Mark Phillips wrote:
I have an older laptop running Debian testing with two USB drives
attached. If I remove the drives, it boots normally. If I leave the
drives connected, it gets stuck at the first boot screen where it
asks
to go into the boot menu.
I suspect that the machine is confused and may think it can boot from
the usb drives. I only want it to boot from the internal hard drive.
On 2016-11-17 15:44, Carruth, Rusty wrote:
Can you tell the BIOS to not ever use the USB drives?
If not, can you make the BIOS have the real hard drive be the first
thing it tries? (think ‘Boot order’) That should be settable in the
BIOS even when you’re working the settings without a USB device
connected.
Yes, that.
It might also be useful to check the USB disks with fdisk (or gparted)
and make sure that none of the partitions on the disks are marked
"bootable". Typically, the BIOS won't boot from a partition that
doesn't have the bootable flag set. (It might if the disk has an
ISO9660 bootable image on it, but it's unlikely you have that going on
if you're using the USB disks to store data.) Your BIOS might be doing
something very stupid, but some combination of the above things should
make the laptop work properly.
--
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