First time you broke fedora because you was using standard iso without uefi support.Second time with arch you installed bootloader to mbr - most certainly this wasn't uefi install.After this I have no idea what you have done Now let's start fresh - how to install arch in uefi mode:Make sure your disk has gpt partition table - if you went back to mbr, it very easy to format to gpt and cre
wakko wrote:Hy guys,i got some troubes installing archlinux on my Lenovo S205 with archboot 2012.01Archboot checks gpt & uefi und installs the uefi-package but it won't boot..what i don't understand: i have now 5 entries in the Boot List in the "Phoenix SecureCore Tiano Setup" called Arch Linux (GRUB2)how can i remove them?greetings,wakkohttps://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.
Which instructions? I don't see how you can have "followed exactly the steps" as described on overclockers *and* all the ways described in the wiki.If you installed grub2 as described in the wiki while in BIOS mode, all you need to do is boot in UEFI mode to complete the installation. I used Ubuntu to do this but anything which will boot UEFI will do.
Hi!I'm trying to install GRUB2 on the disk with GPT on the machine with UEFI support. But at the end of my doings I getting error «Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key».There is my doing in step by step form:1. In the BIOS settings I've turned on Enable UEFI booting. 2.
Hi.Since Arch has moved to the new install framework I haven't been able to install it in UEFI (non UEFI mode is fine...)The only way I have got a boot-able system with UEFI is to use the archboot .iso - https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/ArchbootI have to say just having a install .txt file isn't brilliant, for a start it refers to a partitioning section that should be a HTML link (bu
ataraxia wrote:The "core" images (that included packages on the ISO) caused support problems. If the ISO was older than some recent difficult upgrade, users were faced with tough steps (like a combined filesystem and glibc upgrade) immediately after install. The net install method avoids that.
I recently purchased an Aspire XC600, but am having trouble installing Arch. I haven't installed on UEFI before. I want Arch as the only OS on the disk.
I wrote the Archboot x86_64 image to a USB stick and booted from it successfully. The booting had to be done through a compatibility layer.
In the "Install Bootloader" step, I chose UEFI_x86_64, EFISTUB and GUMMIBOOT_UEFI.
I've got a new Asus laptop and have been trying to install Arch Linux. UEFI and Secure Boot issues gave me a hard time getting things from the ground. Ultimately, I was able to boot into the Live CD, and I currently have Arch pretty much installed. I plan on using a BIOS motherboard (better put: Compatibility Mode on my UEFI motherboard), using GRUB.
Hi Arch community,Arch Linux (archboot creation tool) 2012.10-1, "2k12-R4" has been released.To avoid confusion, this is not an official arch linux iso release!Homepage and for more information on archboot:http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/ArchbootSummary:- major update/cleanup on all componentsHybrid image files and torrents are provided, which includei686 and/or x86_64 core repositor