> I think you miss the point here. Sibi was asking how to store settings, > where UEFI should look for the next-stage bootloader (e.g. GRUB), and > not how to relay the decision which OS to boot.
I am old, a bit numb/dumb (reason INTEL ousted me, good reasoning, don't you think?), so this is why I did reply to this email in the first place... To learn something tangible. I am looking forward for people to couch/teach me. Besides, seems that you, Nico, missing something important in your personal integration: reading/listening skills. You even did not bother to read my entire email (typical FLMs and SLMs behavior in INTEL). ;-) What about my question #1: *[1: For general Coreboot population] After having Tiano Core payload executed, how Tiano Core is linked with the next booting phase: GRUB2?* So your answer/question is kinda perfect, I should say. I am also looking forward to the answer you did formulate (since you did not bother to read mine). In other words, I am also after this question: How Tiano Core should look/what is the mechanism to get to the GRUB2? (I need to learn Chinese, really I do, maybe I'll make/express myself more clear) :-)) Thank you, Zoran On Wed, Mar 22, 2017 at 8:02 PM, Nico Huber <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Zoran, > > On 22.03.2017 14:51, Zoran Stojsavljevic wrote: > > Hello Sibi, > > > > The answer to your question lies outside of Coreboot domain. After > bringing > > Tiano Core, you need to bring the next phase of booting: OS boot loader. > > The best for you is to use GRUB2. Then, from GRUB2 menu > > (/boot/efi/EFI/.../grub.cfg) you can choose your OS (either WIN8+, either > > any modern Linux distro). You can have up to 128 of them, as my best > > understanding is. > > I think you miss the point here. Sibi was asking how to store settings, > where UEFI should look for the next-stage bootloader (e.g. GRUB), and > not how to relay the decision which OS to boot. > > Nico > >
-- coreboot mailing list: [email protected] https://www.coreboot.org/mailman/listinfo/coreboot

