Further question.... does boot1.efi (which I assume has to be placed on the EFI partition and then something like rEFInd can select it) know how to handle a geli-encrypted primary partition (e.g. for root/boot so I don't need an unencrypted /boot partition), and if so how do I tell it that's the case and to prompt for the password?
(If not I know how to set up for geli-encryption using a non-encrypted /boot partition, but my understanding is that for 12 the loader was taught how to handle geli internally and thus you can now install 12 -- at least for ZFS -- with encryption on root. However, that wipes the disk if you try to select it in the installer, so that's no good -- and besides, on a laptop zfs is overkill.) Thanks! On 1/26/2019 08:08, Kamila Součková wrote: > I'm just booting the installer, going to do this on my X1 Carbon (5th gen), > and I'm planning to use the efibootmgr entry first (which is sufficient for > booting), and later I might add rEFInd if I feel like it. I'll be posting > my steps online, I can post the link once it's out there if you're > interested. > > I'm very curious about HW support on the 6th gen Carbon, it'd be great to > hear how it goes. > > Have fun! > > Kamila > > On Sat, 26 Jan 2019, 06:54 Kyle Evans, <[email protected]> wrote: > >> On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 6:30 PM Jonathan Chen <[email protected]> wrote: >>> On Sat, 26 Jan 2019 at 13:00, Karl Denninger <[email protected]> wrote: >>> [...] >>>> I'd like to repartition it to be able to dual boot it much as I do with >>>> my X220 (I wish I could ditch Windows entirely, but that is just not >>>> going to happen), but I'm not sure how to accomplish that in the EFI >>>> world -- or if it reasonably CAN be done in the EFI world. Fortunately >>>> the BIOS has an option to turn off secure boot (which I surmise from >>>> reading the Wiki FreeBSD doesn't yet support) but I still need a means >>>> to select from some reasonably-friendly way *what* to boot. >>> The EFI partition is just a MS-DOS partition, and most EFI aware BIOS >>> will (by default) load /EFI/Boot/boot64.efi when starting up. On my >>> Dell Inspiron 17, I created /EFI/FreeBSD and copied FreeBSD's >>> /boot/loader.efi to /EFI/FreeBSD/boot64.efi. My laptop's BIOS setup >>> allowed me to specify a boot-entry to for \EFI\FreeBSD\boot64.efi. On >>> a cold start, I have to be quick to hit the F12 key, which then allows >>> me to specify whether to boot Windows or FreeBSD. I'm not sure how >>> Lenovo's BIOS setup works, but I'm pretty sure that it should have >>> something similar. >>> >> Adding a boot-entry can also be accomplished with efibootmgr. This is >> effectively what the installer in -CURRENT does, copying loader to >> \EFI\FreeBSD on the ESP and using efibootmgr to insert a "FreeBSD" >> entry for that loader and activating it. >> _______________________________________________ >> [email protected] mailing list >> https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable >> To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]" >> > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]" -- Karl Denninger [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> /The Market Ticker/ /[S/MIME encrypted email preferred]/
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