I have spotted quite a few questions as of late about getting CSM to work (with anything in some cases), I just thought I would drop into the list that in fact CSM is BIOS emulation mode, meaning it makes the UEFI act like a BIOS from the point of view of the OS, and is really only useful for special cases.
For those of you that for some reason are trying to boot Linux on it, stop you are almost certainly doing something very wrong. You should always try standard UEFI as a FIRST OPTION, if that does not work but your target OS supports GRUB then great start using bhyve-grub2 to do the boot, this will cover almost all use cases for anything made within the last 5 years. Just thought it was worth mentioning for if anyone was getting confused as to what CSM was actually for :-) -- Special thanks(for explaining this to me in the first place) to: debdrup @IRC _______________________________________________ freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-virtualization To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-virtualization-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"