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Re: Assortment of Issues with EFI on Mac
From: |
Vladimir 'φ-coder/phcoder' Serbinenko |
Subject: |
Re: Assortment of Issues with EFI on Mac |
Date: |
Fri, 30 Dec 2011 17:54:05 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.2.24) Gecko/20111114 Icedove/3.1.16 |
On 30.12.2011 14:12, Jake Thomas wrote:
//Using version 1.99 of Grub
Hello everyone, I've been meaning to submit these bugs for quite a
while now, at least since summer, but have been busy with school and
hadn't taken the time to figure the Grub mailing list out, and was at
a loss as to how to go about submitting bugs.
I have been playing with Grub2 on a thumb drive. I didn't know why it
wasn't booting on the Mac, and, after some research, found out about
EFI v.s. BIOS. After some more research and head-banging, I made some
working grub efi images, put them on my thumb drive, and I could boot
Linux off my thumb drive on a Mac, which uses EFI, not BIOS.
I encountered some issues.
One I call the "temptation error". If Linux is on the internal hard
drive of my Macbook, and I get booted into Grub off my thumb drive via
EFI, and I tell it to load Linux off the thumb drive, Grub finds the
Linux on the internal hard drive too tempting and usually boots that
instead. The kernel and initrd were the same name and path on both the
internal hard drive and thumb drive, so it's not like it got possessed
and started looking around for Linuxes to boot.
When you are on a Macbook with Linux on the internal hard drive with a
kernel and initrd of the same name and path as the kernel and initrd
on a thumb drive with a bootable grub EFI image, and you boot into EFI
Grub off the thumb drive, it seems to, on average, actually succeed in
booting off the thumb drive rather than the internal about 1 in every
14 times. It's more like it randomly picks a number between 12 and 17
or so, and that's how many more attempts it will take to get to the
next successful attempt to boot off the thumb drive rather than the
internal.
It's usually a symptom of duplicate UUID or wrong grub.cfg. You can't
rely on drive order. You need to use search -s root -u UUID
Another one is an often patternistic blackout bug. I can boot my
MacBook off my thumb drive into EFI Grub, select to boot Linux off my
thumb drive, and boot Linux no problem (unless Linux exists on the
internal). Then the next time I try, it might black the screen out. In
fact, pressing enter or escape or any key doesn't do anything, so it
actually is crashed-out, rather than the screen simply having gone black.
But here's the interesting part: If I save a copy of grub.cfg to my
desktop (the one in the EFI grub prefix) and then delete it off my
thumb drive, and then boot my MacBook off my thumb drive, I
successfully get to a command line and can boot Linux "by hand." Then
I can put the grub.cfg back on, and it will work next time. Sometimes
it follows a simple AB pattern of blacking out, me deleting grub.cfg,
getting to a command line, me putting grub.cfg back on, Grub booting
correctly with a menu and background image and all, and then the cycle
repeats. Though recently I haven't experienced a strict cycle; it's
more of a certain probability of blacking out, to which the fix is to
delete grub.cfg, boot without it, then put it back on.
It's possible that it's another symptom of last problem
And here's a couple of minor bugs (but they still ought to be fixed):
Grub doesn't load a grub.cfg file if it has extra carriage returns at
the end. To someone who doesn't know this and is making a grub.cfg
file by hand for, say, a thumb drive, this can cause a lot of
frustration; it sure caused me a lot of frustration! Grub only loads a
grub.cfg file if the last character is a part of the Grub script,
usually a "}".
grub.cfg has to be in unix-style newline that is \n=LF. There should be
no CR=carriage return at all.
When I boot my thumb drive via EFI on my MacBook, it erroneously, for
a brief moment, says "error: prefix not set" and then continues
loading Grub to a menu with a background and everything (unless it
blacks out). The prefix is indeed set and can be confirmed by command
line.
normal mod shouldn't be baked into image. Use grub-install
Also, I have experienced issues with iMacs, but don't have enough
definite testing to really report anything. It wasn't loading the
background, had funny characters around the menu like it does when the
font file isn't present, and it was in portrait rather than in
landscape, and if I remember right, didn't even boot Linux.
if you use gfxterm you need to load unifont. If you don't GRUB can't
load background image
I'm a big fan of Grub. I felt like I found heaven on Earth when I
started understanding it and using it, because I was using syslinux
before that (for thumb drives). Boy! Support for either EFI or BIOS,
the ability to have a pretty background image, font of your choice, so
many modules for anything...it's got so many great things to it! And
if these kinks could be worked out, it'd be even better. If we really
do switch to EFI, they better get fixed.
That's good to hear. You can drop by in IRC and hopefully we can figure
what's wrong with your system and whether any of it is a bug as opposed
to wrong manual config
Cheers,
Jake
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Regards
Vladimir 'φ-coder/phcoder' Serbinenko