On Mon, 29 Jan 2018 13:08:46 -0500 Chris Dunn <chrisdunn...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm contemplating installing Debian on my beloved Chuwi Hi12 tablet. > The machine is cheap (circa $300) and while there are certain bits of > the hardware that do not (yet) work under Linux there is nothing that > troubles me, and the graphics are superb - 2160x1440 on a 12" screen. > > At present it is dual-booting Xubuntu and Windows (Android was removed). > I installed Xubuntu because I could not at the time successfully burn a > Debian live image to USB, so could not test it out before installing. > > Now I have a new live Debian USB and have tested it on the Chuwi. > Everything works as expected. No wifi (rtl8723bs chip) but that was > expected. Actually there is a driver for that chip in recent kernels that works reasonably well here, unfortunately it is not yet included in distribution kernels, so one has to compile the kernel oneself. > > I'm ready to install debian-live-9.3.0-amd64-xfce from the live USB and > would like to install it to the whole of the Chuwi solid state 64gb > drive, binning Windows and Xubuntu in the process. > > But I'm nervous about the possibility of turning the tablet into a > brick. > > It has a 32 bit UEFI system and while I've tried to research the UEFI > complications find it difficult to grasp the full picture on UEFI > (particularly 32 bit with a 64 bit Debian). > > As best I can make out I should have no problems as the Debian > installer will detect and handle the 32 bit UEFI. However I've been > unable to find full instructions for using the whole of the storage for > Debian, only guides for dual installs alongside Windows. > > Does anyone have any comments or suggestions that might be useful to me > in the installation? In particular do I need to preserve any existing > Windows or EFI partition even though Windows will no longer be on the > machine? I don't know if the Debian Live system will handle the 32bit uefi issue properly when installing, but this can , if necessary be fixed later. I had the same problem with a similar machine. Of course I could remove windows completely. I am not sure if the installer's auto-partitioning works properly, I used the manual partitioning. You must make sure that you have a small (I think 100 MB or so is sufficient) FAT partition with the "Boot" flag set, which will be mounted to /boot/efi . The rest of the disk can be used as usual for "/" and swap. If the installer actually fails to install the proper 32bit-efi-grub, that does not mean that your device is bricked. This can be easyly fixed by booting a live system again, doing a chroot into the installed system and install the required grub packages manually (that's what I had to do ;) Regards Michael .-.. .. ...- . .-.. --- -. --. .- -. -.. .--. .-. --- ... .--. . .-. There is an order of things in this universe. -- Apollo, "Who Mourns for Adonais?" stardate 3468.1