EFI and working LVM partman-auto/expert_recipe?
I have an LVM based recipe that used to work on non-EFI based systems. How do I recreate the same recipe so that it works in EFI/UEFI mode?
I have the following recipe right now (and I've tried others too), but it fails with the message: "The attempt to mount a file system with type vfat in SCSI5 (2,0,0), partition #1 (sda) at /boot/efi failed."
d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe string
boot-root-swap ::
200 50 200 ext2
$primary{ }
$bootable{ }
method{ format } format{ }
use_filesystem{ } filesystem{ ext2 }
mountpoint{ /boot }
.
48000 70 1000000000 ext4
$defaultignore{ }
$lvmok{ }
lv_name{ base }
method{ format }
format{ }
use_filesystem{ }
filesystem{ ext4 }
mountpoint{ / }
.
8000 60 24000 linux-swap
$defaultignore{ }
$lvmok{ }
lv_name{ swap }
method{ swap }
format{ }
.
partitioning uefi lvm preseed
add a comment |
I have an LVM based recipe that used to work on non-EFI based systems. How do I recreate the same recipe so that it works in EFI/UEFI mode?
I have the following recipe right now (and I've tried others too), but it fails with the message: "The attempt to mount a file system with type vfat in SCSI5 (2,0,0), partition #1 (sda) at /boot/efi failed."
d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe string
boot-root-swap ::
200 50 200 ext2
$primary{ }
$bootable{ }
method{ format } format{ }
use_filesystem{ } filesystem{ ext2 }
mountpoint{ /boot }
.
48000 70 1000000000 ext4
$defaultignore{ }
$lvmok{ }
lv_name{ base }
method{ format }
format{ }
use_filesystem{ }
filesystem{ ext4 }
mountpoint{ / }
.
8000 60 24000 linux-swap
$defaultignore{ }
$lvmok{ }
lv_name{ swap }
method{ swap }
format{ }
.
partitioning uefi lvm preseed
add a comment |
I have an LVM based recipe that used to work on non-EFI based systems. How do I recreate the same recipe so that it works in EFI/UEFI mode?
I have the following recipe right now (and I've tried others too), but it fails with the message: "The attempt to mount a file system with type vfat in SCSI5 (2,0,0), partition #1 (sda) at /boot/efi failed."
d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe string
boot-root-swap ::
200 50 200 ext2
$primary{ }
$bootable{ }
method{ format } format{ }
use_filesystem{ } filesystem{ ext2 }
mountpoint{ /boot }
.
48000 70 1000000000 ext4
$defaultignore{ }
$lvmok{ }
lv_name{ base }
method{ format }
format{ }
use_filesystem{ }
filesystem{ ext4 }
mountpoint{ / }
.
8000 60 24000 linux-swap
$defaultignore{ }
$lvmok{ }
lv_name{ swap }
method{ swap }
format{ }
.
partitioning uefi lvm preseed
I have an LVM based recipe that used to work on non-EFI based systems. How do I recreate the same recipe so that it works in EFI/UEFI mode?
I have the following recipe right now (and I've tried others too), but it fails with the message: "The attempt to mount a file system with type vfat in SCSI5 (2,0,0), partition #1 (sda) at /boot/efi failed."
d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe string
boot-root-swap ::
200 50 200 ext2
$primary{ }
$bootable{ }
method{ format } format{ }
use_filesystem{ } filesystem{ ext2 }
mountpoint{ /boot }
.
48000 70 1000000000 ext4
$defaultignore{ }
$lvmok{ }
lv_name{ base }
method{ format }
format{ }
use_filesystem{ }
filesystem{ ext4 }
mountpoint{ / }
.
8000 60 24000 linux-swap
$defaultignore{ }
$lvmok{ }
lv_name{ swap }
method{ swap }
format{ }
.
partitioning uefi lvm preseed
partitioning uefi lvm preseed
edited Jan 9 '14 at 17:29
Braiam
51.4k20136220
51.4k20136220
asked Oct 18 '13 at 20:27
farhany
12114
12114
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
You need to create an EFI system partition. Then the installer will mount it at /boot/efi.
Adding something to effect of ...
1 1 1 free
$bios_boot{ }
method{ biosgrub }
.
256 40 256 fat32
$primary{ }
$lvmignore{ }
method{ efi }
format{ }
.
... at the beginning of your expert_recipe will create a 256MB partition (/dev/sda1 for example) that will be set up for EFI. There's also 1MB of free space before the first partition (priority 1). This is needed if you want to have GRUB install on a system that is partitioned with GPT, since GPT extends beyond the size of the 512K MBR.
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You need to create an EFI system partition. Then the installer will mount it at /boot/efi.
Adding something to effect of ...
1 1 1 free
$bios_boot{ }
method{ biosgrub }
.
256 40 256 fat32
$primary{ }
$lvmignore{ }
method{ efi }
format{ }
.
... at the beginning of your expert_recipe will create a 256MB partition (/dev/sda1 for example) that will be set up for EFI. There's also 1MB of free space before the first partition (priority 1). This is needed if you want to have GRUB install on a system that is partitioned with GPT, since GPT extends beyond the size of the 512K MBR.
add a comment |
You need to create an EFI system partition. Then the installer will mount it at /boot/efi.
Adding something to effect of ...
1 1 1 free
$bios_boot{ }
method{ biosgrub }
.
256 40 256 fat32
$primary{ }
$lvmignore{ }
method{ efi }
format{ }
.
... at the beginning of your expert_recipe will create a 256MB partition (/dev/sda1 for example) that will be set up for EFI. There's also 1MB of free space before the first partition (priority 1). This is needed if you want to have GRUB install on a system that is partitioned with GPT, since GPT extends beyond the size of the 512K MBR.
add a comment |
You need to create an EFI system partition. Then the installer will mount it at /boot/efi.
Adding something to effect of ...
1 1 1 free
$bios_boot{ }
method{ biosgrub }
.
256 40 256 fat32
$primary{ }
$lvmignore{ }
method{ efi }
format{ }
.
... at the beginning of your expert_recipe will create a 256MB partition (/dev/sda1 for example) that will be set up for EFI. There's also 1MB of free space before the first partition (priority 1). This is needed if you want to have GRUB install on a system that is partitioned with GPT, since GPT extends beyond the size of the 512K MBR.
You need to create an EFI system partition. Then the installer will mount it at /boot/efi.
Adding something to effect of ...
1 1 1 free
$bios_boot{ }
method{ biosgrub }
.
256 40 256 fat32
$primary{ }
$lvmignore{ }
method{ efi }
format{ }
.
... at the beginning of your expert_recipe will create a 256MB partition (/dev/sda1 for example) that will be set up for EFI. There's also 1MB of free space before the first partition (priority 1). This is needed if you want to have GRUB install on a system that is partitioned with GPT, since GPT extends beyond the size of the 512K MBR.
edited Jan 9 '14 at 17:29
Braiam
51.4k20136220
51.4k20136220
answered Jan 9 '14 at 17:02
Dave
1262
1262
add a comment |
add a comment |
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