On Fri, 26 Jun 2020 at 08:20, Patrick Dupre <pdu...@gmx.com> wrote:

> The PC is only 1 year ans 4 months old.
>
> It is an Optiplex 7060
> It is runing with a biao 1.2.22
> It seems that there is a version
> 1.4.2 avaialble (marked as urgent
>
I should also have asked if the machine dual boots windows.   If so, you
need
to check step 3 of Dell's dual boot installation instructions (for Ubuntu,
but I can
confirm that the same steps work for Fedora):

3.  Ensure you are logged in as an Administrator and check if Fast Startup is
disabled. (This can affect whether GRUB can pick up your Windows
installation at a later stage.)
Open Control Panel (The windows key + X is a shortcut on all recent
versions.)
Open Power Options
Select Choose what the power button does
Select Change settings that are currently unavailable
Ensure that the box marked Turn on Fast Startup (Recommended) is disabled


Upgrading Windows sometimes resets this to "enabled" (after grub has found
the
Windows installation) which causes problems booting Fedora.



> On Fri, 26 Jun 2020 at 05:40, Patrick Dupre <pdu...@gmx.com> wrote:
>
>> OK
>>
>> On a Dell, it is F12 I guess.
>> From here I have to choose:
>> legacy external device boot
>> USB Storage Device
>>
>> It means, not the UEFI Boot
>
>
> The bios may be set to legacy bios mode, or (like my elderly
> Dell desktop) the system is too old for UEFI.
>
>  > On 6/26/20 1:14 AM, Patrick Dupre wrote:
>
>> > > After I entered into the BIOS, I have the option to select the boot
>> ordering.
>> > > By default, I have USB Key First, then, Fedora (in the boot sequence)
>> > > The options are for the USB Key:
>> > > File System list
>> > > PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x14,0x0)/USB(0x0,0x0)/CDROM(0x1)
>> > > File Name
>> > > \EFI\BOOT\BOOTX64.EFI
>> >
>> > That's not what I'm referring to.  When the computer starts, there is
>> > usually a key you can press to bring up a menu of places to boot from.
>> > For example, on an HP it's F9.  Sometimes it's ESC or other keys.  There
>> > might be an option in the BIOS settings to enable the boot menu.
>
>
> Also, a setting to enable legacy BIOS.   Do your BIOS current
> settings look like:
>
>
> Boot Sequence: Legacy (USB & PCIe)
> Advanced Boot Options: Legacy Option ROMs Enabled
> Secure Boot Disabled.
>
>
> No, it is
> Boot Sequence
> Advanced Boot Option
> UEFI Boot Path Security
>

These are the headings.   Surprising there aren't values for the settings
after the ":", but I assume
the system is using UEFI.

-- 
George N. White III
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