Hello David,
- probably, you were not asked about grub during installation because you did
not chose the expert installation mode
- possibly, your problems originate, at least in part, from the fact that
albeit creating a new ESP (EFI) partition on your USB key, the installer try to
use
partitions as well as a system partition - showing about
5G used?
I'm working on instinct, so feel free to ignore me.
On 2020-01-29 23:22, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
Here is info about one of my disks, GPT partition table with EFI
partition, boots fine into UEFI mode without Secure Boot. It's
users. We explicitly disrecommend it for that exact reason.
This is even more important with new features like UEFI and Secure Boot.
Rufus is a different matter - it has a "DD mode" which *is* useful for
writing an image to a USB stick unmolested.
--
Steve McIntyre, Cambridge, UK.
David wrote:
>debian-users:
>
>I would like to create a USB flash drive with Debian that I can boot in
>new Windows 10 machines with UEFI Secure Boot, so that I can examine
>things, run tools, take images of the Windows system drive, etc., before
>booting Windows for the first
st. Please specify --target or --directory.
>
> I was able to install grub for x86_64-efi:
>
> root@d-i:/# grub-install --target x86_64-efi
> Installing for x86_64-efi platform.
> Installation finished. No error reported.
>
>
> But, the drive still will not
ease specify --target or --directory.
>
> I was able to install grub for x86_64-efi:
>
> root@d-i:/# grub-install --target x86_64-efi
> Installing for x86_64-efi platform.
> Installation finished. No error reported.
>
>
> But, the drive still will not boo
- showing about 5G
used?
I'm working on instinct, so feel free to ignore me.
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
0447 667 468
On 30/1/20 5:51 am, David Christensen wrote:
Using a Dell PowerEdge T30 with CMOS Setup configured for UEFI and
Secure Boot, I booted d-i and installed onto
ctory.
>
> I was able to install grub for x86_64-efi:
>
> root@d-i:/# grub-install --target x86_64-efi
> Installing for x86_64-efi platform.
> Installation finished. No error reported.
>
>
> But, the drive still will not boot in the PowerEdge T30, UEFI, with
:/# grub-install --target x86_64-efi
Installing for x86_64-efi platform.
Installation finished. No error reported.
But, the drive still will not boot in the PowerEdge T30, UEFI, with or
without Secure Boot, or in the DQ67SW, UEFI without Secure Boot.
Is anybody booting and running
On 2020-01-29 11:28, Peter Ehlert wrote:
maybe this will help
http://cosmolinux.no-ip.org/raconetlinux2/persistence.html
Thanks for the reply. :-)
I prefer a working Debian install on a USB flash drive, so I can install
whatever tools I choose (including home-grown) in a familiar
On 2020-01-29 11:09, Hans wrote:
Am Mittwoch, 29. Januar 2020, 19:51:28 CET schrieb David Christensen:
Hi David,
although it is not recommended as the documentation is telling, but just try
out RUFUS or UNETBOOTIN to create a bootable USB-Stick.
Maybe this works better than using dd.
Just a
maybe this will help
http://cosmolinux.no-ip.org/raconetlinux2/persistence.html
On 1/29/20 10:51 AM, David Christensen wrote:
debian-users:
I would like to create a USB flash drive with Debian that I can boot
in new Windows 10 machines with UEFI Secure Boot, so that I can
examine things
> debian-users:
>
> I would like to create a USB flash drive with Debian that I can boot in
> new Windows 10 machines with UEFI Secure Boot, so that I can examine
> things, run tools, take images of the Windows system drive, etc., before
> booting Windows for the first ti
debian-users:
I would like to create a USB flash drive with Debian that I can boot in
new Windows 10 machines with UEFI Secure Boot, so that I can examine
things, run tools, take images of the Windows system drive, etc., before
booting Windows for the first time.
I have downloaded
Bonjour à tous.
Aujourd'hui je sèche sur une clé usb sur laquelle j'ai installé grub efi et
édité un petit fichier grub.cfg pour tester la contruction.
Mon bios uefi est configuré uniquement en uefi (pas de bios legacy, ...
etc).
Voici les commandes :
**
sudo fdisk -l /dev/sdb
On 1/5/20, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 05, 2020 at 10:47:52AM +0100, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>> Le 04/01/2020 à 20:47, Sven Joachim a écrit :
>
> [FAT, hard links]
>
>> >a feature that is crucial for dpkg.
>>
>> I vaguely remember this, but not when and why dpkg needs to create
>>
Le 05/01/2020 à 11:00, to...@tuxteam.de a écrit :
On Sun, Jan 05, 2020 at 10:47:52AM +0100, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 04/01/2020 à 20:47, Sven Joachim a écrit :
[FAT, hard links]
a feature that is crucial for dpkg.
I vaguely remember this, but not when and why dpkg needs to create
On Sun, Jan 05, 2020 at 10:47:52AM +0100, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 04/01/2020 à 20:47, Sven Joachim a écrit :
[FAT, hard links]
> >a feature that is crucial for dpkg.
>
> I vaguely remember this, but not when and why dpkg needs to create
> additional hard links. Can you refresh my memories ?
Le 04/01/2020 à 20:47, Sven Joachim a écrit :
On 2020-01-04 13:38 +0100, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Some new boot specification mounts the EFI partition on /boot
Citation needed, which specification is that?
Freedesktop/systemd's Boot Loader Specification.
On 2020-01-04 13:38 +0100, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 04/01/2020 à 11:25, Bonno Bloksma a écrit :
>
>> If I had not created that /boot partition would those files be in
>> /boot folder on the / (root) partition or would /boot then be on the
>> EFI partition?
>
> On the root partition. Some new
ile anywhere on the disk.
>
> So far so good, that still works but do I still need that
> partition when I create an EFI System Partition (ESP) to boot using
> UEFI?
>
[...]
First off, I'm pretty sure that Pascal is far more knowledgeable than I
but I just had some experienc
on the disk.
So far so good, that still works but do I still need that partition when I
create an EFI System Partition (ESP) to boot using UEFI?
A separate /boot is required only if GRUB cannot read the root
filesystem. Possible reasons include :
- root device not supported by the firmware
but do I still need that partition when I
create an EFI System Partition (ESP) to boot using UEFI?
The automatic disk partitioning created a 500M EFI partition that only has 5M
files on it, on my 300M boot partition are another 49M files.
If I had not created that /boot partition would those
Issuer: C=US, O=Hewlett-Packard Company, CN=Hewlett-Packard Printing Device
> Infrastructure CA
>
> I reach there my limitations to understand clearly how SecureBoot and UEFI
> work, but on my laptop, the Microsoft Thir Party thing seems to be enabled
> when enrolling something called
uers -
URI:http://www.microsoft.com/pki/certs/MicCorThiParMarRoo_2010-10-05.crt
Issuer: C=US, O=Hewlett-Packard Company, CN=Hewlett-Packard Printing
Device Infrastructure CA
I reach there my limitations to understand clearly how SecureBoot and UEFI
work, but on my laptop, the Microsoft
a, O=Lenovo Ltd., CN=Lenovo Ltd. KEK CA 201
Subject: C=US, ST=Washington, L=Redmond, O=Microsoft Corporation, CN=Microsoft
Corporation KEK CA 2011
# mokutil --db
4 keys:
Subject: C=JP, ST=Kanagawa, L=Yokohama, O=Lenovo Ltd., CN=ThinkPad Product CA
2012
Subject: C=US, ST=North Carolina, O=Lenovo, CN=
Le mercredi 1 janvier 2020 18:20:04 UTC+1, Pascal Hambourg a écrit :
> No. This was only an irrelevant example. Secure boot does not prevent
> booting when an unsigned kernel module is present, it would only prevent
> loading such module.
I struggle to see why it is irrelevant considering it
eason (it would then probably
profitable to verify if the shim* packages are installed and properly
configured)
- a feature or a bug in the Lenovo implementation of your UEFI that prevents
from booting particurlarly Debian or generally any other OS than Windows. I
would try, if possible, different set
Le 01/01/2020 à 13:59, l0f...@tuta.io a écrit :
1 janv. 2020 à 10:36 de didier.gau...@gmail.com:
SecureBoot has its own limitations and perhaps your use case is covered here:
https://wiki.debian.org/SecureBoot#Secure_Boot_limitations
for example, I cannot use SecureBoot on my recent laptop
Hi,
1 janv. 2020 à 10:36 de didier.gau...@gmail.com:
> SecureBoot has its own limitations and perhaps your use case is covered here:
> https://wiki.debian.org/SecureBoot#Secure_Boot_limitations
>
> for example, I cannot use SecureBoot on my recent laptop due to my Realtek
> RTL8821ce wireless
Le mardi 31 décembre 2019 18:50:04 UTC+1, l0f...@tuta.io a écrit :
[...]
> As soon as I deactivate Secure Boot, I get Grub and then Debian is
> launching...
> It's pretty weird as I thought Debian 10 works out-of-the-box with Secure
> Boot...
SecureBoot has its own limitations and perhaps your
verything works fine after that (it proves that my Linux is well
>> installed)...
>>
>> I've created a thread on LinuxQuestions at
>> https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/debian-26/no-grub-to-launch-my-new-debian-10-with-luks-and-lvm-uefi-4175666362/
>> You should
roves that my Linux is well
> installed)...
>
> I've created a thread on LinuxQuestions at
> https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/debian-26/no-grub-to-launch-my-new-debian-10-with-luks-and-lvm-uefi-4175666362/
> You should get any useful information/details about my
no-grub-to-launch-my-new-debian-10-with-luks-and-lvm-uefi-4175666362/
You should get any useful information/details about my situation at this URL
and you will see I've already tried a few operations, with no avail so far...
As I don't receive any new suggestion from the LQ community during the
Hello guys,
As I promised, here a more detailed solution, with the steps I really used:
The problem:
* You have a Windows 10 UEFI and a Linux Legacy boot. They both work, but
to choose what to boot you need to change the BIOS option each time.
Possible solutions discussed in the thread:
1
Hello all,
Thank you very much for all this thread and discussion.
Let me get back to you.
On Sun, 6 Oct 2019 at 18:26, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Dear Pascal,
>
> If Windows boots in EFI mode :
> Mount the EFI partition on /boot/efi.
> Install grub-efi-amd64.
> Boot some Linux media in EFI
On 2019-10-08, Joe wrote:
>
> But I'm pretty sure that any pre-installed Windows, and very few people
> now install it themselves, will be a UEFI installation, which cannot be
> changed to boot in legacy mode, nor vice-versa.
>
>From what I'm understanding you're batting a
stem can boot both systems ok. But to choose which one
> >>> you want, you need to enter the BIOS, change legacy to UEFI, and
> >>> vice-versa, then you can boot.
> >>
> >> Would you mind telling which systems boots in EFI mode and which
> >> one boots
Le 07/10/2019 à 09:42, Joe a écrit :
On Sun, 6 Oct 2019 23:26:32 +0200
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 06/10/2019 à 22:45, Beco a écrit :
Now the system can boot both systems ok. But to choose which one
you want, you need to enter the BIOS, change legacy to UEFI, and
vice-versa, then you can boot
t; Now the system can boot both systems ok. But to choose which one you
> want, you need to enter the BIOS, change legacy to UEFI, and
> vice-versa, then you can boot.
>
> Not a good way to keep.
When I needed windows I had once succes with rEFInd boot manager,
apt install refind
Alway
On Sun, 6 Oct 2019 23:26:32 +0200
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 06/10/2019 à 22:45, Beco a écrit :
> >
> > Now the system can boot both systems ok. But to choose which one
> > you want, you need to enter the BIOS, change legacy to UEFI, and
> > vice-versa, then you can
Le 06/10/2019 à 22:45, Beco a écrit :
Now the system can boot both systems ok. But to choose which one you want,
you need to enter the BIOS, change legacy to UEFI, and vice-versa, then you
can boot.
Would you mind telling which systems boots in EFI mode and which one
boots in legacy mode
t; Now the system can boot both systems ok. But to choose which one you
> want, you need to enter the BIOS, change legacy to UEFI, and
> vice-versa, then you can boot.
>
> Not a good way to keep.
>
> Lets give the devices some names.
>
> /dev/sda4 is windows 10
> /
need to enter the BIOS, change legacy to UEFI, and vice-versa, then you
can boot.
Not a good way to keep.
Lets give the devices some names.
/dev/sda4 is windows 10
/dev/sda5 is debian buster 10
/dev/sda6 is swap
Other partitions are the usual that comes with a Windows Dell laptop (boot,
backup
Didier Gaumet, on 2019-09-17:
> Le mardi 17 septembre 2019 22:00:05 UTC+2, Étienne Mollier a écrit :
> [...]
> > I am seriously considering sticking to UEFI
> > Secure Boot, not exactly for security, mostly to have a general
> > idea of how things work, by practice.
>
Le mardi 17 septembre 2019 22:00:05 UTC+2, Étienne Mollier a écrit :
[...]
> I am seriously considering sticking to UEFI
> Secure Boot, not exactly for security, mostly to have a general
> idea of how things work, by practice.
[...]
I have not tested it myself (only KVM/Ovmf bu
Didier Gaumet, on 2019-09-17:
> Le lundi 16 septembre 2019 21:00:04 UTC+2, Étienne Mollier a écrit :
> [...]
> > does someone know if UEFI
> > prevents unsigned "driver" or "firmware" loading ? (or both?)
> [...]
>
> it forbids it if SecureBoot is a
00 00
Bonjour,
Il y a aussi refind mais c'est un chargeur de démarrage, spécifique UEFI.
Marche très bien.
Cordialement
Pour compléter la réponse d'Etienne, il y a aussi la commande efivar du paquet
homonyme.
exemple, ici efivar indique si le système est en Secure Boot, mais il pourrait
servir à modifier ce comportement:
didier@hp-notebook14:~$ sudo efivar --print
> 64Go
> de RAM.
>
>
> Je connais mal (à cause de mon âge, 60 ans) le UEFI
> (dont j'ai pourtant parcouru quelques spécifications
> programmatiques). Je
> lis et écris
> l'anglais technique sans souci.
> Puis-je configurer cet UEFI depu
On 27/08/2019 20.20, Basile Starynkevitch wrote:
> Puis-je configurer cet UEFI depuis Debian en ligne de commande? Par exemple,
> l'ordre de boot, l'overclocking léger, le redémarrage automatique, etc. Si
> oui, comment?
Bonsoir Basile,
Sans avoir creusé dans les arcanes de cette com
Bonjour,
J'ai une carte mère MSI X399 SLI Plus
<https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/X399-SLI-PLUS> avec un processeur AMD
2970WX sous Debian/Testing (et bien sûr, aucun système microsoftien),
plusieurs disques, 64Go de RAM.
Je connais mal (à cause de mon âge, 60 ans) le UEFI
Le 28/07/2019 à 16:08, toto a écrit :
RESOLU
De quelle manière ?
RESOLU
--
Sent from: http://debian.2.n7.nabble.com/debian-user-french-f1152225.html
BOOTX64.CSV BOOTX64.EFI fbx64.efi grub.cfg grubx64.efi
mmx64.efi
Après quelques recherches sur internet j'ai tapé "efibootmgr -v" qui affiche
:
BootCurrent: 0002
Timeout: 0 seconds
BootOrder: 0002,3002,2001,2002,2003
Boot* USB Hard Drive (UEFI) -
Le 25/07/2019 à 21:59, Basile Starynkevitch a écrit :
A partir d'une image .iso qui traine sur le net, par exemple une Debian
netinst (...)
il suffit de la copier, kilo-octets par kilo-octets, avec l'utilitaire
dd
Et ensuite, comment mets-tu en place le multiboot ?
ap" au boot de pc pour tomber
directectement sur "boot options" (F9) mais cela conduit au même problème)
PC de marque HP ? J'en ai connu plusieurs modèles dont l'amorçage UEFI
était défectueux.
* puis s'affiche le choix du bios et je choisi "boot options" (F9) et
On 7/25/19 8:28 PM, toto wrote:
Bonjour a tous.
* creation de ma cle usb multiboot uefi gpt grub
A partir d'une image .iso qui traine sur le net, par exemple une Debian
netinst <https://www.debian.org/CD/netinst/> obtenue avec
<http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/wget.1.html>
Bonjour a tous.
* creation de ma cle usb multiboot uefi gpt grub
* fdisk -l /dev/sdb donne :
Disque /dev/sdb : 28,7 GiB, 3075200 octets, 60062500 secteurs
Modèle de disque : Ultra
Unités : secteur de 1 × 512 = 512 octets
Taille de secteur (logique / physique) : 512 octets / 512
> est considéré comme non bootable par certains UEFI,
> > qui passent alors au prochain support, ça m'est déjà arrivé.
>
> Sur mon portable récent,
> "secure-boot" dans BIOS est lié à UEFI,
> - si activé, secure-boot = enabled,
> - si non activé (legacy), secure-
On Monday 22 July 2019 12:15:46 Éric Dégenètais wrote:
> N'y a t'il pas confusion avec le "secure boot" qui n'est
> qu'une fonctionnalité d'UEFI ?
> Si un boot-loader non signé est détecté le support
> est considéré comme non bootable par certains UEFI,
> qui passent
Avec mes excuses à ajh-valmer pour le double message : fausse manipulation,
je croyais répondre à la liste.
Éric Dégenètais
-- Forwarded message -
De : Eric Degenetais
Date: lun. 22 juil. 2019 12:15
Subject: Re: Mise à jour du bios UEFI ?
To: ajh-valmer
N'y a t'il pas
Le 21/07/2019 à 13:07, ajh-valmer a écrit :
Quel est l'intérêt de mettre le BIOS en mode UEFI ?
(sécurité ?).
Le sujet a derive a partir de cette confusion.
Il ne s'agit pas d'un mode "UEFI" du Bios: Bios est mort, ce sont des
UEFIs partout maintenant, pas le choix.
D'ou la ne
Le 21/07/2019 à 14:48, Pascal Hambourg a écrit :
D'après un doc d'Intel, certains firmwares UEFI ne gèreraient pas les
SSD NMVe en mode legacy. Je n'ai pas connaissance d'exemple concret.
Bonjour, sur les ordinateurs dell que nous recevons depuis plusieurs
mois dans la fonction publique, le
On Sunday 21 July 2019 14:48:05 Pascal Hambourg wrote:
|cut]
> A ma connaissance une même installation de Windows ne peut pas booter
> indifféremment en mode UEFI et legacy. C'est soit l'un, soit l'autre et
> c'est fixé à l'installation. Ce que ajh-valmer appelle "LEGACY"
Le 21/07/2019 à 13:55, Eric Degenetais a écrit :
Le dim. 21 juil. 2019 13:32, ajh-valmer a écrit :
On Sunday 21 July 2019 13:21:15 hamster wrote:
Le 21/07/2019 à 13:07, ajh-valmer a écrit :
Quel est l'intérêt de mettre le BIOS en mode UEFI ?
En principe, une meilleure gestion du multiboot
Le dim. 21 juil. 2019 13:32, ajh-valmer a écrit :
> On Sunday 21 July 2019 13:21:15 hamster wrote:
> > Le 21/07/2019 à 13:07, ajh-valmer a écrit :
> > > Quel est l'intérêt de mettre le BIOS en mode UEFI ?
> > > (sécurité ?).
> > > Le mode Legacy est si simple
On Sunday 21 July 2019 13:21:15 hamster wrote:
> Le 21/07/2019 à 13:07, ajh-valmer a écrit :
> > Quel est l'intérêt de mettre le BIOS en mode UEFI ?
> > (sécurité ?).
> > Le mode Legacy est si simple et on peut booter
> > sur tous les périphériques.
> > UEFI, pas
Le 21/07/2019 à 13:07, ajh-valmer a écrit :
> Bonjour,
>
> Quel est l'intérêt de mettre le BIOS en mode UEFI ?
> (sécurité ?).
>
> Le mode Legacy est si simple et on peut booter
> sur tous les périphériques.
>
> UEFI, pas simple à mettre en place,
> vu lors de l
Bonjour,
Quel est l'intérêt de mettre le BIOS en mode UEFI ?
(sécurité ?).
Le mode Legacy est si simple et on peut booter
sur tous les périphériques.
UEFI, pas simple à mettre en place,
vu lors de l'achat d'un portable neuf.
Bon dimanche.
Ok. Je lis cela de suite. Merci pour l'info.
--
Sent from: http://debian.2.n7.nabble.com/debian-user-french-f1152225.html
Wed, 17 Jul 2019 06:54:46 -0700 (MST)
toto écrivait :
> Bonjour à tous.
salut Eric,
> Je souhaiterais savoir s'il est possible de mettre à jour le bios UEFI sous
> debian stretch.
La plupart des constructeurs offrent des images pour mettre ton «BIOS» à jour
sans passer par un O/S s
Bonjour à tous.
Je souhaiterais savoir s'il est possible de mettre à jour le bios UEFI sous
debian stretch.
Sous mon vieux PC pentium 2, j'amorcais le pc avec une disquette dos et je
flashais le bios.
Sur le pc portable que j'utilise j'ai mis à jour récement le bios UEFI en
lançant l'executable
the idea
you can refer to my suggestion as the result of a case study -- my
limited but successful use of rEFInd when I was very frustrated
by the EFI/UEFI interface of an un-named computer manfacturer whose name
has an uncanny resembelance to the name you
mentioned in your post, but maybe
And because I like to know the details of what I
> am doing I also discovered that I just naturally like Debian, too, as
> Debian is built upon explanations, fine with me!
>
> I was in the process of partitioning my hard drive to install Debian
> when I encountered a couple of UEF
Le 08/06/2019 à 04:46, tuulen a écrit :
I was in the process of partitioning my hard drive to install Debian when I
encountered a couple of UEFI complications. My HP Laptop with Windows 10
does not offer a way to disable the "secure boot" feature of UEFI, so that
makes Debian off l
ore years old.
GPUs
I use are mostly from all three major brands. Drivers for others apparently
don't
get much developer testing, so if available at all, tend to be less reliable
and/or flexible for use with modern widescreen displays.
UEFI BIOS are somewhat like people - each seems to be uni
ent "hands-on" books for BSD and other Unix topics:
https://mwl.io/nonfiction/os
https://mwl.io/nonfiction/networking
https://mwl.io/nonfiction/tools
I was in the process of partitioning my hard drive to install Debian when I
encountered a couple of UEFI complications. My HP Laptop with W
partitioning my hard drive to install Debian when
> I encountered a couple of UEFI complications. My HP Laptop with Windows
> 10 does not offer a way to disable the "secure boot" feature of UEFI, so
> that makes Debian off limits. Then I went to the HP website but almost
>
On Sat, 8 Jun 2019 at 13:03, tuulen wrote:
>
> My HP Laptop with Windows 10 does not offer a way to disable the "secure
> boot" feature of UEFI
Hi, more information from you might produce more useful replies :)
If you state the specific model of your laptop and BIOS versi
HP works, I have 5 HP machines at this time, all running Debian.
"secure boot" does not exist on any of them.
I do Not use UEFI, only Legacy Boot.
Never figured it out or saw an urgent need to use it.
BIOS/UEFI menus are all different, even on similar models and makes.
there ar
that I just naturally like Debian, too, as Debian is built upon
explanations, fine with me!
I was in the process of partitioning my hard drive to install Debian when I
encountered a couple of UEFI complications. My HP Laptop with Windows 10
does not offer a way to disable the "secure boot&quo
Steve McIntyre wrote:
...
> I've alwo written a lot about UEFI in relation to Debian in the wiki:
>
> https://wiki.debian.org/UEFI
thanks! that was a very helpful page when i ran into
problems last year. :)
what i know now is that for the time spent i could have
avoided a lot
On 05/04/2019 10:37 AM, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
Quoting Richard Owlett (2019-05-04 16:56:03)
This post was prompted by recent discussion of problems/cautions
concerning UEFI. All my machines boot in Legacy BIOS mode and I have
minimal background in UEFI.
A preliminary web search yielded
rowl...@cloud85.net wrote:
>
>This post was prompted by recent discussion of problems/cautions
>concerning UEFI. All my machines boot in Legacy BIOS mode and I have
>minimal background in UEFI.
>
>A preliminary web search yielded:
>>
>> http://x86asm.net
Quoting Richard Owlett (2019-05-04 16:56:03)
> This post was prompted by recent discussion of problems/cautions
> concerning UEFI. All my machines boot in Legacy BIOS mode and I have
> minimal background in UEFI.
>
> A preliminary web search yielded:
> >
> >
This post was prompted by recent discussion of problems/cautions
concerning UEFI. All my machines boot in Legacy BIOS mode and I have
minimal background in UEFI.
A preliminary web search yielded:
http://x86asm.net/articles/introduction-to-uefi/
https://blog.thomasmarcussen.com/tag
Narcís,
Ho provaré però com que ja m'he pres la molèstia de migrar a UEFI ser`un
tema més aviat "acadèmic".
Aprofito i en un altre fil us faig un resum de com ha anat la cosa.
Missatge de Narcis Garcia del dia dj., 7 de febr.
2019 a les 11:48:
> Lluís,
>
> Si agafes un eq
Lluís,
Si agafes un equipet d'aquests amb UEFI (aparentment només), amb la
unitat interna en blanc, prova a instal·lar-hi un sistema operatiu sense
UEFI possible. T'haurà de funcionar.
__
I'm using this express-made address because personal addresses aren't
masked enough at this mail
etmanes he migrat de extlinux a grub amb arrencada
UEFI perquè m'estava trobant que tots els equipets de baix cost ( Tipus
Beelink AP34 Pro) que tinc previst emprar a partir d'ara, em venien amb
bios uefi sense el mòdul de compatibilitat.
Missatge de Alex Muntada del dia dc., 6 de febr. 2019 a
(Perdó pel top-posting. El mòbil...)
Hola Lluís. Jo fa temps que instal·lo sempre amb gpt i uefi, i en general no he
tingut cap problema. Només fa anys, amb les primeres plaques uefi vaig haber-me
de barallar amb un portàtil i ho vaig haver de solventar amb el "refit".
Només en alg
an sumar el secure-boot i no
> és fàcil incloure claus personalitzades amb què poder signar els
> continguts (sinó no serviria de res).
>
>> Sense UEFI/EFI tot funciona perfectament, ja que les plaques
>> base dels ordinadors porten BIOS igualment.
>
> De moment no m'he trobat c
do que ens hagin donat cap problema en la instal·lació
però no els vam instal·lar amb UEFI perquè ja venien de sèrie
en mode legacy i sense S.O.
Estic força segur que amb Debian hauria de funcionar també sense
problemes perquè jo tinc el portàtil amb GRUB, GPT, LVM + UEFI,
corrent Debian stretch.
S
les persones puguin arrencar amb un
altre mitjà o sistema operatiu diferent del què s'entrega instal·lat de
sèrie (Windows).
Sense UEFI/EFI tot funciona perfectament, ja que les plaques base dels
ordinadors porten BIOS igualment.
__
I'm using this express-made address because personal
Hola,
El 6/2/19 a les 7:51, Narcis Garcia ha escrit:
> Jo normalment estableixo GPT en unitats majors de 2 TiB, és a dir, només
> quan és imprescindible. De tota manera, no sé si el DebianInstaller dóna
> a triar.
>
> uEFI també intento evitar-ho; la manera més senzilla és
Jo normalment estableixo GPT en unitats majors de 2 TiB, és a dir, només
quan és imprescindible. De tota manera, no sé si el DebianInstaller dóna
a triar.
uEFI també intento evitar-ho; la manera més senzilla és quan no s'ha de
conservar una arrencada EFI per Windows. Quan només hi ha sistemes GNU
Bones,
Alguna experiència reeixida, recomanació assenyada o consell imperdible amb
la configuració de l'assumpte.
La veritat és que encara no ho he provat però ho faré aviat i amb certa
urgència. Juraria que el darrer cop que vaig intentar instal·lar un raid1
sobre discs amb taula gpt,
-- Forwarded message -
From: Jhosue rui
Date: lun., 4 feb. 2019 1:54 p. m.
Subject: Re: UEFI y Linux
To: David
El lun., 4 feb. 2019 5:02 a. m., David escribió:
> Hola a todos:
>
> Tengo entendido lo siguiente:
>
> La Placa Base que viene con *UEFI* hay que
Holaa todos:
Tengoentendido lo siguiente:
LaPlaca Base queviene con UEFIhayqueponerlaen modo CSMporque facilita la
instalación de Linux y quetenga deshabilitado o desactivado tanto el
SecureBootcomo el FastBootya que para instalar Linux estos parámetros de UEFI
deben estardesactivados
On Mon, 14 Jan 2019 23:41:03 +0100
deloptes wrote:
> Patrick Bartek wrote:
>
> >> Patrick Bartek wrote:
> >>
> >> > I never could understand that type of "reasoning." With me, if there's
> >> > no NEED, it's not done. I'm very much the pragmatist. Always have
> >> > been even as a child, and
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