R0b0t1 gmail.com> writes:
> On Jul 22, 2016 5:43 PM, "Neil Bothwick" digimed.co.uk> wrote:
> > I take it this is a limitation of Apple's firmware as I have set up a
> > number of uUEFI systems and never had to do this.
> It is.
There is another document that talks in depth about the issue, al
> >> I don't use systemd on Gentoo but for the nfs-utils upstream-shipped
> >> systemd units that I think that Gentoo's using, you have to re-run
> >> nfs-config.service - or run the script that it calls - in order to
> >> update the "/run/sysconfig/nfs-utils" environment file that's sourced
> >> b
On Jul 22, 2016 5:43 PM, "Neil Bothwick" wrote:
> I take it this is a limitation of Apple's firmware as I have set up a
> number of uUEFI systems and never had to do this.
>
It is.
On Fri, 22 Jul 2016 14:53:47 -0500, R0b0t1 wrote:
> You need to set the bootable flag in the protective MBR.
>
> I had to use gdisk and fdisk to make a partition that was bootable by
> Apple's EFI. The proper setting does not seem to exist in gdisk, even
> though gdisk can read it (oversight by t
You need to set the bootable flag in the protective MBR.
I had to use gdisk and fdisk to make a partition that was bootable by
Apple's EFI. The proper setting does not seem to exist in gdisk, even
though gdisk can read it (oversight by the author?).
Hello,
I thought I'd post a new thread on this issue. My goals is to have a single
default partition scheme on a sata disk that allows me to use either
Bios(mbr) or EFI(gpt) systems on these drives. Also the goal is to keep the
partition scheme unchanged (boot;root;swap;'usr/local') but be able t
On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 10:51 PM, Adam Carter wrote:
>> I don't use systemd on Gentoo but for the nfs-utils upstream-shipped
>> systemd units that I think that Gentoo's using, you have to re-run
>> nfs-config.service - or run the script that it calls - in order to
>> update the "/run/sysconfig/n
On 07/22/2016 10:49:35 AM, Dmitry Bogun wrote:
Look like you don't have gpt support in kernel.
Many thanks Dmitry,
that was the problem.
Since I have a somewhat older mother board with no UEFI support, I
couldn't image why I need the
EFI GUID Partition support
setting for my kernel.
I have
Look like you don't have gpt support in kernel.
Post output from command "gunzip -c /proc/config.gz | grep '_PARTITION\>'"
> On Jul 22, 2016, at 11:37 AM, Helmut Jarausch wrote:
>
> On 07/22/2016 10:28:35 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> On Fri, 22 Jul 2016 10:04:58 +0200, Helmut Jarausch wrote:
>>
On 07/22/2016 10:28:35 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jul 2016 10:04:58 +0200, Helmut Jarausch wrote:
> I have zeroed the first 8 MB and then I used gdisk
> gdisk still notes that there is a backup GPT. I opted to created a
new
> blank GPT.
> Then I created 4 partitions.
> I have used th
On Fri, 22 Jul 2016 10:04:58 +0200, Helmut Jarausch wrote:
> I have zeroed the first 8 MB and then I used gdisk
> gdisk still notes that there is a backup GPT. I opted to created a new
> blank GPT.
> Then I created 4 partitions.
> I have used the w(rite) command before exiting gdisk.
> Starting
Thanks to all of you who have tried to help.
Unfortunately, I am still lost.
I just want to run Gentoo on my system, and the new drive is just for
backup, i.e. it needn't be bootable.
I have zeroed the first 8 MB and then I used gdisk
gdisk still notes that there is a backup GPT. I opted to c
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