


rijnsma wrote:By the way, do you know if it gives problems, when one has UEFI and ONLY Linux (one or more partitions)?
So when there's no Windows involved.







rijnsma wrote:But in my opinion 'Secure Boot' was something from Microsoft?
What has that to do with EUFI from the hardware-guys? So why a problem if Windows is not on the machine??
I don't understand.
And why can UEFI not be switched off like Microsoft has said?
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/09/23 ... i_lock_in/



rijnsma wrote:But in my opinion 'Secure Boot' was something from Microsoft?
What has that to do with EUFI from the hardware-guys? So why a problem if Windows is not on the machine??
I don't understand.
And why can UEFI not be switched off like Microsoft has said?
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/09/23 ... i_lock_in/
Red Hat developer Matthew Garrett in his article "UEFI secure booting" raised a concern that UEFI "secure boot" feature may impact Linux (machines with the Windows 8 logo with secure boot enabled that ships with only OEM and Microsoft keys will not boot a generic copy of Linux)[41][42] In response, Microsoft stated that customers may be able to disable the secure boot feature in the BIOS.[2][43] Concern remains that some OEMs might omit that capability in their computers.


Dry Lips wrote:Apparently Linux supports UEFI, but it can be complicated to set up. Not exactly noob friendly
in other words:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEFIBooting
It also seems as if quite a few people have problems setting up a UEFI system:
http://askubuntu.com/search?q=uefi



Vincent Vermeulen wrote:Microsoft are saying they have not mandated UEFI secure boot must always be on, only that it must be on
to boot Windows 8. So it is up to the BIOS / motherboard manufacturer how to deal with this.


Vincent Vermeulen wrote:Dry Lips wrote:Apparently Linux supports UEFI, but it can be complicated to set up. Not exactly noob friendly
in other words:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEFIBooting
It also seems as if quite a few people have problems setting up a UEFI system:
http://askubuntu.com/search?q=uefi
Ah. That explains a lot. My UEFI BIOS has the "Compatibility Support Module", allowing BIOS based operating systems to boot as normal...

rijnsma wrote:And sign: http://www.fsf.org/campaigns/secure-boot/



Dry Lips wrote:Apparently Linux supports UEFI, but it can be complicated to set up. Not exactly noob friendly
in other words:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEFIBooting


AlbertP wrote:Dry Lips wrote:Apparently Linux supports UEFI, but it can be complicated to set up. Not exactly noob friendly
in other words:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEFIBooting
This is UEFI without secure boot - and that is working. UEFI with Secure Boot is more problematic.








AlbertP wrote:That's also what developers from Red Hat, Canonical and the Linux kernel suggest in this paper: http://ozlabs.org/docs/uefi-secure-boot ... -linux.pdf
It's a long piece of text but at the end they suggest offering to add the keys when removable media (CD, USB, etc.) is booted.





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