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Operating Systems Linux Debian Hardlink on wheezy by default for usb-stick? Post 302939456 by 1in10 on Wednesday 25th of March 2015 03:36:11 PM
Old 03-25-2015
As an answer to sea, the BIOS of the version mentioned up above requires such a written line on the usb-media, though unpacked. It is an msi-board, the menu itself got some 12 entries for the boot sequence. So it may wasn't correct to put it like this, but until UEFI or something like this, I really never had to make such a fuss writing or connecting the boot media with on single bit of the BIOS. Or even a command-line for such a media. Who may is into this trouble with UEFI may knows about this. Nonetheless I am repairing my GRUB.
And yes he may looks to a former partition with an MBR, because there has been a pre-installed version of UBUNTU. As my attempt was to get unetbootin to install another OS (Debian). My problem startet. In this very case it is not the OS, whether UBUNTU or anything else, it is UEFI that stubbornly blocks any attempt to get access.

And learning from this article

https://www.linux.com/learn/tutorial...ub-2-on-linux/

I must be a fool to think there still is a MBR. This has been ages ago, nowadays it is called "shiny new Globally Unique Identifiers partition table (GPT)".

Last edited by 1in10; 03-25-2015 at 05:36 PM.. Reason: new information for GRUB2
 

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installgrub(1M)                                                                                                                    installgrub(1M)

NAME
installgrub - install GRUB in a disk partition or a floppy SYNOPSIS
/sbin/installgrub [-fm] stage1 stage2 raw-device The installgrub command is an -only program. GRUB stands for GRand Unified Bootloader. installgrub installs GRUB stage 1 and stage 2 files on the boot area of a disk partition. If you specify the -m option, installgrub installs the stage 1 file on the master boot sector of the disk. The installgrub command accepts the following options: -f Suppresses interaction when overwriting the master boot sector. -m Installs GRUB stage1 on the master boot sector interactively. The installgrub command accepts the following operands: stage1 The name of the GRUB stage 1 file. stage2 The name of the GRUB stage 2 file. raw-device The name of the device onto which GRUB code is to be installed. It must be a character device that is readable and writable. For disk devices, specify the slice where the GRUB menu file is located. (For Solaris it is the root slice.) For a floppy disk, it is /dev/rdiskette. Example 1: Installing GRUB on a Hard Disk Slice The following command installs GRUB on a system where the root slice is c0d0s0: example# /sbin/installgrub /boot/grub/stage1 /boot/grub/stage2 /dev/rdsk/c0d0s0 Example 2: Installing GRUB on a Floppy The following command installs GRUB on a formatted floppy: example# mount -F pcfs /dev/diskette /mnt # mkdir -p /mnt/boot/grub # cp /boot/grub/* /mnt/boot/grub # umount /mnt # cd /boot/grub # /sbin/installgrub stage1 stage2 /dev/rdiskette /boot/grub Directory where GRUB files reside. See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Evolving | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ boot(1M), fdisk(1M), fmthard(1M), kernel(1M), attributes(5) Installing GRUB on the master boot sector (-m option) overrides any boot manager currently installed on the machine. The system will always boot the GRUB in the Solaris partition regardless of which fdisk partition is active. 24 May 2005 installgrub(1M)
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