Hi, > Noce to hear from you.
I am always watching here for any problems with ISOs. > LBA 0 is not an option. Thanks for confirming this (once again). It turned out that /dev/sdb1 is link target in ./by-label with any partition start LBA. Lack of brains. So the last hope is the double superblock option of xorriso, which to my knowledge was only tested with ISOLINUX up to now. It seems to work with pure GRUB2 equipment too. I repacked the ISO in question according to what i can see in my olde copy of grub-mkrescue. "$old_iso" is mounted at /mnt, modification-date was learned from that image, /dvdbuffer is my local playground. Option -partition_offset 16 is the new thing to be tested: xorriso -as mkisofs \ -V "$version" \ -o /dvdbuffer/"$version".iso \ -graft-points \ --modification-date=2013030413525500 \ -b boot/grub/i386-pc/eltorito.img -no-emul-boot -boot-info-table \ --embedded-boot "$old_iso" \ --protective-msdos-label -r --sort-weight 0 / --sort-weight 1 /boot \ -partition_offset 16 \ /mnt This yields an MBR (copied from $old_iso) with partition start LBA 64 (16 blocks of 2048), two Primary Volume descriptors, and two directory trees with the same file names but data block addresses differing by 16. The resulting image was put onto USB stick and DVD. Both boot fine on my test machine. Unlike with partition start at LBA 1, the USB stick can be mounted as /dev/sdb and as /dev/sdb1. (Simultaneously only by help of -o loop. Brain suffices to recognize that /dev/sdb and /dev/sdb1 do overlap.) My test machine boots via BIOS. The ISO image is only equipped for BIOS, anyway. I have no means to test UEFI with partition offset 16. Does contemporary grub-mkrescue cause xorriso to produce GPT for UEFI ? (That would be a new adventure with -partition_offset.) If anybody has opportunity and curiosity: It should be possible to append option -partition_offset 16 to the options of grub-mkrescue, so that it reaches xorriso as one of the ${source} arguments. There was a bug with -partition_offset with older versions of xorriso, which caused Debian to stop using this option in its amd64 UEFI capable images. So better get newest stable xorriso for such a test. Currently this is: http://www.gnu.org/software/xorriso/xorriso-1.3.2.tar.gz Theoretical problems: El Torito booting from CD/DVD should not be influenced by this unusual layout. The ISO 9660 image beginning at LBA 0 is quite the same as without that option. Nevertheless, there was a report that Apple "Snow Leopard" refused to mount an ISO image with partition offset 16. http://lists.debian.org/debian-cd/2011/04/msg00032.html http://lists.debian.org/debian-cd/2011/04/msg00040.html http://lists.debian.org/debian-cd/2011/04/msg00042.html Note well that this was not about booting. Further, one never knows what the booting operating system expects as layout of USB sticks. I consider the current layout with LBA 1 to be more confusing. But that's only me ... Have a nice day :) Thomas _______________________________________________ Grub-devel mailing list Grub-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/grub-devel