On 2013-12-31 10:23:18, Luca Capello wrote: > Hi there! > > On Tue, 31 Dec 2013 15:50:39 +0100, Antoine Beaupré wrote: >> On 2013-12-31 05:45:01, Andreas Cadhalpun wrote: >> Yeah... I struggled with that before, and I *was* able to make it work, >> but since it wasn't obvious this was necessary *during* the installer, I >> did a normal MBR-based partitionning. When the boot loader failed to >> install, I didn't want to go back and redo everything, especially since >> this is a dual-boot system and I was happy to have been able to resize >> the NTFS partition at all... ;) > > Sorry, but there is something strange here. In the first email you > reported that "when I rebooted, grub was not installed in the MBR and I > was brought back into windows", which means that partman used the > partition table already present. This can be checked with a simple > `fdisk -l /dev/sda`: if there is no GPT mention, then the partition > table is plain old MBR. > > BTW, Windows 7 does not mandate GPT nor UEFI, but can use both.
Oh right - I used the original partitionning I guess. I assumed it was MBR. >> Shouldn't we create GPT partitions all the time now anyways? > > Why? IMHO if there is no need for it (because BIOS is used) plain old > MBR is easier. The reason is that it will fail on newer BIOS, from what I can tell. >>> Last but not least, you have to select the UEFI:USB in the firmware >>> and not BIOS:USB, which every firmware has a different marking scheme >>> for, but disabling legacy-bios (or equivalent option) in the UEFI >>> BIOS, should always disable the BIOS:USB option. (It can be enabled >>> again after installation.) >> >> Right, I guess this is the tricky bit. It seems that in any case, the >> user needs to go fiddle in the BIOS, which is annoying. In my case, I >> was able to install by *disabling* UEFI in the BIOS, but the reverse >> might be the case for others. > > No need to fiddle in the BIOS if you simply use UEFI (d-i supports it). That would imply reformatting the whole drive and destroying all the data, from what I understand. Unless d-i can convert a MBR partition to GPT? A. -- Voter, c'est abdiquer - Élisée Reclus
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