Le 02.02.2014 21:46, Tom H a écrit :
On Tue, Jan 28, 2014 at 5:47 AM, <berenger.mo...@neutralite.org>
wrote:
Le 28.01.2014 11:41, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org a écrit :
Sorry for incomplete message. Here is the full message:
At my job, I have a computer on which I can choose the OS so, I
installed my
lovely debian there (with "some" problems to make it booting because
of this
damned EFI ) but would prefer to keep windows in dual boot. Windows
partition is still there, but grub does not seems to be able to
notice it.
I can do all tasks on the Debian system, but I need to retrieve some
informations which were configured on windows, and keeping a dual
boot seems
a not so bad idea anyway, so do someone have any idea about what to
do to
fix that problem?
Now some technical informations which could give (or not) some hints
to help
me:
The boot flag was on a NTFS partition sda1, 1GiB large.
Windows itself was on a NTFS partition sda2, more than 300GiB large,
but I
have resized it through Debian installer to 93GiB ( should be enough
for a
system which will almost never be used, even if the system's name is
windows
btw ). After simple resizing, it was still able to work.
There were 2 other partitions, one for windows recovery with NTFS,
and
another one for HP tools with fat32. I have removed both of them.
I now have a fat32 partition with EFI informations, mount point:
/boot/efi,
1.86GiB large on sda3, which is bootable.
I have lot of other partitions for Debian: /, /usr, /var, swap, /tmp
and
/home. Lot of GiB there.
The last partition is a FAT32 that I intend to keep to share data
between
windows and debian, on sd5, 61GiB large ( very large too, but
considering
the HD's size... I did not cared a lot about that ).
Have you checked that "/boot/efi/EFI/Microsoft\Boot\bootmgfw.efi"
exists? (It might be "Bootmgfw.efi".)
I'm not at work currently, but I'll take a look tomorrow. However, I
have already looked at what was in /boot and am pretty sure that I have
no file or directory with microsoft or windows in their name (
lowercase, uppercase and all kinds of mixes ). I'll check anew to be
sure anyway.
Have you tried to switch to "bootmgfw.efi" through your firmware?
Which firmware?
Running "efibootmgr" should display all the values that your firmware
knows about and the order in which they classified.
I'll install this tool and check what it gives tomorrow, thanks.
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