Rodolfo Medina <rodolfo.med...@gmail.com> wrote: > I frehly installed Debian Sid in dual boot with Windows 10 on my brand > new Lenovo desktop pc but it won't boot into Debian system I suspect > because of the new Secure Boot policy. I want to disable it but the > problem is that there's no Secure Boot option anywhere in its Bios. > In fact, in the Security submenu, there are only the options for > administrator and power-on password setting.
> What do you suggest me to do? As far as I know support for Security Boot is not quite ready in Debian. It is getting there, but it is not yet complete. Last I heard from this (from Ben Hutchings I believe) the status was as following: - the kernel is signed, but this is a manual process, needs automating + this in turn needs a secure way to store and access the key on a server -> a HSM - the bootloader shim was sent to be signed by Microsoft See also https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=820036 and https://wiki.debian.org/SecureBoot Grüße, Sven. -- Sigmentation fault. Core dumped.