Salutations, What are you booting the Arch Iso off of? Regards, Mark -----Original Message----- From: "Alan E. Davis" <lngndvs@xxxxxxxxx> Sent: 5/1/2014 9:09 PM To: "General Discussion about Arch Linux" <arch-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: Installing Archlinux alongside Ubuntu on aWindows8 UEFI laptop I have never seen an option to boot the Arch iso using eufi boot. I may not have said that I want to dual boot. I do need to do so. If I boot directly back into Arch, will there be an option do dual boot? (Actually triple boot for the time being.) Alan Davis On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 5:25 PM, Mark Lee <mark@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Salutations, > > Okay. Try starting ove again. Boot into the arch iso using uefi boot > (preferably but not necessary). Then set up your partitions (root, home). > For boot, mount the windows EFI system partition as /boot. Then install the > system. You won't need to install grub or gummiboot since you can boot the > efistub directly. I would create a folder in /boot named "arch". I would > then copy the *.img from /boot to /boot/arch and rename the vmlinuz-Linux > to vmlinuz-linux.efi. If you booted into uefi mode from the Arch iso, you > should be able to run efibootmgr. Run efibootmgr to see what entries you > have (you should at least have the windows entry). Then type something like > this : efibootmgr -d <efi disk id ( probably /dev/sda) -p <parition # > (probably 1> -L "Arch Linux UEFI" -l /arch/vmlinux-Linux.efi -u > "root=<location of root> initramfs=/arch/initramfs.img rw quiet" -w. You > should be able to reboot if all went well and you will boot into Arch Linux. > > Regards, > Mark > > -----Original Message----- > From: "Alan E. Davis" <lngndvs@xxxxxxxxx> > Sent: 5/1/2014 8:07 PM > To: "General Discussion about Arch Linux" <arch-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Subject: Re: [arch-general] Installing Archlinux alongside Ubuntu on a > Windows8 UEFI laptop > > I don't understand what is the entry, or fallback entry, or "run the > entry." I'm sorry. > > I'm going to try again later. In fact, I may take the undesireable step of > installing from Manjaro or whatever is the shortcut way to install Arch > Linux these days. > > On the one hand, I don't care to learn about what's Micro$oft's latest > tortuous trick it has played on the users; and on the other hand, I do > value to learn the nuts and bolts of GNU/Linux. > > Thank you very much. I am willing to give it one more try. I might even > try to install grub in a partition, as apparently is what Ubuntu has > done. > > Thank you again, > > Alan Davis > > > On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 4:59 PM, Daniel Micay <danielmicay@xxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > > On 01/05/14 07:40 PM, Alan E. Davis wrote: > > > I took a chance, and nothing happened. I installed gummiboot on > /boot, > > > where the kernel was. But I didn't move the ubuntu kernel over. > > > > > > In the end, Windows still booted, and I was able to get back to a boot > > menu > > > from there, and boot ubuntu. Not Arch. Yet. > > > > > > Thank you for now. > > > > > > Alan > > > > You need to explicitly run the entry (if you had the EFI stuff mounted) > > or the fallback entry (if you didn't). > > > > >