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Re: Reconfiguring grub2 UFEI system **SOLVED**



Hi!

Em domingo, 23 de Outubro de 2016 20:10:05 WEST, Mark Neidorff <mark@neidorff.com> escreveu:
On Sunday, 10/23/16 10:05:43 AM Laruibasar wrote:
Em sábado, 22 de Outubro de 2016 22:17:35 WEST, Mark Neidorff

<mark@neidorff.com> escreveu:
> On Friday, 10/21/16 10:19:47 PM Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>> Le 21/10/2016 à 20:56, Mark Neidorff a écrit :
>> > So, the next step was to clean out the other distros.  I
>> >> used gparted to >> >> > delete no longer needed partitions and to expand other >> >> partitions to fill >> >> > the space. All is now good. >> > >> > I then ran >> > >> > #update-grub >> > >> > hoping that would regenerate the grub boot menu, (I also tried >> > #update-grub2) but the old entries still appear when the system boots. >> >> Are you talking about entries in GRUB's menu or in the UEFI boot menu ? > > Grub menu. (I don't see a UEFI menu) > >> update-grub only updates the former. > > Good. > >> What is the output of "os-prober" ? > > No output. (yes, I ran it as root) > >> Are you sure the GRUB that shows up is the one from Debian ? > > I'm not sure how to answer that question. The first OS I installed was
> OpenSUSE.  Then I installed Debian 8.6 twice (on the two
> separate drives in
> the system).  All three of these entries are still there even
> after running
> update-grub.

Have you mounted the EFI partition? Update-grub change grub, I don't think
it changes the FIE partitions. And check motherboard bios/uefi for the
default entry

> I wouldn't care about the extra entries except that the
> OpenSUSE entry is the
> default.  I want  Debian to be the default (and, yes there is only one
> instance of Debian installed).  Yes I tried changing the value
> of the default
> before I ran update-grub, but that didn't help.
> > Thanks for any help, > > Mark

Bandarra

I went into the UEFI bios, and changed the default entry. Now I get the correct Debian grub boot screen without the extra entries. Once I get the rest of this system configured, I'm going to have to go back and really understand what goes on in the UEFI.
I'm marking this as SOLVED.

Glad you solve it! If you are going to use several OS on you PC with UEFI, check a solution call rEFInd (uefi boot manager). I use it for dual boot and it was once upon a time the way I use to transition Debian to uefi.

Many thanks for the help.

Mark




--
Enviado do Dekko através do meu dispositivo Ubuntu.


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