On Thu, 2016-03-24 at 21:18 +0100, Carlos E. R. wrote:
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On Thursday, 2016-03-24 at 12:24 -0700, John Andersen wrote:
On 03/24/2016 12:07 PM, Andrei Borzenkov wrote:
Отправлено с iPhone
Anybody got any ideas?
Mint kernel is signed by Mint key and openSUSE loader trusts only openSUSE key (surprise). Either disable secure boot or enroll Mint key using mokutil.--
Wow, what a nugget of valuable information to drop as an offhand comment. I hadn't even thought about THAT ramification of dual boot in the UEFI world.
No, the problem is that the OP is telling openSUSE grub to boot mint, in secure mode, and it can't, out of the box. Maybe openSUSE's grub would be able to chainload mint's grub (I don't know).
The correct procedure on secure UEFI would be to use the UEFI native boot menu to choose which operating system to boot. The design of UEFI allows just that, booting dozens of different operating systems independently. Whatever the manfacturers implement, that's different.
Exactly. Thanks to Andrei for giving me a hint (the name of the program that will hopefully be able to fix my problem once I have grokked it, since it doesn't seem to be the best documented program-I've-never-heard-of in the world). But ... If the openSUSE installer is going to produce a menu that claims to be able to boot the mint system, then why doesn't it make sure that the menu entry actually works! Or at the very least produce a disgnostic to say that it won't work and why. Or even better, use the UEFI boot menu as Carlos suggests!!! Cheers, Dave -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org