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From: | Isaac Dupree |
Subject: | Re: [PATCH] New x86_64 EFI patch |
Date: | Sat, 28 Jun 2008 06:51:45 -0400 |
User-agent: | Thunderbird 2.0.0.14 (X11/20080505) |
Bean wrote:
Perhaps command line is not passed to loader correctly, you can verify it with the OSX loader: set root=(hd0,2) chainloader /System/Library/CoreServices/boot.efi -- -v boot Please try this out, if parameter -v is passed to the loader, you will see console screen before switching to GUI.
That 'chainloader' didn't work at all: It seems GRUB2 here isn't understanding the HFS+(journaled) filesystem at all. Neither in EFI nor BIOS grub2 can I see anything on that partition, even though I have module hfsplus loaded (I think - but lsmod in grub takes up more than the whole screen, so I can't see them all - is there any way to get around that?).
Also I decided to play around and try a few other commands in grub2. cpuid (efi or pc) -- finishes instantly without outputting anything lspci (efi) -- hangs (but it works properly in pc) reboot (efi) -- hangs (but it works properly in pc)
every time I've tried Ubuntu with a different kernel... it has problems. Ubuntu has a fancy initrd, modules, lots of patches, Upstart as init, >and who knows what assumptions about the boot process... but maybe. I could use the kernel from the Ubuntu development branch, if I >had any idea how to use APT to upgrade just a few specific things from an unstable package-source and not my whole system (the kernel >binary obviously doesn't depend on system libraries, so it should be uniquely easy to do this...). Do you know about debians -- if that's >possible?In debian, all I have to do is to add the sid line to /etc/apt/source.list, apt-get update, then apt-get install linux-image-xxx. Ubuntu is based on debian, the process should be similar.
yes it is similar (and I'd probably try and use the Ubuntu development branch for the next release, "intrepid") : however, what bothers me is that this seems to make the whole apt repo, not just the part I want, be a first-class citizen; so that if it contains a newer version number of any package on my system, it will install that if I ask to install the package, or it will offer to upgrade to that version if it's already installed (so I can't even begin to pick out which are the Ubuntu-stable updates). I hope I'm missing some option that lets me avoid this risky nuisance, while still keeping tabs on the unstable linux-image packages?
-Isaac
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