Pascal Hambourg wrote: ... > I agree with the author. If you want to keep the existing EFI Windows > installation and have a convenient dual boot with GRUB, you'll have to > set up your favourite distribution to boot in EFI mode. If you want to > go back to legacy boot, including for Windows, you'll have to > repartition the disk to MSDOS format and reinstall Windows.
all i know is that if your bios doesn't boot in UEFI mode and you don't know anything about what this means you can end up installing Debian without UEFI support and then it can be rather fun to get it back. i managed to have grub do an install to a stable partition without UEFI and i messed up the testing setup i had. it took me some while to figure out what went wrong and how to fix it. if you don't really understand grub rescue commands and there isn't a working system you can use to connect and find help for the commands you need to enter it's very frustrating. the Debian UEFI pages helped a great deal but there were other things i had to figure out coming in cold to UEFI. how to create a /boot/efi partition, what goes in it, mounting it, clearing and putting in new efibootmgr entries, etc. refind was useful and at least it does what i expect it to do. grub, i dislike how it assumed things i didn't want to do. alas, i didn't know how different UEFI was from bios mode. i still haven't redone my efibootmgr entries but refind doesn't care, i can create custom entries in that config file and they work that is all i really need at this point. songbird