On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 4:29 PM, Steve McIntyre <[email protected]> wrote: > Dan wrote: > >>I just bought a desktop (Dell T5810). I tried to install Jessie with >>UEFI. The USB installation (netinst) works perfectly. I installed the >>whole system and I can see it in the UEFI/BIOS menu. Surprisingly when >>I try to boot the system I get "No bootable devices found" >> >>I tried all the options of the BIOS but it does not work. I already >>installed Debian with UEFI in another system and it worked fine. Would >>that mean that I have a buggy BIOS? What surprises me the most is that >>the USB/UEFI works but not the HDD/UEFI. > > Unfortunately, it's not that uncommon. Lots of UEFI implementations > are really bad so far - testing seems to be essentially "does it work > with Windows?" and nothing more. > > As already suggested, try running "efibootmgr -v" on the system and > see what it says. If needs be, use the installer in Rescue mode to get > there. With Jessie, I also added an option in Rescue mode to add a > "removable media" boot entry on your hard disk so that even really > brain-dead UEFI setups should still boot... >
As suggested I typed efibootmgr -v and everything seems to be fine. I get BootCurrent: 0001 Timeout: 1 seconds BootOrder 0000,0001 Boot0000* debian Vendor(99e27e7-75a0-4b37-a2e6-c5385e6c00cb,) Boot0001* UEFI: SanDisk Cruzer Blade 1.27 HD(1,f8c,340,1876769c)File(EFI\boot\bootx64.efi)..B0 How do I tell UEFI the parameters or how to boot? If I do not manage to install Debian with UEFI, I will switch to the legacy BIOS option. Is there any adavantage using UEFI? Thanks, Daniel -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected] Archive: https://lists.debian.org/cak00folkcjxrn_mheh3lod4yvwxynjb2rbpxezrzhsq3or-...@mail.gmail.com

