On Wed, Mar 11, 2015 at 9:06 AM, Bret Busby <[email protected]> wrote: > On 11/03/2015, Bret Busby <[email protected]> wrote: >> On 11/03/2015, Andrei Borzenkov <[email protected]> wrote: >>> В Tue, 10 Mar 2015 23:26:41 +0800 >>> Bret Busby <[email protected]> пишет: >>> >>>> >>>> Maybe, as Debian Linux, and Ubuntu Linux, have different versions, >>>> according to the CPU upon which they are to run (eg, x386, and amd64), >>>> they should also have different versions, to run on the different >>>> platforms, of UEFI/GPT and BIOS/MBR/FAT? >>>> >>> >>> That's possible. As you can use your installed system now - do you have >>> anything under /sys/firmware/efi/efivars or /sys/firmware/efi/vars? >>> >>> >> >> I am replying from the Ubuntu 14.04 installation on the particular >> computer; i have found Ubuntu 14.04 to be not user-friendly, and to >> have considerably reduced functionality (compared to Debian 6 and >> Ubuntu 12.04). And, Ubuntu 14.04 is difficult to use, but, it allows >> me to use an external monitor, wheras Debian 7 does not. >> >> On this platform, both commands return "No such file or directory", using >> sudo ls <path> >> . >> > > And, in using the Debian 7 installation, and a root terminal, I get > the same responses. > > In the Debiab 7 installation, if I go up a level; in the root terminal, > running > ls /sys/firmware/efi/ > I get the same response. > > In the root terminal, I get > > " > # ls /sys/firmware > acpi memmap > " >
Which finally confirms that all your systems are installed and booted in legacy BIOS mode. You will need to find some way to boot any Linux media in EFI mode before you can consider next steps. I cannot tell how to do it - every vendor of consumer product has own (re-)implementation of EFI firmware, or at least user interface. _______________________________________________ Help-grub mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-grub
