Re: Problem with efibootmgr on asus 1215b

From: Vasco Dias
Date: Thu Mar 15 2012 - 00:26:31 EST


On Thu 15 Mar 2012 03:06:33 AM WET, Motiejus JakÅtys wrote:
On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 02:27:08AM +0000, Vasco Dias wrote:
On Thu 15 Mar 2012 01:29:41 AM WET, Motiejus JakÅtys wrote:
Somewhat late to this I know, but:

On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 11:48:26AM +0000, Matt Fleming wrote:

Just to let you know I apparently have exactly the same issue with the same
laptop. If it can help, I could try installing the M$ Student Edition during
the weekend and report the results.

Windows Server 2008 64-bit, fresh GPT partition table will be my lab
environment. Standard installation procedure.

I am running Ubuntu 12.04 with 3.2.0-18-generic.

Motiejus

I have to say that before installing linux i tried installing
windows right after
converting the system to gpt and after selecting the partition to
install it it
would just BSOD.

I downloaded windows from my msdna account, converted it to boot
from the usb drive and manually selected the efi file from the drive
to launch
the windows setup.

Sometimes it would reboot just after starting, other times it would BSOD
after selecting the partition and clicking next and yet other times
it would
start installing and then BSOD.

After at least 20 different attemps there was just one time that
before going into BSOD that it successfuly registered the microsoft
boot program with the efi boot variables.

All that assuming the files on the usb drive were not corrupted ;)
(it would be fun if they were)

Thanks for response, now I know what to expect. Sounds like an *alternative*
way to spend a weekend.

Which version exactly did you use?

In any case, I will verify your findings.

So AFAIK there is no way to boot 64 bit linux (or even as of now - windows)
without entering the UEFI shell and manually starting the UEFI loader (like
[1])?

[1]: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1064647#p1064647

Motiejus

The version i used was "Microsoft Windows 7 Professional with Service Pack 1 64-bit (English)"
and to put it to boot from the usb drive i read somewhere how to do it.

I would be happy actually if you were able to do it, it could mean something very wrong on my side,
if not it really means this laptop needs the firmware fixed from asus.

For your question, at least I have to do it that way.
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