Hello Simon,

these are the EFI configuration tables that EDK II is publishing:

Configuration tables:
  ee4e5898-3914-4259-9d6e-dc7bd79403cf
  05ad34ba-6f02-4214-952e-4da0398e2bb9
  7739f24c-93d7-11d4-9a3a-0090273fc14d
  4c19049f-4137-4dd3-9c10-8b97a83ffdfa
  49152e77-1ada-4764-b7a2-7afefed95e8b
  060cc026-4c0d-4dda-8f41-595fef00a502
  SMBIOS
  eb9d2d30-2d88-11d3-9a16-0090273fc14d
  ACPI 2.0
  dcfa911d-26eb-469f-a220-38b7dc461220
  d719b2cb-3d3a-4596-a3bc-dad00e67656f

Here is the translation for the GUIDs:

Configuration tables:
  EFI_LZMA_COMPRESSED (not standardized)
  EFI_DXE_SERVICES (not standardized)
  EFI_HOB_LIST (PI specification)
  EFI_MEMORY_TYPE (not standardized)
  EfiDebugImageInfoTable (UEFI specification)
  EFI_MEM_STATUS_CODE_REC (not standardized)
  SMBIOS (UEFI specification)
  EFI_GUID_EFI_ACPI1 (UEFI specification, deprecated)
  ACPI 2.0 (UEFI specification)
  EfiMemoryAttributesTable  (UEFI specification)
  EFI_IMAGE_SECURITY_DATABASE (not defined as table in UEFI spec)

At least the Memory Attributes Table is used with some security profiles
of Windows. The lack of one of the tables might be stopping the
installation progress.

The EFI_DEBUG_IMAGE_INFO_TABLE points to SMM images and I needed smm=on
to run the Windows installer on EDK II.

The Windows 11 installer does not comprise a virtio block device driver.
Some Fedora people have packages a driver that you could load into the
installer but I guess it is easier to supply an emulated NVMe or SCSI
driver as installation target.

Best regards

Heinrich

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