On Monday, 19 October 2020 17:10:57 BST Peter Humphrey wrote: > On Monday, 19 October 2020 14:08:05 -00 Michael wrote: > > Are you saying calling 'efibootmgr -v' lists a different UEFI boot menu? > > No, I'm saying that I appear to be able to create a BIOS entry using > efibootmgr, but when I reboot and enter BIOS setup, the entry often isn't > there. Or if it is, either the kernel won't boot, or it does but the > resulting system is incomplete. > > When I bought this system I failed entirely to install grub - I followed the > instructions slavishly and received much help from those more knowledgeable > on this list at the time, but never got the system to boot. Then, groping > about trying to understand efibootmgr, bootctl and UEFI generally, I may > have done some combination of things that prevented those tools from ever > working again. For me. On this machine. > > So the summary is: I can preserve the ESP using Windows's system image > creation and recovery tool, but not with those two Linux tools. > > I've wasted several months wrestling with this, and I've finished up with > what I've described.
I see. What you describe is interesting, because the UEFI firmware GUI, efibootmgr, and MSWindows are all meant to be accessing the *same* database of editable entries on the firmware, using the UEFI API. I have not looked into bootctl more than once to know what it does with any clarity. However, I don't think anyone would argue against empirical repeatable outcomes. :-)
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