On 08 Mar 2013, at 17:43, Doug Hardie <bc...@lafn.org> wrote: > > On 7 March 2013, at 17:00, John Mehr <j...@visi.com> wrote: >> >> On Thu, 7 Mar 2013 14:18:23 -0800 Doug Hardie <bc...@lafn.org> wrote: >>> On 7 March 2013, at 11:57, Kevin Oberman <rkober...@gmail.com> wrote: [ ... ] >>>> Thanks. Well, I got 9.1 Release installed, but it won't boot from the >>>> internal disk. It doesn't see the disk as bootable. I installed using >>>> the entire disk for FreeBSD. I used the i386 release. Perhaps I need to >>>> switch to the amd64 release? >>>> I would generally recommend using the amd64 release, but it may not get >>>> your system to boot. How is your disk partitioned? GPT? Some BIOSes are >>>> broken and assume that a GPT formatted disk is UEFI and will not recognize >>>> them if they lack the UEFI boot partition. UEFI boot is a current project >>>> that seems likely to reach head in the fairly near future, but it's not >>>> possible now. >>> No idea what the default partitioning is for BSDInstall. However the Mini >>> is only EFI or UFEI with some fallbacks although the comments I find in the >>> web indicate that different models have different fallbacks. >>> One comment indicates that an older unit will boot if its MBR partitioning. >>> I don't know if the new installer supports that or not. >>>> You may be able to tweak your BIOS to get it to work or you may have to >>>> install using the traditional partitioning system. The installer defaults >>>> to GPT, but can create either. >>>> I have such a system (ThinkPad T520) and I have two disks... one that came >>>> with the system and containing Windows, and my GPT formatted FreeBSD disk. >>>> I wrote a FreeBSD BootEasy boot into the MBR of the Windows disk and it >>>> CAN boot the GPT disk just fine. Not ideal for most, but it works well for >>>> me >>> Based on a comment I say, waiting till the empty folder icon appears and >>> then plugging in the install memstick causes the mini to boot from disk. >>> That just downright weird, but it works. I could live with that, but this >>> is an unattended server and would experience some down time if I am not >>> there when there is a power failure. >>> I just found some "instructions" for using MBR with bsdinstall, but given >>> there is an effort to create a UEFI boot which I suspect would expect to >>> find the GPT boot partition, perhaps I should just go with the memstick >>> approach? >> >> Hello, >> >> If you still have a drive with OS X on it, you may have some luck with OS >> X's bless command: >> >> https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Darwin/Reference/Manpages/man8/bless.8.html >> >> I got a late 2012 mac mini to boot FreeBSD 9.1 (AMD64) from a hard drive >> using 'bless' (unfortunately I don't remember the exact command line >> parameters I used). If you're looking to dual boot, the only luck I had >> (without resorting to using third party software like rEFIt) was to put the >> OS's on different drives and install FreeBSD using MBR on the second drive. > > I have investigated the bless command and nothing I find on google gives me > any good ideal on what folder/file to bless. I am wondering if just using > the volume command and ignoring folder and file would work?
When I was setting up FreeBSD (9/amd64) to run on a MacBook Air, I used (from within Terminal while booted into an OS X boot image): sudo bless --device /dev/disk0s2 --setBoot --legacy (s2 was the FreeBSD boot slice.) My notes also claim that the drive needed to have MBR boot code installed first (e.g., via fdisk -B ada0 or the gpart equivalent) in order for the blessing to work. This was about a year ago (December 2011), on whatever hardware/firmware/OS X were current at the time. -- Molly _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"