Furthermore, a bios bootloader and a UEFI bootloader can happily co-exist. So you can simply get it up and running with legacy bios booting and then work on wrapping your head around the whole UEFI thing. Linux happily supports the combination of UEFI and GPT (unlike the other OS on your machine).
]]>I would suggest you to burn a CD. It's like a cent to buy, plus you will need it much more than you think you will.
I never had a successful USB making from a windows OS, only dd in another Linux env was able to do the trick.
Last week I was trying to install windows to use a native software, USB said some partitions were out of order, aborted the process. After that, it complained about missing checks, or something. I was downloading another torrent ( shh, don't tell anyone ) when I give burning it to CD a try and alas it just worked. I'm sorry for boring you with my stupid anecdotes but for short, Usb doesn't quite work like a CD.
I wouldn't mind burning one but my computer doesn't have optical drive.
I never had any problem installing either windows or Linux distro (arch included, using win32diskimager), so guess this may be really a bug.
I never had a successful USB making from a windows OS, only dd in another Linux env was able to do the trick.
Last week I was trying to install windows to use a native software, USB said some partitions were out of order, aborted the process. After that, it complained about missing checks, or something. I was downloading another torrent ( shh, don't tell anyone ) when I give burning it to CD a try and alas it just worked. I'm sorry for boring you with my stupid anecdotes but for short, Usb doesn't quite work like a CD.
Any hint?
]]>OK, apparently a BIOS(/UEFI ???) update did the trick. I just upgraded my BIOS (or UEFI?, not so sure about the terminology) and tried to use my USB install stick again. Now I got to the live system without any problems. Should I mark this thread as "[SOLVED]" now, or am I allowed to keep it open until I managed to actually get Arch on my machine? (After I saw that I finally got into the live system, I just rebooted because I don't want to do the install right now.)
Read Rod Smith's site for details on the terminology. As the topic of this thread is UEFI, you should mark this one solved and then only open another if/when you come a cropper in your BIOS installation.
]]>On another note: I also rechecked if Windows 7 is actually installed in UEFI mode, and apparently it's not. The system partition I thought Windows created for (U)EFI, is formatted in NTFS, so apparently Windows was installed in BIOS legacy mode. Would you recommed to install Arch in BIOS legacy mode as well? It seems my BIOS prefers that legacy mode over UEFI mode by default anyway, even after the upgrade after which I had to load default settings (which caused my fans to go haywire (full power), so I ran some Windows hardware monitoring program, which told me "UEFI Boot" was "Not enabled").
]]>how did you create the installation usb ?
Did you follow the Beginners' Guide ? https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginners%27_guide
First I used "Universal USB Installer" in Windows (with the outdated iso) and then dd with Arch (with the current iso as of today), as suggested in the wiki. Concerning the USB stick: I previously installed Arch using this stick, so the stick itself should be ok.
Yes, I tried to follow the Beginner's Guide, but I only got to "Boot the installation medium" (https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Be … ion_medium), because I never got to the live environment. (And I know how that is supposed to look, because I managed to install Arch on multiple occasions when there was no UEFI involved, although I'm still a beginner, as you correctly guessed )
I saw "[MOOT] UEFI USB Install (from 201306 image) - blank screen during boot" by the way, and it seems I'm dealing with the same issue, but I thought I should still post my own question, because it concerns a current iso, and I'm probably rather restricted in the use of workarounds, since I already have Windows 7 installed and really don't want to install that thing again in the near future.
]]>Did you follow the Beginners' Guide ? https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginners%27_guide
]]>Today I wiped my hard drive to set up my system anew, because Windows 7 was too old (i.e. too much crap had piled up), and I lacked a real Linux (I only had Linux Mint installed via the Windows installer (similar to "ubi"), because I was afraid of the whole "UEFI" thing, because I never installed Linux on an UEFI system before). I then reinstalled Windows 7, as I am aiming at a dual boot setup, and Windows 7 created an EFI partition and the system partition for Windows itself (I left about half of my hdd untouched for Arch).
Beforehand, I had a USB stick with archlinux-2014.03.01-dual.iso prepared (using "Universal USB Installer" in Windows with the correct label). I then booted using the USB stick and after some fiddling (because of the "Failed to install override security policy."-bug, I had to "cp EFI/boot/loader.efi to EFI/boot/bootx64.efi" as suggested here), I got to the menu where there are 3 options:
- "Arch Linux archiso x86_64 UEFI CD"
- two UEFI shell entries (v1 and v2)
Selecting the first option, the only thing I got was a black screen (with two narrow stripes of grey at the top and bottom of the screen), no command prompt or anything, and that's it. It seems it's the same situation described here.
Selecting the v2 UEFI shell, I get an error (I can't remember the error code, but if it's important, I can check).
Selecting the v1 UEFI shell, I get to a shell (named "shell", in yellow), and some message about a "startup.nsh" script, and all I get after waiting the promised 5 (?) sec, after which something was announced to happen (probably concerning the "startup.nsh" script), nothing happens. The only thing I get is "shell > ", and I guess that's not the thing that was supposed to happen.
I then got the current iso (archlinux-2014.04.01-dual.iso) and created an installation medium as suggested in the wiki ("USB Installation Media") using dd on another Arch machine, but nothing changed. I'm still stuck at the UEFI shell (v1) or the black screen as described above.
I hope there's an easy fix for this, because after a couple of hours of installing drivers, a service pack and a gazillion of Windows updates, I was really looking forward to installing and using Arch on this machine.
By the way, my motherboard is an "ASRock H67M-GE/HT".
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