the BIOS:
 ERROR: No boot disk has been detected or the disk has failed.
 I tried selecting the SSD from the boot menu (via F12) instead (it shows up 
 as EFI: M4-CT128M4SSD2), but got the same message.
 I upgraded the BIOS from version P01-A3 to version P01-A4 (the newest 
 available), still no dice.

Just an update: 
today I connected another disk to the machine (I used a sata-to-usb adapter, 
but I think that doesn't matter), this disk is MBR-partitioned,
and the machine boots from this with no problems using the boot menu (via F12).
root@kg-vm2# gpart show -p da1
=   63  117210177da1  MBR  (55G)
 63   29350692  da1s1  freebsd  (14G)
   29350755   29360079  da1s2  freebsd  [active]  (14G)
   58710834   58499406 - free -  (27G)

The non-working disk looks like this:
root@kg-vm2# gpart show -p ada0
=   34  250069613ada0  GPT  (119G)
 34128  ada0p1  freebsd-boot  (64k)
162  119537664  ada0p2  freebsd-ufs  (57G)
  1195378268388608  ada0p3  freebsd-swap  (4.0G)
  127926434  121634816  ada0p4  freebsd-ufs  (58G)
  249561250 508397  - free -  (248M)


-- 
Torfinn

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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-04-01 Thread Kevin Oberman
On Sun, Apr 1, 2012 at 2:11 PM, Torfinn Ingolfsen
torfinn.ingolf...@broadpark.no wrote:
 On Sat, 24 Mar 2012 17:26:03 +0100
 Torfinn Ingolfsen torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no wrote:

 Hi,
 I just installed FreeBSD 9.0-release / amd64 on a new machine (Acer Aspire 
 X1470).
 I installed from a usb memory stick (the default amd64 image), which I 
 booted by pressing F12 and selecting it from the boot menu on the machine.
 I installed on a SSD (which replaced the hard drive originally in the 
 machine), using the default scheme for 9.0 (GPT).
 The installation was painless (many thanks to all who made it that way), but 
 when I try to boot the machine from the SSD afterwards, I just get this 
 message from the BIOS:
 ERROR: No boot disk has been detected or the disk has failed.
 I tried selecting the SSD from the boot menu (via F12) instead (it shows up 
 as EFI: M4-CT128M4SSD2), but got the same message.
 I upgraded the BIOS from version P01-A3 to version P01-A4 (the newest 
 available), still no dice.

 Just an update:
 today I connected another disk to the machine (I used a sata-to-usb adapter, 
 but I think that doesn't matter), this disk is MBR-partitioned,
 and the machine boots from this with no problems using the boot menu (via 
 F12).
 root@kg-vm2# gpart show -p da1
 =       63  117210177    da1  MBR  (55G)
         63   29350692  da1s1  freebsd  (14G)
   29350755   29360079  da1s2  freebsd  [active]  (14G)
   58710834   58499406         - free -  (27G)

 The non-working disk looks like this:
 root@kg-vm2# gpart show -p ada0
 =       34  250069613    ada0  GPT  (119G)
         34        128  ada0p1  freebsd-boot  (64k)
        162  119537664  ada0p2  freebsd-ufs  (57G)
  119537826    8388608  ada0p3  freebsd-swap  (4.0G)
  127926434  121634816  ada0p4  freebsd-ufs  (58G)
  249561250     508397          - free -  (248M)

Just for reference, my GPT disk boots fine on my ThinkPad with the following:
 gpart show /dev/ada1
=34  1465149101  ada1  GPT  (698G)
  34   6- free -  (3.0k)
  40 128 1  freebsd-boot  (64k)
 168 2097152 2  freebsd-ufs  (1.0G)
 2097320 8388608 3  freebsd-swap  (4.0G)
1048592810217472 4  freebsd-ufs  (4.9G)
20703400 1048576 5  freebsd-ufs  (512M)
21751976   124539712 6  freebsd-ufs  (59G)
   14629168831134928- free -  (14G)
   177426616  1287722512 7  freebsd-ufs  (614G)
  1465149128   7- free -  (3.5k)

The disk has native 4K sectors, so the partitions are aligned
accordingly. That is why the free chunk at the beginning. the second
free chunk is due to my error which I'll get around to adding to p6
some day. I use traditional partitions (root, tmp, var, bin, and home)
and the home partition is GELI encrypted. (I I had hardware crypto
support, I'd encrypt everything.)

The disk does have the protective MBR installed, though it's not
really part of the GPT. (See the GUID Partition Table article on
Wikipedia for more information.)
-- 
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
E-mail: kob6...@gmail.com
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FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-03-24 Thread Torfinn Ingolfsen
Hi,
I just installed FreeBSD 9.0-release / amd64 on a new machine (Acer Aspire 
X1470).
I installed from a usb memory stick (the default amd64 image), which I booted 
by pressing F12 and selecting it from the boot menu on the machine.
I installed on a SSD (which replaced the hard drive originally in the machine), 
using the default scheme for 9.0 (GPT).
The installation was painless (many thanks to all who made it that way), but 
when I try to boot the machine from the SSD afterwards, I just get this message 
from the BIOS:
ERROR: No boot disk has been detected or the disk has failed.
I tried selecting the SSD from the boot menu (via F12) instead (it shows up as 
EFI: M4-CT128M4SSD2), but got the same message.
I upgraded the BIOS from version P01-A3 to version P01-A4 (the newest 
available), still no dice.

If I use the usb stick I installed from, I can select the boot device, and 
actually boot from it, so there doesn't seem to be anything wrong with the SSD.
I tried:
kg-vm2# gpart bootcode -b /boot/pmbr -p /boot/gptboot -i 1 ada0
bootcode written to ada0

in case there was something wrong with the bootcode, but I still get the 
message ERROR: No boot disk has been detected or the disk has failed.
gpart shows this:
root@kg-vm2# gpart show ada0
=   34  250069613  ada0  GPT  (119G)
 34128 1  freebsd-boot  (64k)
162  119537664 2  freebsd-ufs  (57G)
  1195378268388608 3  freebsd-swap  (4.0G)
  127926434  121634816 4  freebsd-ufs  (58G)
  249561250 508397- free -  (248M)
and root is on ada0p2, with swap on ada0p3:
root@kg-vm2# df -h
Filesystem SizeUsed   Avail Capacity  Mounted on
/dev/ada0p2 56G2.3G 49G 4%/
devfs  1.0k1.0k  0B   100%/dev
root@kg-vm2# swapinfo -h
Device  1K-blocks UsedAvail Capacity
/dev/ada0p3   4194304   0B 4.0G 0%

Has anyone seen anything like this before?
Any hints on what I can do?

References:
1) http://sites.google.com/site/tingox/aspire_x1470_fbsd
-- 
Torfinn Ingolfsen torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no
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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-03-24 Thread Christian Laursen

On 03/24/12 17:26, Torfinn Ingolfsen wrote:

Hi,
I just installed FreeBSD 9.0-release / amd64 on a new machine (Acer Aspire 
X1470).
I installed from a usb memory stick (the default amd64 image), which I booted by pressing 
F12 and selecting it from the boot menu on the machine.
I installed on a SSD (which replaced the hard drive originally in the machine), 
using the default scheme for 9.0 (GPT).
The installation was painless (many thanks to all who made it that way), but 
when I try to boot the machine from the SSD afterwards, I just get this message 
from the BIOS:
ERROR: No boot disk has been detected or the disk has failed.
I tried selecting the SSD from the boot menu (via F12) instead (it shows up as EFI: 
M4-CT128M4SSD2), but got the same message.
I upgraded the BIOS from version P01-A3 to version P01-A4 (the newest 
available), still no dice.


It sounds a bit like the BIOS thinks that since the disk uses GPT you 
want to EFI boot. As far as I know the default bootcode in the PMBR is 
meant for old style BIOS booting.


Is it possible to disable EFI in your BIOS? If that is the case, that's 
probably the easiest solution.


I'm unsure of the current state of EFI boot in FreeBSD but a little bit 
of searching did not look promising.


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Christian Laursen
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Re: FreeBSD 9.0 - GPT boot problems?

2012-03-24 Thread Torfinn Ingolfsen
On Sat, 24 Mar 2012 18:50:13 +0100
Christian Laursen x...@borderworlds.dk wrote:

 It sounds a bit like the BIOS thinks that since the disk uses GPT you 
 want to EFI boot.

That could very well be the case.

 As far as I know the default bootcode in the PMBR is 
 meant for old style BIOS booting.

Hmm, I was hoping that the pmbr / gptboot would work both ways.

 Is it possible to disable EFI in your BIOS? If that is the case, that's 
 probably the easiest solution.

No, I haven't found any place to do that.
Before I installed FreeBSD on this SSD (before it was partitioned with gpart) 
it showed up in
the BIOS under hard drive. (Other choices are removable drive
Now it shows up under EFI device, and doesn't show up under hard drive.

 I'm unsure of the current state of EFI boot in FreeBSD but a little bit 
 of searching did not look promising.

Yes, after a bit of searching I agree with you.
If anyone knows of a EFI capable boot loader for FreeBSD, I'm willing to try it.
Rather that, than having to deal with grub, elilo or the other stuff.
-- 
Torfinn Ingolfsen torfinn.ingolf...@getmail.no
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