I should add that you will not be able to use grub for dualbooting *unless* you
modify or re-install one of the OSes, so that it boots using the same process
as the other.
On Sunday May 05, 2019, Randy Goldenberg wrote:
Hermes,
Thank you for the information.
Your Linux installation boots legacy BIOS, while your new Windows
installation boots UEFI. That being the case, you will not be able to
use grub for dualbooting.
Cheers,
Randy
On Sunday May 05, 2019, Hermes Brandt wrote:
one more thing, when, in the /sys/firmware directory, I run the "ls -a"
command, I get " . .. acpi dmi memmap". I don' t know if that is
useful for you in this case.
Hermes Brandt
Amsterdam
The Netherlands
"Be kind whenever possible.
It is always possible."
Dalai Lama
On Sat, May 4, 2019 at 11:32 PM Randy Goldenberg
<[1][email protected]> wrote:
Hermes,
When running Linux, is there a directory "efi" in /sys/firmware?
Thanks,
Randy
On Saturday May 04, 2019, Hermes Brandt wrote:
>Windows has divided the disc (called Disc 0) in four parts:
>
>(1) Recovery, 450 MB NTFS OEM-partition
>
>(2) 100 MB EFI System partition
>
>(3) 231,52 GB NTFS primary partition
>
>(4) 826 MB NTFS OEM-partition
>
>Is it possible to install NGU GRUB from Windows in this configuration?
>Hermes Brandt
>Amsterdam
>The Netherlands
>_______________________________________________
>Help-grub mailing list
>[2][email protected]
>[3]https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-grub
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