On Nov 22, 2013, at 3:21 PM, Steven Rosenberg <stevenhrosenb...@gmail.com> 
wrote:

> On Fri, Nov 22, 2013 at 1:50 PM, Chris Murphy <li...@colorremedies.com> wrote:
>> On Nov 22, 2013, at 1:40 PM, Steven Rosenberg <stevenhrosenb...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> On Wed, Nov 20, 2013 at 4:11 AM, Tom H <tomh0...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Once in Fedora, you can use efibootmgr to change the boot order.
>> 
>> 
>> Not all systems allow you to do this. My HP Pavilion g6 laptop will not
>> allow you to flip Windows and Linux in the boot order. You can do it in
>> efibootmgr, but nothing happens.
>> 
>> 
>> So if you use efibootmgr -v before and after the change in order with
>> efibootmgr, does BootOrder show the change in the 2nd efibootmgr -v
>> instance?
> 
> 
> The boot order changes. But once I reboot, it goes back to what it was before.

So the boot order changes in NVRAM, according to efibootmgr -v, but when you 
reboot and then run efibootmgr -v again, it's changed the order?

Wow, that's goofy. How does it even know what the order was and that it's 
changed? The spec language seems to imply that BootOrder isn't what gets 
changed, but rather than boot entry, which just seems wrong. I must be reading 
the spec incorrectly, but then I read it again….

"To change boot option on an existing Boot####, only the Boot#### variable 
would need to be rewritten. A similar operation would be done to add, remove, 
or modify the driver load list."


Chris Murphy
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